Google has recently demoed an interesting WebGL application called Body Browser, which lets you explore the human body just like you can explore the world in Google Earth. Now you can try Google Body Browser before it's added to Google Labs, assuming that you have a WebGL-enabled browser:
* WebGL is available, but not enabled by default in Chrome 8 (the latest stable version). Type about:flags in the address bar, click "Enable" next to "WebGL" and then click on "Restart now". Please note that this is an experimental feature in Chrome 8.
* WebGL is enabled by default in Chrome 9 Beta, Chrome 9 Dev Channel, Chrome Canary Build and Firefox 4 beta.
Latest mp3 songs, Movies, Tamil mp2 songs, Online mp3 songs, Live FM Radio, http://mp3.w3dummies.com/
Monday, December 27, 2010
google Body Browser
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Dell PS511 USB Sound Bar Review
Highlights
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The Dell™ PS511 USB Sound Bar offers Mobility, Single USB Cable Solution for Power/Audio, and Excellent Digital Stereo Sound with an added bonus of a hard shell carry case. This product has been tested and validated on Dell systems to ensure it will work with your computer. It is supported by Dell Technical Support when used with a Dell system.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Play Hidden Snake Game In YouTube Video
YouTube provides streaming video. You can find variety of video based on your interests. Usually we wait for the video to load on the YouTube. But have you ever thought that you can do something innovative while waiting for your favorite video to stream? YouTube videos comes with hidden snake game.
Snake game is one of the most basic and simple game that is available in almost all cellphones. All you have to do is eat your food without touching the tail of the snake.
How To Play Snake Game In YouTube Video
- open any YouTube video. Let us take this as an example.
- When streaming starts. Select the player with mouse and press any arrow key in ur key board (that loading image will changed to a snake.
- Once the game starts you can change the direction from keyboard arrow.
Thanks & Regards,
Jayaprakash.Kandasamy
Google Working on Cars That Drive Themselves [Google Said to Be Working on Self Driving Cars, Have Already Logged 140,000+ Test Miles]
Take a look at your arsenal of gadgets, what do you see? You’ve probably got a high powered portable computer, a large touchscreen touting smartphone and perhaps even a tablet. Much of this stuff has become standard fare but if you go back even 5 years, many of the things we use on a daily basis would be unheard of – 20 years? Forget about it.
This technology
is thanks to the major technological revolution we are currently engrossed in. In fact, things are moving so fast that by the time a device hits the market, another product is already in the pipeline to make it obsolete. So, with things moving at such a rapid pace it leads us to question, what’s next?
Google is no stranger to technological discovery with things like their Android mobile operating system and extremely advanced search engine (among other things, of course). However, what they are working on now is something that will surely make consumers see the company in a new light.
What might this be, you ask? Well, according to Google CEO Eric Schmidt, the search engine giant is currently at work on cars that are completely automated. In fact, their progress is so far along that they’ve already got a whole slew of self driving Toyota Prius that have logged over 140,000+ test miles. Apparently, the work is done by a whole slew of sensors, cameras, laser range fingers and GPS technology that, when coupled together, make for a completely autonomous driving experience.
Unfortunately, seeing how this technology is extremely new it probably won’t be made publicly available anytime soon if ever but the innovation at work here is tremendous. It also leads us to question what industry Google will find their way into next. They’ve already dipped their feet in virtually ever technologically focused industry but have yet to make it into the auto industry.
Thanks & Regards,
Jayaprakash.Kandasamy
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Google TV
It’s been almost five months since we introduced Google TV to the world at Google I/O, and today we’re happy to give you an update on our progress. For those who haven’t yet heard of it, Google TV is a new way to think about TV: it’s a platform that combines your current TV programming and the open web into a single, seamless entertainment experience.
One of our goals with Google TV is to finally open up the living room and enable new innovation from content creators, programmers, developers and advertisers. By bringing Google Chrome and access to the entire Internet, you can easily navigate to thousands of websites to watch your favorite web videos, play Flash games, view photos, read movie reviews or chat with friends—all on the big screen.
Since our announcement, we’ve been overwhelmed by interest from partners on how they can use the Google TV platform to personalize, monetize and distribute their content in new ways. Most of these partner sites already work with Google TV, but many are choosing to further enhance their premium web content for viewing on the television. Today, we’re excited to announce several of these content partners.
- Turner Broadcasting has been hard at work optimizing some of their most popular websites for viewing on Google TV, including TBS, TNT, CNN, Cartoon Network and Adult Swim, available anytime through Google TV.
- NBC Universal has collaborated with Google TV to bring CNBC Real-Time, an application that allows you to track your favorite stocks and access news feeds while enjoying the best financial news from CNBC directly on the TV screen.
- HBO will bring access to hundreds of hours of programming to Google TV with HBO GO. Authenticated subscribers will soon be able to access all of their favorite HBO content on-demand in an enhanced website for Google TV.
- NBA has built NBA Game Time, an application that lets you follow game scores in real-time and catch up on the latest highlights from your favorite team in HD.
In addition, we’ve partnered with some of the leading premium content providers to bring thousands of movie and TV titles, on-demand, directly to your television. Amazon Video On Demand offers access to over 75,000 titles for rental or purchase, and Netflix will offer the ability to instantly watch unlimited movies and TV shows, anytime, streaming directly to the TV.
We have also been working with some leading technology and media companies to optimize their content for Google TV, including news sites like The New York Times and USA Today; music sites like VEVO, Pandora and Napster; information networks like Twitter; and online networks like blip.tv. And with YouTube Leanback, we can offer the best experience for you to watch your favorite viral videos and personalized channels on the television.
You can get a sneak peek of some of these apps in the video below:
This is just the beginning. Over the next few weeks, you can expect to hear from more sites that are enhancing their web content for the television. If you’re interested in learning more about how to optimize your website for viewing on Google TV, please visit our developer page.
Today we also launched a new website that provides more information about these apps and all of the other great features of Google TV. And if you want to stay up to speed on the latest developments from the Google TV team, check out our new blog.
We’re really excited about the enthusiasm surrounding the platform and can’t wait for it to reach your living room. Devices powered by Google TV will launch this month, so look out for more information in the next few weeks from Sony on its Internet TV and Blu-Ray player, and Logitech on its companion box.
Update: Added links to partner announcements.
Courtesy: Google
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Special trains for Deepavali
Southern Railway will run the following special trains to clear extra rush of passengers during Deepavali festival season. Reservation for the trains opens on Wednesday.
Train No. 0601 Chennai Central-Tirunelveli-Chennai Central Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 6.15 p.m. on November 4 and arrive at Tirunelveli at 7.45 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0602 Tirunelveli – Chennai Central Superfast Special will leave Tirunelveli at 2 p.m. on November 5 and arrive here at 3.40 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0613 Chennai Central – Tuticorin Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 8.35 p.m. on November 6 and reach Tuticorin at 10 a.m. the next day.
Train No. 0614 Tuticorin – Chennai Central Special will leave Tuticorin at 3.45 p.m. on November 7 and arrive here at 8.20 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0603 Chennai Central – Nagercoil Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 11.30 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Nagercoil at 2 p.m. the next day.
Train No.0604 Nagercoil – Chennai Central Special will leave Nagercoil at 4.15 p.m. on November 4 and arrive here at 8.20 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0629 Chennai Central – Tirunelveli Special will leave Chennai Central at 7.30 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Tirunelveli at 9.35 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0630 Tirunelveli – Chennai Central Special will leave Tirunelveli at 2.55 p.m. on November 4 and arrive here at 5 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0622 Coimbatore – Chennai Central Superfast Special will leave Coimbatore at 11.55 p.m. on November 2 and arrive here at 8.20 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0621 Chennai Central – Coimbatore Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 10.30 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Coimbatore at 6.50 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0642 Nagercoil – Chennai Egmore Superfast Special will leave Nagercoil at 5 p.m. on November 7 and arrive at Chennai Egmore at 6.05 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0641 Chennai Egmore – Nagercoil Special will leave Chennai Egmore at 2.40 p.m. on November 8 and arrive at Nagercoil at 5.35 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0619 Chennai Central – Tuticorin Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 8.35 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Tuticorin at 10 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0620 Tuticorin – Chennai Central Superfast Special will leave Tuticorin at 2.05 p.m. on November 4 and arrive here at 3.45 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0646 Tiruchchirappalli – Chennai Egmore Special will leave Tiruchchirappalli at 9 p.m. on November 1 and arrive at Chennai Egmore at 4.30 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0645 Chennai Egmore – Tiruchchirappalli Superfast Special will leave Chennai Egmore at 10.45 p.m. on November 4 and arrive at Tiruchchirappalli at 6 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0635 Chennai Egmore – Nagercoil Superfast Special will leave Chennai Egmore at 6.50 p.m. on November 2 and arrive at Nagercoil at 8.05 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0636 Nagercoil – Chennai Egmore Special will leave Nagercoil at 1.30 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Chennai Egmore at 4.25 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0661 Chennai Egmore – Sengottai Special will leave Chennai Egmore at 10.45 p.m. on November 3 and arrive at Sengottai at 12.30 p.m. the next day.
Train No.0662 Sengottai – Chennai Egmore Special will leave Sengottai at 4.45 p.m. on November 4 and arrive at Chennai Egmore at 6.05 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0652 Ernakulam Jn. – Chennai Central Special will leave Ernakulam Jn. at 6.55 p.m. on November 4 and arrive at Chennai Central at 7.45 a.m. the next day.
Train No.0651 Chennai Central – Ernakulam Jn. Superfast Special will leave Chennai Central at 8.35 p.m. on November 5 and arrive at Ernakulam Jn. at 8.05 a.m. the next day.
Friday, September 17, 2010
Five reasons to use Google Chrome (and not IE9 beta)
It's faster
Preston says IE9 is faster than previous versions -- but that's not exactly saying much. As he points out, Chrome was the fastest browser in his tests: 25% faster than IE9.
It maximizes available screen real estate
As Preston rightly points out, IE9's new clean look is inherited from Chrome. Firefox 4 does a similar thing, but both FF4 and IE9 waste space above the tabs when maximized. That may seem like a small thing, but as more of us move to 16:10 or 16:9 wide screens, vertical space is at a premium, relatively speaking.
IE9 compensates by putting the 'One Box' location bar and the tabs on the same 'row', but this just has the effect of limiting the amount of space that tabs can use. Chrome's solution of eliminating the title bar makes perfect sense.
It actually has useful add-ons
Preston was impressed by IE9's add-on performance monitor, but that would be more useful if there was a decently-sized community of add-on writers for the browser.
Firefox has had this for some time, of course. Chrome has gone from a standing start to a rich choice of add-ons in what seems like the blink of an eye.
It, too, integrates with Windows 7
While there isn't an easy way to pin a site to the taskbar, Chrome does support jumplists for most-visited sites and recently-closed windows.
In other words, right-click on the Chrome icon on the taskbar, and you're presented with two pop-up lists that Chrome automatically generates for you. One contains the sites that you often visit -- the same list that you get in a new tab. The other contains tabs that you closed most recently, in case you want to re-open them.
The address bar supports Google Instant
Almost everyone is raving about Google Instant. What's the betting that the next stable beta build of Chrome supports that functionality direct from the address bar?
What's your favorite browser?
Courtesy: Google Alerts
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Honey! It's sweet, yet comes with a sting
Antibiotics fed to bees for commercial purposes are dangerous to consumers, says a new study.
Branded honey sold in India is likely to be contaminated with harmful antibiotics, according to a new study
That spoonful of “guaranteed pure” sweetness may be hiding a bitter secret. Branded honey sold in India is likely to be contaminated with harmful antibiotics, according to a new study by the Centre for Science and Environment.
CSE's Pollution Monitoring Laboratory tested 12 leading brands of honey sold in Delhi, including those made by Indian companies such as Dabur, Himalaya, Patanjali, Baidyanath and Khadi as well as by two foreign companies based in Switzerland and Australia. Scientists found high levels of six harmful antibiotics in 11 samples, with only the Indian Hitkari brand coming out clean.
The contamination is the end result of a murky chain, which begins when antibiotics are fed to bees to prevent disease, promote growth and increase honey production to meet commercial targets. When they make their way into your daily spoonful of honey, these substances could damage the blood, kidneys, liver, bones and teeth. More importantly, they create resistance in the body to prescribed antibiotics when you really do fall ill, says the CSE report.
Most developed countries have banned or strictly regulated antibiotics in honey, and Indian companies must meet those standards when they export their products. However, in a stinging example of double standards, most Indian companies are dumping their contaminated honey on the domestic market, since there are no regulations here, says CSE.
Dabur Honey — which has captured 75 per cent of the Indian market — had the antibiotic Oxytetracycline at nine times the level that is permitted for exported honey. It also had significant amounts of two other drugs completely banned for use in honey. If the sample was placed for export to the United States or the European Union, it would have been rejected.
Interestingly, Dabur was recently involved in a controversy in Nepal, where leading newspapers claimed that the Dabur honey was substandard and used harmful chemicals. The company dismissed it as part of a Nepali “smear campaign” against Indian products, but the sticky claim has now come from an Indian source.
Nectaflor Natural Blossom Honey, made by Narimpex of Switzerland, had the largest number — five — of the six antibiotics that it was tested for, including the highest levels of ampicillin and erythromycin, both of which are not permitted for beekeeping in any country. It would be illegal to sell it even in Switzerlanditself. Similarly, the Australian brand, Capilano Pure & Natural Honey, which is sold in 40 countries, violated standards set in its home country.
“It is clear that foreign companies are taking advantage of the lack of regulations in India. After all, if our government does not care about the health of its people, why should these companies care?” said CSE director Sunita Narain, at the release of the study on Wednesday.
“We have standards for antibiotic contamination in the honey we export. The government even tests and certifies that exported honey meets health and safety regulations. But we do not have any standards for domestic honey. This is clearly unacceptable,” she said.
Courtesy: TheHindu
Saturday, September 4, 2010
google 25th Anniversary of the Buckyball
Google is celebrating buckyball's 25th anniversary by commemorating it in an interactive Google Doodle on Google's homepage.
Today’ google released its home page with interactive animated buckyball logo. It looks amazing, It mouse driven animated buckyball. You can check out the logo in google search home page.
Have any one know how to design that type of animation? They have designed using CSS & javascript. Can any one help me to find out how to do that type of animation using CSS & javascript. It’s really amazing.
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Insomnia Increases Risk of Early Death for Men?
It's not all in your head: Insomnia has "significant physical consequences."
Suffering from insomnia? A new finding could make you lose even more sleep.
Men with chronic insomnia who also sleep less than six hours a night have a higher risk of early death than "normal" male sleepers who get more than six hours of shut-eye, a new study suggests. (Take National Geographic magazine's sleep quiz.)
Insomnia—difficulty falling or staying asleep—is the most common sleep disorder, affecting about 30 percent of people in the U.S., according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine. Chronic insomniacs are those who have had the disorder consistently for at least a year.
After decades of mixed findings, the new report shows that insomnia is a "serious disease with significant physical consequences, including mortality," said study leader Alexandros N. Vgontzas, director of Penn State University's Sleep Research & Treatment Center in Hershey, Pennsylvania.
Though the researchers didn't specifically study people who reported lack of sleep due to their lifestyle, Vgontzas emphasized that "losing sleep for whatever reason is bad for your health." For instance, he has published previous results showing that curtailing sleep in young adults by two hours a night for just one week is linked to inflammation that may cause cardiovascular problems.
The new study changes "how we view insomnia," said Vipin Garg, director of the Sleep Disorders Center at Trinitas Regional Medical Center in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
"It definitely is pointing attention to insomnia as more than a psychological disorder," said Garg, who was not involved in the research.
Insomnia Tracked Over Time
Study leader Vgontzas and colleagues randomly selected 741 Pennsylvania men between 20 and 100, with an average age of 50, to participate in the initial phase of the study, between 1990 and 1995.
First, the volunteers identified themselves as either insomniacs or non-insomniacs. Then they spent a night in a sleep lab, where scientists confirmed how long the subjects slept.
By combining the subjects' self reports and the lab data, the team determined that 6 percent of the men had chronic insomnia.
Between 1994 and 1997, the sleep researchers studied a thousand women with a similar age range to the men. The team found that 9 percent of the women had chronic insomnia.
By the time the scientists checked in on the subjects in 2007—14 years later for the men, 10 for the women—51.1 percent of the male chronic insomniacs who slept fewer than six hours a night had died, versus 9.1 percent of the normal male sleepers.
The findings suggest that chronic male insomniacs are four times more likely to die early—even after taking into account risk factors such as smoking, obesity, and sleep apnea, Vgontzas said.
(Read secrets of why we sleep in National Geographic magazine).
There was no such link between insomnia and premature death in women—insomniacs and healthy sleepers both had a mortality rate of just over 2 percent during the study period.
There could be two reasons for the gender discrepancy, Vgontzas said: Since the women's study was started later, there was not as much time for follow-up as for the men. It's also possible there's a "gender effect"—though insomnia is less common in men, it's generally more severe, he said.
Flaws in Insomnia Study?
There were a few weaknesses in the insomnia study's design, said Garg, of the Sleep Disorders Center.
For instance, the number of subjects in the study was small: "To give that kind of bold statement [about mortality], you want to see a bigger sample," he said.
It's also possible that during their one night in the sleep lab, some subjects experienced something called a "first-night effect." In other words, the unfamiliarity of the surroundings may have influenced their sleep patterns.
Insomnia Not a Direct Killer
The researchers did not include cause of death in their study, but study leader Vgontzas said that "no one dies directly from insomnia."
Instead, the chronic disease probably just wears on people gradually, making them more likely to succumb to other ailments.
For instance, male insomniacs in the study who were also diabetic or had high blood pressure were even more likely to die during the test period than their relatively healthy counterparts.
There's also evidence that hyperarousal—a condition that causes some people to stay awake for long periods of time—can stress the cardiovascular system, the sleep center's Garg noted.
(Related: "Secrets of Sleeping Soundly Uncovered.")
Insomniacs Born Not Made?
Causes of insomnia are still poorly understood—it may be that some people are just "born poor sleepers," Vgontzas said. But even more mysterious is how to treat the condition.
For instance, insomnia medications are mostly geared toward combating occasional sleeplessness, and psychological interventions such as cognitive behavioral therapy don't seem to work for severe insomniacs, he said.
That's why federal agencies and companies need to support the search for better treatments, and doctors need to take insomnia diagnosis more seriously, Vgontzas said.
Doctors "are used to thinking insomnia is a nuisance," he said. "They have to change their attitude about that."
The insomnia-risk study appears September 1 in the journal SLEEP.
Courtesy: National Geographic
Monday, August 30, 2010
Gmail's New Voice Call Service From Google
Gmail voice and video chat makes it easy to stay in touch with friends and family using your computer’s microphone and speakers. But until now, this required both people to be at their computers, signed into Gmail at the same time. Given that most of us don’t spend all day in front of our computers, we thought, “wouldn’t it be nice if you could call people directly on their phones?”
Starting today, you can call any phone right from Gmail.
Calls to the U.S. and Canada will be free for at least the rest of the year and calls to other countries will be billed at our very low rates. We worked hard to make these rates really cheap (see comparison table) with calls to the U.K., France, Germany, China, Japan—and many more countries—for as little as $0.02 per minute.
Dialing a phone number works just like a normal phone. Just click “Call phone” at the top of your chat list and dial a number or enter a contact’s name.
We’ve been testing this feature internally and have found it to be useful in a lot of situations, ranging from making a quick call to a restaurant, to placing a call when you’re in an area with bad reception.
If you have a Google Voice phone number, calls made from Gmail will display this number as the outbound caller ID. And if you decide to, you can receive calls made to this number right inside Gmail (see instructions).
We’re rolling out this feature to U.S. based Gmail users over the next few days, so you’ll be ready to get started once “Call Phones” shows up in your chat list (you will need to install the voice and video plug-in if you haven’t already). If you’re not a U.S. based user—or if you’re using Google Apps for your school or business—then you won’t see it quite yet. We’re working on making this available more broadly—so stay tuned!
For more information, visit gmail.com/call.
Update Aug 26: This has now been rolled out to everyone in the U.S. If you don't see the feature yet, try logging out of Gmail and signing back in.
Courtesy: Official Google Blog
Thanks & Regards,
Jayaprakash.Kandasamy
Monday, May 17, 2010
PORSCHE 911 GT2 RS STEALTH LAUNCHED IN INDIA
Now and then hypercar manufacturers slip in one of their sizzlers almost stealthily and here is one such launch that almost nobody in the Indian blogosphere have a clue about. If you’re loaded to the gills and have a fetish for fast porkers, you’ll go bonkers over what you’re about to hear.
You can now buy the Porsche 911 GT2 RS right here in India, the spy pics of which we had brought you just days ago. That is, if you can afford the gargantuan price tag of over INR 1.5 Crores. Porsche aficionados will certainly be pleased to hear that the 911 GT2 RS produces about 620 Bhp from it’s 3600cc Twin Turbo Boxer engine.
All this power will push you past the 100 kph mark in under 3.5 seconds and before you read finishing this sentence, you’ll be able to doing about 200 Ks. Yes, the Porsche 911 GT2 RS will transport you past the 200 mark in under 9.8 seconds and the top speed too is a stunning 330 Kph. Now, for those who know the rich racing heritage the GT2 moniker signifies, you can be pretty certain that plenty of other hypercar drivers would shiver at the sight of a 911 GT2 in their rear view mirrors.
Monday, April 26, 2010
IPL goes 3D with SpiderCam
To reach his goal, he carried out an in depth study, made numerous calculations, plans and CAD-drawings, built models and revised them again and again. One of his major efforts was always to reach technical solutions by means of already well-known, standardised and reliable components which could be arranged in a modular manner. All developments Peters achieved are protected by international patents, and the name spidercam® is a trademark.
Moving through space without being limited by obstacles on the ground the spidercam® effortlessly and silently follows the commands of the spidercam® pilot. The free movement in space opens up completely new and unique perspectives, thus bringing your audience closer to the action than ever before. This is achieved by using the latest computer, network and drive technologies, combined with approved and high quality camera and video-components.
Four motorised winches are positioned at each corner at the base of the covered area. By controlling the up- and unwinding of the four Kevlar-cables the camera-carrier (dolly) is able to reach any position in space. The spidercam® pilot is operating this three dimensional dolly movement; his inputs are processed by a special software, which forwards the commands to the winches. This ensures the save dolly movement at any time. The real-time communication between the winches and the control station is realised by fibre-optic cables. Another two fibre-optic cables are woven into two of the Kevlar-cables, which enables double information processing: the camera and remote head receive their respective commands, while the camera transmits its HD-Signal back to the control station. The remote head, which houses the camera, is not only responsible for the pan and tilt movement, it also controls the lens remote (focus, zoom, iris). A gyro sensor, which is installed in the dolly, stabilises the horizon. A specially trained spidercam® camera operator is responsible for all camera issues.
Whether TV or film productions, indoors or outdoors, small or large areas: the characteristics of a spidercam® installation are the modular design, the low weight of the components and the small rope-forces, therefore a successful set-up is possible at almost any location. With the right preparation the installation will be realisable at even the most extraordinary places - we always find the optimal solution!
Safety is our highest priority. The spidercam® is certified by the German BGV and has been awarded the BGV C1 certification. This approval guarantees the highest level of European safety standards. In addition to the internationally approved German seal the spidercam® system is also authorized to fly over audience in accordance to the requirements of the French Bureau VERITAS.
In case of an emergency or a malfunction the security concept will stop the system immediately. This stop is composed of the deactivation of the winches and the activation of all brakes, which brings the system to a halt within milliseconds. A stop can either be initiated manually by pressing one of the "emergency stop" buttons, or automatically by one of the integrated safety protocols.
The most important security components:
- tension sensor checking the Kevlar-cables
- torque sensor checking the winding control unit
mechanical check of brake functionality
constant monitoring of the functionality of all brake contactors, motor contactors, servo amplifiers, emergency stop button and fibre optic connections
constant monitoring of the kinematics and dolly position
Monday, April 5, 2010
BSNL launches 3G services in Puducherry
PSU BSNL launched its 3G mobile services in Puducherry (earlier known as Pondicherry) falling under the Tamil Nadu circle.
The services were launched by Union Communications Minister, A Raja.
On the occasion, Mr. D.Varadarajan, CGM BSNL Tamil Nadu Circle said, “BSNL 3G Mobile service is now available to all postpaid and prepaid subscribers of Poudecherry and Karaikal city and surrounding urban areas.”
As a launch offer, BSNL is offering 3G SIM for Rs 59 with 50 free video calls and 25 MB data storage usage. After the consumption of free calls, the tariff applicable will be 30 paise per minute for local voice and video calls while STD voice and video calls will be charged 50 paise per minute.
Thursday, March 11, 2010
Find C# application running in debug or Release mode
Statments with in this block will be compiled & Executed in DEBUG mode;
#else
Statments with in this block will be compiled & Executed in Release mode;
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Making Music Boosts Brain's Language Skills
Photograph by Pete Ryan, National Geographic Stock
Do you have trouble hearing people talk at cocktail parties? Try practicing the piano before you leave the house.
Musicians—from karaoke singers to professional cello players—are better able to hear targeted sounds in a noisy environment, according to new research that adds to evidence that music makes the brain work better.
"In the past ten years there's been an explosion of research on music and the brain," Aniruddh Patel, the Esther J. Burnham Senior Fellow at the Neurosciences Institute in San Diego, said today at a press briefing.
Most recently brain-imaging studies have shown that music activates many diverse parts of the brain, including an overlap in where the brain processes music and language. (Listen to global beats at Nat Geo Music.)
Language is a natural aspect to consider in looking at how music affects the brain, Patel said. Like music, language is "universal, there's a strong learning component, and it carries complex meanings."
Above the Din
For example, brains of people exposed to even casual musical training have an enhanced ability to generate the brain wave patterns associated with specific sounds, be they musical or spoken, said study leader Nina Kraus, director of theAuditory Neuroscience Laboratory at Northwestern University in Illinois.
Kraus' previous research had shown that when a person listens to a sound, the brain wave recorded in response is physically the same as the sound wave itself. In fact "playing" the brain wave produces a nearly identical sound.
But for people without a trained ear for music, the ability to make these patterns decreases as background noise increases, experiments show. Musicians, by contrast, have subconsciously trained their brains to better recognize selective sound patterns, even as background noise goes up.
The overall effect is like a person learning to drive a manual transmission, Kraus said.
"When you first learn to drive a car, you have to think about the stick shift, the clutch, all the different parts," Kraus told National Geographic News. "But once you know, your body knows how to drive almost automatically."
At the same time, people with certain developmental disorders, such as dyslexia, have a harder time hearing sounds amid the din—a serious problem, for example, for students straining to hear the teacher in a noisy classroom.
Musical experience could therefore be a key therapy for children with dyslexia and similar language-related disorders, Kraus said today at the 2010 annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Singing Music's Praises
In a similar vein, Harvard Medical School neuroscientist Gottfried Schlaug has found that stroke patients who have lost the ability to speak can be trained to say hundreds of phrases by singing them first.
In research also presented today at the AAAS meeting, Schlaug demonstrated the results of intensive musical therapy on patients with lesions on the left sides of their brains, those areas most associated with language.
Before the therapy, these stroke patients responded to questions with largely incoherent sounds and phrases. But after just a few minutes with therapists, who asked them to sing phrases and tap their hands to the rhythm, the patients could sing "Happy Birthday," recite their addresses, and communicate if they were thirsty.
"The underdeveloped systems on the right side of the brain that respond to music became enhanced and changed structures," Schlaug said at the press briefing.
Success varied depending on how recently a person had had a stroke and the severity of the damage, he noted. But several patients were eventually able to teach themselves new words and phrases by turning them into tunes, and few were even able to move beyond simple phrases and give short speeches.
Overall, Schlaug said, the experiments show that "music might be an alternative medium for engaging parts of the brain that are otherwise not engaged."
Northwestern's Kraus agreed. She added that musical training, whatever the age, should be universally encouraged, since it can play a key role in education, clinical therapies, and even in protective measures for keeping the brain sharp as people age.
"Plus," she said, "it's just inherently wonderful."
Naps Clear Brain's Inbox, Improve Learning
Photograph by Joel Sartore, National Geographic Stock
If your brain is an email account, sleep—and more specifically, naps—is how you clear out your inbox.
That's the conclusion of a new study that may explain why people spend so many of their sleeping hours in a pre-dreaming state known as stage 2 non-rapid eye movement, or REM, sleep.
For years sleep studies have hinted that shut-eye improves our ability to store and consolidate memories, reinforcing the notion that a good night's sleep—and power naps—is much more conducive to learning than an overnight cram session.
Now scientists may have figured out how, in part, this happens: During sleep, information locked in the short-term storage of the hippocampus—the part of the brain responsible for memories—migrates into the longer-term database of the cortex.
This action not only helps the brain process new information, it also clears out space for the brain to take in new experiences.
That means "it's not just important to sleep after learning, it's critical to sleepbefore learning," study leader Matthew Walker, of the University of California, Berkeley, said today during a press briefing.
"Sleep prepares the brain like a dry sponge, ready to soak up new information."
Power Naps
In his latest work, presented today at a meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in San Diego, Walker and colleagues asked 39 young adults to perform several tasks related to fact-based learning.
One group was then asked to take a 90-minute nap while the other group stayed awake.
Afterward, both groups engaged in a new round of tasks. The non-nappers performed much worse than the nappers, the researchers found.
Measuring the nappers' electrical activity in the brain revealed that their "cache" cleared during stage 2 non-REM sleep.
The new work not only backs up the benefits of midday naps, it also may have also solved the long-standing mystery of why people need stage 2 non-REM sleep.
Although the "dreaming" sleep stage known as REM is perhaps better known, humans actually spend about half of the night in stage 2 non-REM.
REM sleep is crucial for more complex thinking, such as making nonobvious connections between previously learned facts—a process he describes as "a Google search gone wrong—or right."
"When you have a problem, no one says you should 'stay awake on it,'" he quipped.
Instead, sleep—specifically the REM stage—is a way for the brain to take information that might at first seem unrelated to your mental "search" and come up with creative solutions.
In fact, he said, our dreams could be a testing ground for this subconcious problem-solving.
Not Everyone Built for Naps
Unfortunately, the new findings don't mean that all people would benefit from an afternoon siesta, noted Sara Mednick, a psychiatry professor at the University of California, San Diego.
Some nappers tend to wake up groggy and disoriented because of something called sleep inertia. (Related: "Night Owls Stay Alert Longer Than Early Birds.")
"This is when you wake up during deep, slow-wave sleep," she said today during the briefing. Since brain temperature and blood flow to the brain decrease during this sleep stage, it's jarring to suddenly be awake and experiencing much higher rates of brain activity.
Previous studies have shown that habitual nappers tend to be light sleepers. This means they spend much less time, at least during the first few hours of sleep, in a deep non-REM sleep state.
If naps leave you groggy, it's also possible to get a similar performance boost on some tasks simply by taking a mental time-out, she said.
"In some cases," she said, "quiet rest and naps give the same [memory] benefits."
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Windows XP Control Panel, Shortcuts and Control.exe
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As the name suggests, Control Panel is where many important system settings can be changed or adjusted. Since so many vital functions can be found there, it is worth looking at some aspects of how it works. We will also consider some ways of quickly accessing this very important system area. Going over the entire panoply of functions is too much for a single article but shortcuts for a few frequently used functions are given. The standard way to open Control Panel is through Start-Control Panel. There are two methods of displaying the contents. One is called the "Category View" and displays tasks by generalized categories as shown in the figure below.
Choosing a category leads to another box with a further choice of tasks or icons for specific control panel applets. The figure below shows the choice when "Performance and Maintenance" is clicked .
A second way of displaying Control Panel is called the "Classical View" and displays icons for individual applets. A partial view is shown below. Some of these applets may have several tabs that open different functions.
Control Panel AppletsSome of the components of the Control Panel are special system folders but many are determined by a group of files with the extension CPL. Most of these files are in the folder\Windows\System32\; some that are part of application software may be elsewhere. To find which CPL files are on your system, go to Windows Search and search for all files with name *.cpl. The table below lists some of the common CPL files. CPL files can be used to directly access various features of Control Panel by opening them with eitherRundll32.exe or Control.exe. By this means, scripts or shortcuts can be written for immediate access to particular functions. Commands using these files can also be entered into the Start-Run line. Note that some CPL files are multi-functional and require additional parameters to invoke the various functions. Parameters use the "@" sign and a zero-based integer. Tabs are denoted by additional indexes (not necessarily zero-based integers). More details are given in the section on shortcuts below.
Shortcuts and Scripts Using Control.exeAs outlined at the beginning of this page, the standard way to open Control Panel functions by using Start-Control Panel requires several steps. If a particular function is frequently used, it may be convenient to create a shortcut that opens the desired window directly. It is common on the Internet to find shortcuts that use the executable fileRundll32.exe to open CPL files and these are discussed here. However, many of the standard shortcuts are for Windows 98/Me and do not work in Windows XP. Also there are easier, shorter ways available for Control Panel applets. Using Rundll32.exe is a general method applicable to many different types of DLL files with a complicated syntax. For CPL files there is a specific method using the executable Control.exe that I think is preferable. It has the simpler syntax shown below. control somefile.cpl,<optional arguments> Here, somefile.cpl stands for whichever of the CPL files is of interest. There are two types of optional arguments. They are of the form "@m,n" (without the quotes.) Here "m" and "n" are integers. Thus, the full expression when optional arguments are included is
The parameter @m is used for files with more than one basic function and starts with zero, which is the default value if no parameter is used. For example, main.cpl controls both mouse and keyboard properties. Thus, either the command control main.cpl or control main.cpl,@0 would open the mouse properties. To open the keyboard properties the command would be control main.cpl,@1 The second set of optional parameters "n" can be used when a dialog box is tabbed. A number of the values are given in Table I. For example, the default window when the mouse properties dialog is opened is the "Buttons" tab. To open the"Pointer Options" tab (third on the list) the command would be control main.cpl,@0,2 Note that here the index "n" is zero-based so the third tab has an index of 2. Many control panel files have only one main page and the "@m" index can be omitted. In that case, to open a particular tab requires two commas between the file name and the tab index. For example, the dialog box for System Properties has a number of tabs as listed in the table above. A specific one of these can be opened by adding a parameter so that the command reads control.exe sysdm.cpl,,n where "n" is an integer running from 0 to 6 corresponding to the 7 tabs listed in Table I. Unfortunately, Microsoft is not consistent in how it indexes tabs. For example, when using access.cpl, the tabs run from 1 to 5 instead of beginning with zero. Some files can only be opened at a few tabs or only at the beginning tab. For instance, Power Options has four tabs but they are not accessible with an index. The only way to find out what system applies to a particular file seems to be trial and error. Also note that the numbering of tabs for many files is not the same in Windows XP as it was in Windows 98/Me. Also, at least one change was made in Windows XP SP2. Many of the values are given in the book, Microsoft Windows XP, Inside Out (2d edition), by Bott, Siechert, and Stinson, which has been used as a partial source for Table I above. Easier Shortcuts Using Control.exeTrying to open control panel applets with commands containing the complexity of index parameters discussed in the previous section may seem rather daunting to some PC users. Fortunately, there are some alternate commands using plain names that can also be used. These do not seem to be as well-known but are discussed in Microsoft'sMSDN library. Fewer possibilities are available than with the previously discussed methods but there are some new commands as well. Three that work in Start-Run are given below.
Scripts using Shell objectControl panel applets can also be opened with JScript or VBScript files using the Shell.Application object and its ControlPanelItem method . For a control panel appletsomefile.cpl the syntax is Other ShortcutsThere are also a number of other quick ways to get to some of the Control Panel components. Here is a short list of some.
Note that any file with extension CPL can be used directly as long as your system has the usual file association of CPL with Control.exe. To see how to check your file associations or to change file associations go to this tutorial. |