Tuesday, August 25, 2009

New Maruti Estilo

http://www.autopundit.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/02/suzuki-mr-wagon-zen-estilo.jpg

India’s leading car manufacturer Maruti Suzuki India, has launched a new version of its small car Estilo with a fuel efficient engine at an introductory price between Rs 3.12 lakh and Rs 3.95 lakh (ex-showroom, Delhi).

The new 998 CC petrol car is equipped with the latest K-series engines, on the lines of the company’s other small cars — A-Star and Ritz.

“Product upgradation is an integral part of Maruti Suzuki’s business strategy and future plans. This is a way to include feedback from the customers and offer better products that match their tastes,” Maruti Suzuki India Managing Director and CEO Shinzo Nakanishi told reporters here.

According to the Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI), Estilo would run 18.2 km in every litre of petrol.

The new Estilo would be produced from MSI’s Gurgaon plant, which also manufactures the A-Star and the Ritz. The existing Zen Estilo comes with a 1.1 litre petrol engine.

ICSI Company Secretary Results

ICSI Company Secretary Results Update:
The foundation, Inter and Final CS Exam Results will be declared today. JUNE 2009 EXAMINATION RESULT WILL BE DECLARED ON 25th AUGUST 2009 AT 12:00 NOON


Previous:
Examination Result - DECEMBER 2008 Session

Check here for New Syllabus
http://icsi.edu/default_resultaticsinew.htm

Check here for Old Syllabus
http://icsi.edu/Default_oldatresultdecember2008.htm

Check here for Merit List
http://www.icsi.edu:8888/Student/MeritList/Merit_Check_list.aspx

How to get the results through email?
Latest notifications from ICSI is that the company secretary CS results will be declared and all the registered candidates can access the same via the official website of ICSI at www.icsi.edu.

When you visit the website you can find the link to register your mail ID to receive the CS results - all the candidates who successfully subscribe for receiving the results through mail will be sent the CS Result of December 2008 session through email once they are declared.

Here is the link that you need to go to for registering your mail ID

http://www.icsi.edu/webmodules/icsiweb/works/homepage/resemailnew.asp

Monday, August 24, 2009

Liverpool vs Aston Villa

7:45pm: "I'm an American," admits Ed Brickell. "And I profess to know a lot about the history of English football, so I'm going to submit President George Washington as the answer to both survey questions."

7:42pm: "I don't know the answer to either questions," confesses gormless Gary Tynan. "But I do remember Steve Staunton stepping up to take a penalty towards the end of his Villa career. As he did so the commentator noted that Stan had never missed a penalty before. He then missed." Had he even taken a penalty before that? I don't recall any off hand.

7:40pm: Jan Molby and John Barnes are your early leading responses to Question 1, somewhat surprisingly. No one has even mentioned Phil Neal. "I've just finished reading War & Peace," boasts Colin Greer. "I was amazed at the similarity between the main character - Pierre Bezukhov - and Rafa Benitez. Both are intelligent (but not dominated by reason), both have trouble controlling their emotions (which leads to conflict with rivals) and they are both fat. Seeing as no one I know has read the book, could you please present this analogy to your readers as a discussion point?" Thank you for making my questions look interesting.

7:35pm: "I am looking forward to seeing how well Liverpool keep up their quest for second place<" blurts Randy Denton. "Did you know that after eight games last year Tottenham only had two points? That's what my friend, Harry, told me today. And yesterday. And the day before that. And the day before the day." Nice use of commas there, Randy, suggesting as it did that Harry is your one and only friend. But hey, at least your waggery paves the way for another question to which there may be a multitude of answers: precisely how will Tottenham sabotage their own season this time round? I'm guessing they mighty get all giddy about their plans for a new stadium and knock down the current one around Christmas, thus making it impossible for them to complete their fixtures and compelling the FA to demote to the North London six-a-side indoor league (Wednesday afternoon section).

Are there really more questions than answers? Or merely more questions than correct answers? Let's run a little survey, shall we? Here are two questions, let's see who can come up with the answer that the majority of readers will deem correct (please be aware that I'm going to look pretty stupid if no one bother replying to this ... so in 15 minutes or so I may just go back and delete this proposal and make like it never happened. In which case, don't tell anyone).
1) Who is the greatest set-piece taker in the history of either of these clubs?
2) Who is the most enlightened monarch in the history of humanity?

Plea in lieu of a preamble:
"Don't bother with a preamble tonight," implores George Templeton, whose request I am only too happy to grant. "Let me save you and your loyal readers their valuable time and reveal that Liverpool will thrash Aston Villa 4-0. Fernando Torres will score two, Steven Gerrard will dive to get a penalty and, even worse Dirk Kuyt, will score. It will be ugly with a capital U. I am a Villa fan and it will be as much fun as a safe getting dropped on my head." Well, given Villa's origami-inspired behaviour at places such as Anfield and Old Trafford, that sounds fairly accurate to me, though I wouldn't be surprised if Benayoun chipped in with one of the goals. A lovely player, to be sure.

Teams:
Liverpool: Reina, Johnson, Carragher, Skrtel, Insua,
Mascherano, Lucas, Kuyt, Gerrard, Benayoun, Torres. Subs: Cavalieri, Voronin, Riera, Babel, Kelly, Dossena, Ayala.

Aston Villa: Friedel, Beye, Davies, Cuellar, Shorey, Milner, Sidwell, Petrov, Reo-Coker, A Young, Agbonlahor.
Subs: Guzan, Albrighton, Delfouneso, Delph, Heskey, Gardner, Lowry.

Referee: Martin Atkinson (W Yorkshire)

Miss Universe 2009

Miss Venezuela Stefania Fernandez, center, was named Miss Universe 2009, Sunday night in Nassau, Bahamas. Miss Dominican Republic Ada Aimee De la Cruz, l., was first runner up.

Nokia Booklet 3G brings all day mobility to the PC world

Espoo, Finland - After more than 25 years as a pioneer and leader in the mobile industry, Nokia will bring its rich mobility heritage and knowledge to the PC world with the new, Windows based, Nokia Booklet 3G.
Powered by the efficient Intel Atom processor, the Nokia Booklet 3G delivers impressive performance with up to 12 hours of battery life, enabling people to leave their power cable behind and still be connected and productive. Delivering the rich experience of a full-function PC inside an ultra-portable aluminum chassis, the new mini-laptop weighs 1.25 kilograms, measures slightly more than two centimeters thin, and has the features one would expect from the world's leading mobile device manufacturer. A broad range of connectivity options - including 3G/ HSPA and Wi-Fi - gives consumers high speed access to the Internet, including Nokia's broad suite of Ovi services, and allows them to make the most of every moment and every opportunity.
"A growing number of people want the computing power of a PC with the full benefits of mobility," said Kai Oistamo, Nokia's Executive Vice President for Devices. "We are in the business of connecting people and the Nokia Booklet 3G is a natural evolution for us. Nokia has a long and rich heritage in mobility and with the outstanding battery life, premium design and all day, always on connectivity, we will create something quite compelling. In doing so we will make the personal computer more social, more helpful and more personal."
The mini-laptop also comes with an HDMI port for HD video out, a front facing camera for video calling, integrated Bluetooth and an easily accessible SD card reader. Other premium features include the 10-inch glass HD ready display and integrated A-GPS which, working with the Ovi Maps gadget, can pinpoint your position in seconds and open up access for a truly personal maps experience. The Nokia Booklet 3G also brings a number of other rich Ovi experiences to life, whether its access and playback of millions of tracks through the Nokia Music Store, or using Ovi Suite to sync seamlessly from your Nokia smartphone, to your mini-laptop, to the cloud.
The Nokia Booklet 3G will widen the Nokia portfolio, satisfying a need in the operator channel, and bringing another important ingredient in the move towards becoming a mobile solutions company.

India second in ICC Test Rankings

Success is easy to gain, hard to maintain. The adage seems to be true for Australian Cricket team who ended this Ashes series with a humiliating defeat. With this demise, Australia has slipped in ICC rankings.

According to a report, the Aussies has been knocked off its long-held perch as the number-one team in the ICC Test Championship after losing the Ashes series 1-2 in England.

England celebrated the 197 runs victory over Australia in the final Test at the Oval.

With Australia going down to fourth position in the rankings, South Africa assumed top spot followed by Sri Lanka-second and India-third.

Australia has been knocked off top spot for the first time since the current method of ranking was introduced in May 2003. According to the rule, the Test team rankings are only updated at the end of the each series.

Gaining six rating points, England stays fifth in the ranking.

ICC Test Championship (as of August 23, 2009)


Rank Team Rating

1 South Africa 122
2 Sri Lanka 119
3 India 119
4 Australia 116
5 England 105
6 Pakistan 84
7 New Zealand 82
8 West Indies 76
9 Bangladesh 13

Galileo's Telescope

Four hundred years ago, our understanding of the universe changed forever. On Aug. 25, 1609, an Italian mathematician called Galileo Galilei, demonstrated his newly constructed telescope to the merchants of Venice.

Shortly afterwards, he turned it on the skies. He saw mountains casting shadows on the moon and realized this body was a world, like the Earth, endowed with complicated terrain. He saw the moons of Jupiter that circled another heavenly body in direct disobedience of the church's teaching. He saw the moonlike phases of Venus, indicating (it) circled the sun, not the Earth, in even greater disobedience of the priests. He saw sunspots, demonstrating that the sun itself was not the perfect orb demanded by the Greek cosmology adopted by the church.

But he also saw something else. He saw that the Milky Way, that cloudy streak across the sky, is made of stars. That observation was the first hint that, not only is the Earth not the centre of things, but those things are vastly, almost incomprehensibly, bigger than people up until that date had dreamed. Astronomers' latest estimates put the age of the universe at about 13.7 billion years, three times as long as the Earth has existed and about 100,000 times the lifespan of modern humanity as a species. The true size is still unknown. Its age and the finite speed of light, means no astronomer can look beyond a distance of 13.7 billion light-years. But it is probably bigger than that.

Physics, astronomy's dutiful daughter, suggests that the object that people call the universe, vast though it is, may be just one of an indefinite number of similar structures, (each) governed by slightly different rules that inhabit what is referred to, for want of a better term, as the multiverse.

The shattering of the crystal spheres which Galileo's contemporaries thought held the planets and the stars, with the sphere containing the stars representing the edge of the universe, is (along with Darwin's discovery of evolution by natural selection) the biggest revolution in self-knowledge that mankind has undergone.

The world Galileo was born into was of comprehensible compass. The Greeks had a fair idea of the size of the Earth and the distance to the moon, and so did the medievals who read their work. These were distances that the imagination might, at a stretch, embrace. It was easier to believe that a human-sized universe was brought into being with humanity in mind.

It is harder though to argue that the modern version of cosmology which is multiversal rather than universal, has come about for mankind's convenience.

Four centuries on, it is difficult to think of Galileo's intellectual heirs, meeting this week in Rio de Janeiro under the auspices of the International Astronomical Union, as firebrand revolutionaries. Yet their discoveries – from planets around other stars that may support alien life to dark matter and energy of unknown nature are no less world-changing than his. Moderns may be more comfortable than medievals with the idea that man's notion of his place within the universe can suddenly change. That should not blind them to the wonder of it.

Source: The Star