Ye Meri Life Hai - Chirag Mehta

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Tag: India (page 4 of 18)

Why we keep patriotism just a line for 2 days in a year?

The world states India to be Economic Capital of World in near future!

India’s economy to be completely stable or maintain a complete stance in 2009 where as US and European economies going to see economic downturn in the coming quarters Swiss banking major UBS said.

The Japanese economy is expected to stagnate at best in the coming year. Large countries such as China, India or Indonesia should fare better, as they have a smaller export ratio than the smaller Asian economies,” UBS economists stated.

In Just feet of 61th years of independence, I as India had started gaining confidence of world in terms of economics. Then what’s wrong with following

Why we keep fighting on communal or regional lines?
Why don’t we strive to serve nation?
Why we keep patriotism just a line for 2 days in a year?
Why we want Maharashtra or Bihar to be a different country alike?
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Friends request you to please comment and discuss on this serious talk of the nation. I Chirag Mehta welcome you all to this tribute line we need to feel in our heart.

Sky is not the limit for India anymore

After nine years of hard work, the countdown for Chandrayaan-1 – India’s first unmanned moon mission – has begun at the Sriharikota space station. The launch is scheduled for early Wednesday morning.

Chandrayaan-1 will orbit the moon for about two years, mapping the topography and mineral content of the lunar soil. It will take off from Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh, about 80 km from Chennai, and off the Bay of Bengal.

The Chandrayaan-1 launch would be around 0620 hrs IST on October 22, weather conditions permitting.

Ninety-nine per cent of the integration and testing is complete and the countdown has begun for India’s historic tryst with the moon.The success of Chandrayaan-1 will catapult India among the top five space exploring countries of the world.

Chairman of Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) Dr G Madhavan Nair said, “It has been a dream of Indian scientists to send satellites around the moon and collect data about its surface features, minerals and so on.”

Experts said that just getting the satellite right isn’t enough. A huge ground network is needed to monitor and control it. So 30 kilometres outside Bangalore, ISRO built this tracking station.

Director of ISRO Satellite Centre, TK Alex said, “We have to make sure that the trajectory is correct. Moon must be exactly where we decided it should be when we designed the satellite.”

While Indians designed and built everything on this mission – they weren’t averse to letting others hitch a ride. There are 11 different machines on board this mission – five from India, four from Europe and two from NASA.

On Wednesday morning, nine years of hard work will be put to the test. If successful, the Chandrayaan-1 mission will be a clear statement that sky is not the limit for India anymore.

Is India’s strong enough to weather the storm in the world financial market

The global economic crisis has come to India. Share markets are down; industrial production is down and the mood among businesses and investors is down.

The Prime Minister, Finance Minister and the RBI Governor have repeated said India’s economy strong enough to weather the storm in the world financial market and it’s banks have enough money.“The fundamentals of the Indian economy have been strong and continue to be strong. The Indian banking system is sound, well capitalised and well regulated,” said RBI Governor D Subbarao yet again on Friday night.

Is India’s strong enough to weather the storm in the world financial market? Is your money safe? A CNN-IBN show hosted by Karma Paljor discussed this on Friday with CNBC-TV18’s Banking Editor Latha Venkatesh, leading market expert S P Tulsian, who is the CEO of www.sptulsian.com, and Rajiv Bajaj, MD of Bajaj Capital.

Is your money safe ?

If a bank goes bust

Delhi resident Deven Mehta wanted to know what would happen to his money in savings account if his bank were declared bankrupt? “Is it true that the amount of Rs 1,00,000 is insured in the savings account of any bank?” he asked.

“Yes, an amount of Rs 1,00,000 is insured for every depositor. The rules of Indian commercial banks are such that they render depositors safe,” said Venkatesh.

“For every Rs 100 a bank collects as deposit, Rs 25 will have to be kept with the government as bonds. Governments cannot default, so Rs 25 is anyway safe. Another 8.5 per cent cash should be kept with the RBI, so that is safe again. Besides these there are other safeguards in the banking system.”

“Lehman Brothers lent 40 times its capital as loans and Goldman Sachs lent 27 times it capital but India is nowhere near that kind of cowboy lending,” said Venkatesh.

Safest bank?

As Indians feared for their deposits, the talk on the street was that public sector banks were safer. Is this true?

“Every institution should not be seen in the same light anymore. One should rate the credit-worthiness of an institution and even banks are subject to credit ratings. One should see the credit-worthiness of a bank and not whether it is public or private. I would keep my money in a Triple-A rated institution,” said Bajaj.

Should Indians withdraw their money from British banks? Is it the Indian government which guarantees savings in foreign banks?

Venkatesh’s advice was not to be scared, as the British government was doing its utmost to help its banks. “The British government has gone all out to reassure its banks in a big way. I assume that that assurance applies to branches in India. I think a scare (about British banks) is uncalled for. British banks is an umbrella term, one would have to refer to individual banks,” she said.

Staying invested

Bangalore resident Rakesh Kumar invested in the markets when the Sensex was at 20,000. “I can afford to remain invested for the next three years. Is my money safe or should I sell bearing a huge loss?” he asked.

Tulsian’s advice was: if you are an investor you must hold and if you are a trader you must sell. Now is a good time for people who have funds and are waiting to invest in shares.

Stocks of PSU banks, sugar stocks, pharmaceutical and FMCG companies look good for investment, he said.

It always the right time to invest—investors right now have to decide whether they want to preserve their money or use it to buy stocks which are normally unaffordable, said Bajaj.

“If I want to play safe I would probably put my money in gold mutual funds, which is a very good instrument to invest in this uncertain period,” said Bajaj.

Invest in equity funds and choose a large fund management house, which has lots off assets under management and a track record of at least 5-10 years. “Choose a large-cap and diversified fund. Whenever the market recovers, large and frontline companies will go up first, so invest in a large-cap fund,” said Bajaj.

Wait, watch and invest cautiously was the advice of the experts.

Excerpt From IBN Live.com

CAPTCHA-breaking is a huge business in India

Small Iindian companies solving 25K captchas per day!!! and that’s a headache for Gmail/Hotmail/yahoo.

CAPTCHA-breaking is a huge business in nations like India, where workers will input thousands of CAPTCHAs per day in exchange for a minuscule amount of money per CAPTCHA successfully decoded.

2008 hasn’t been the best year for CAPTCHA-based anti-spam systems; Google’s Gmail CAPTCHA was broken in February, followed by that of Hotmail in April. Researchers have fought back by incorporating images into CAPTCHAs, but this is only effective against bot-driven CAPTCHA crackers, and while automated attackers may be responsible for a majority of the CAPTCHA-breaking attempts that occur every day, they no longer account for the entirety.

Dancho Danchev, writing for ZDNet, reports on the emergence of CAPTCHA-breaking as an economic model in India. He reports that it’s impossible to untangle the corporate web that’s unfurled, given that large CAPTCHA-breaking companies often farm work out to multiple smaller businesses, but all available information suggests that CAPTCHA-cracking (referred to as “solving” in marketing parlance) is a booming sector of the Indian tech economy. Danchev reports that CAPTCHA-crackers can earn more per day than they can as legitimate data processing centers.

Indian CAPTCHA-crackers (perhaps they were Chinese gold farmers in another life) appear to earn between 1/10 and 1/8 of a cent per CAPTCHA solved. The businesses in question advertise a wide range of available CAPTCHAs per day; smaller outfits claim they can provide 25,000-50,000 solutions per day, while large-scale operations advertise themselves as producing up to 700,000 CAPTCHAs in a single day. These cracking systems are also designed to minimize lag; one company states it can return CAPTCHAs from MySpace within 20 seconds, though they rather humorously note: “We run into many slowdowns. The most common bottleneck is that MySpace itself is often bogged down, slow and error prone, which then makes it very difficult for our servers to pull captchas quickly.”

One can’t help wondering if heavy traffic from India is one reason why MySpace is boggy, lethargic, and “error-prone.” CAPTCHAs may not be dead, at least not yet, but the corporatization of breaking spells serious trouble for any company that relies on CAPTCHAs to foil spammers. They were nice while they lasted (if occasionally impossible to read), but it’s hard to see how researchers will find a CAPTCHA that legitimate customers can read that remains illegible to humans paid to solve them.

Source : ArsTechnica

Want to make a bomb? Just log on to the Net

Type “How to Make a Bomb” on Google and you will get a long list of sites that give ingredients, measurements, directions – everything you need – to kill.

IBNLive.com directs us on above thing as follows …

Want to make a bomb

The question is: Even after Delhi’s serial blasts, why is such information freely available? Internet Service Providers, through whose servers all Internet traffic in India flows – say they need directive to shut down.

Internet Security expert, Rajesh Chharia says, “We can shut down these sites in five minutes. But we need a Government order.”

Pasting a site’s address on a service provider’s server is all it takes to block it in India. But terrorists get around that by pasting the same information on a new site or by using proxy servers. Countries abroad have found a lasting solution to the problem.

Cyber Security expert, Rajat Khare says, “The Middle East uses content filtering software at its international gateways. All traffic is electronically checked. If it has any objectionable keywords like porn or bomb, it’s automatically blocked. Problem is, it’s an electronic invasion of your privacy. And it requires lots of money to implement.”

Nuclear weapons’ manuals were once easily available on the Net. However, the US took them down after the 9/11 attacks.

Last year, the European Union outlawed all bomb making websites as part of the war against terror.

Surprisingly, India hasn’t made any such move inspite of being hounded by terrorism for more than two decades.

We India are the IT hub of the world but still when it comes to usage of IT for domestic purpose we lack way beyond, why so ?

Satyam to axe 4,500 employees

Satyam Computers, which has just started giving pink slips to its employees, could potentially downsize its workforce by a whopping 4,500 employees.

This translates to a little less than 9 per cent of the 51,000 employees that the company employs. Company sources say 1,500 employees have been put under the performance improvement plan (PIP), euphemism for employees put on watch list and asked to shape up or ship out.

Apart from this, 3,000 others have not been given any increment in the last appraisal cycle, thereby indicating that their services are dispensable.

“This 1,500 plus 3,000 equals 4,500, which indicates the total number of persons who could be eased out of the company,” the source said.

On Friday, all employees received an email from the company chief Ramalinga Raju warning them, especially the ones on the bench, to not bunk office and be in their best dress code, failing which they may face strict disciplinary action.

Last week, some 400 employees from across different locations were given the pink slip. Sources also indicated that after getting the message many among the 3,000 have also started leaving jobs. But an estimate of the employees who have left is not known.

A Satyam spokesperson said: “The bottom 5 per cent of those who have got a bad appraisal are put under PIP and given dummy projects to prove themselves. If they fail they will be shown the door. But some of them marked for PIP said they have been given very little time to come up as winners.”

However, even as it downsizes, Satyam continues to hire new employees in thousands. Over 40 per cent of them are fresh blood just passing out of college.

The spectre of retrenchment is creating panic among employees of the company. “Of the 12 people working in my project, five were suddenly asked to resign, failing which, the company warned, it would fire us. Everything came without warning,” said a techie pleading anonymity.

Source of above pleading anonymity @ Indiatimes Infotech

Lehman bankruptcy will hit IIM placements

With America’s fourth largest investment bank Lehman Brothers filing for bankruptcy protection and Merrill Lynch being bought over by the Bank of America, placements at the Indian Institutes of Management will be affected.

These financial giants have so far been the biggest recruiters from the IIMs especially from the institutes at Ahmedabad, Bangalore and Calcutta.These have been among the day zero firms on IIM campuses and have made plum job offers.

“We are sitting on pre-placement offers from these companies, which go invalid after this development. So, the students will have to go through the regular placement process and look at other companies,” said professor Sourav Mukherjee, chairperson, placements, IIM-Bangalore.

The institute will write to these banks in the next few weeks to seek clarification on the issue. Last year, IIM Bangalore had received around 20 job offers from the banks.

IIM Calcutta has recorded 54 offers so far from these banking banks. Last year, IIM-C received 90 pre-placement offers. Students have been offered international profiles with BCG, Mckinsey, Bain and AT Kearney in the consulting sector and Merrill Lynch, Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers, Barclays, HSBC, Credit Suisse and Citibank in the investment banking sector. The institutes however, are not very enthusiastic of the banking and financial sector doing well on the campus this year.

“Banking giants like Lehman and Merrill have been the leading paymasters on our campus, offering crore-plus salaries. The confidence of students in the banking sector is collapsing with the bad news from the market,” said an IIM professor.

The IIMs have decided to host new companies on campus. Many institutes have decided to invite smaller private equity players and wealth management firms. Unlike most years, the banking and financial services sector is not expected to be the best performer on campus this year.

Read Complete Story @ Rediff India Abroad

India Inc feels the tremor as Lehman goes bust

Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (LBHI) bankruptcy and Merrill Lynch’s acquisition by Bank of America will have a huge impact on India as both companies have a strong Indian connection.

Lehman Brothers currently employs about 2,500 people in India and most of them are likely to lose their jobs. Merrill Lynch also employs 600 people in India and their fate is not known.

The global investment bank’s move to file bankruptcy has already lead to a loss of nearly Rs 2,000 crore for Indian companies in which Lehman had made equity investments.

The loss would have been higher if Lehman had not started offloading its equity holdings in Indian firms last month.

Following the subprime crisis in the United States of America, Foreign Institutional Investors have already pulled out over $8 billion from Indian markets..

Read Complete Story @ IBNLive.com

US Dept Responses to 45 Questions concerning 123 Agreement

Ack :- Sunil Nandipati

Following is the letter by US Dept of State as a response to 45 Questions concerning 123 Agreement

http://media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/documents/Lantos_Letter.pdf

U.S. and India Release Text of 123 Agreement

Ack :- Sunil Nandipati

The following link lists the text of the Agreement for Cooperation between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of India concerning peaceful uses of nuclear energy i.e., 123 Agreement

Access Complete 123 Agreement Text @ http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2007/aug/90050.htm

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