Tuesday, 9 October 2012


Mercury Launches 7" Tablet mTAB7 at Rs 6'499

New Delhi: With an eye to cater to the price sensitive Indian market that looks for low cost, feature rich tablets, Kobian has unveiled an ultra-thin tablet, the Mercury mTAB7. The tablet comes with 1 year warranty and is priced at Rs 6,499.
Key Features:

  • 1.2 GHz Cortex A8 processor, 512MB DDRM

  • 4GB internal storage

  • 32GB extendable memory through MicroSD card

  • In-built Wi-Fi, and 3G (Via external dongle)

  • Android 4.0 platform

  • 32GB extendable memory through MicroSD card

  • 0.3-megapixel front camera

  • Built-in speaker with full HD

  • Adobe Flash 11.1.

The 5 Best Foods on the Planet


          Superfoods Benefits Debunked


The health and fitness industry cannot survive without realizing the benefits of Superfoods in our diet. However, researchers now claim that the health promoting properties or the nutrients in the superfoods does not fully assimilate in our systems.

Researchers claim that broccoli, whole grains and berries do have high antioxidant and anti inflammatory properties , but these nutrients rarely get absorbed by our system during digestion. Lucy Jones, Kingston University's deputy dean and the other researchers told IANS.

They claim that Polyphenols in superfoods have many benefiting factors , but in real life they don’t break down well in our systems. It can show entirely different results in laboratories.
The simple logic they give it that if the food doesn’t get through our guts and into our body then they are not superfoods.
They experiment it by creating a model called Caco-2, which imitates the action of the small intestine, the principal place where nutrients absorbed.






80% Urban Indian Women Overweight: Study

A shocking 80 percent of Indian working women in the 25 to 45 age group are overweight or fat because of their lifestyle and food habits. The survey was called ‘Rising Workplace Obesity among Indian Women’ and was conducted by Healthji.com in association with Leisa's Secret, as told by IANS. 
The survey revealed that most women claimed that they are overweight because of the sedentary life at work, unhealthy food habits and lack of exercise. 
The survey was conducted in all the cosmopolitan cities of India with 2000 participants. 

Overweight women also face the symptoms of putting on extra weight like lack of sleep , depression and self consciousness. It tends to add more to the misery , Heal Foundation president R. Shankar tells IANS . 

Women, especially in the technology sector tend to put on more weight than the others as they have to spend a lot of time in their work station which doesn’t involve much exercise.  
Women involved in jobs where they have to involve their brains rather than their stamina, put on extra weight because their working hour activities only involves fetching eatables and taking breaks, says Shanker. 

Urban homemakers also at risk as they hardly give time to exercise and are busy only in their household chores. 

The only solution to avoid obesity and the many underlying diseases  in women caused by sedentary lifestyle is to exercise daily for at least 30 minutes, have regular walks and avoid junk food and have a positive outlook to life.

Thursday, 27 September 2012


One certain forecast in U.S. poll dispute: more acrimony ahead.

Republican presidential candidate and former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney speaks at a campaign fund raiser in Washington, DC September 27, 2012.

(Reuters) - It has become the new battle cry for Republicans: All the polls showing Mitt Romney trailing by big margins are just wrong because pollsters are interviewing too many Democrats.
Surveys showing President Barack Obama leading nationally by 5 to 7 points, and even more in swing states, have come under fire from the Romney campaign and conservatives who accuse polling companies of misjudging their data at best, and deliberately skewing it against Romney at worst.
While pollsters say the Republicans are griping because they are losing, the kernel of the conservatives' complaints - that pollsters frequently survey more Democrats than Republicans - is true.
But poll companies do not go out of their way to find Democrats - it is just that there are more of them on voter registers than there are Republicans and independents.
Thirty-five percent of registered voters identify with Democrats, 28 percent with Republicans, and 33 percent are independents, according to a Pew study in August.
That make-up of the electorate is reflected in many of the recent polls that show Obama well ahead in the race for the November 6 election.
Even then, Democrats do appear to be over-represented in some of the surveys being criticized by Republicans. The percentage of Democrats interviewed in some polls is a few points higher than the 35 percent found in the Pew study.
"I'm a little uncomfortable at some of the samples, which strike me as surprisingly Democratic," said Stuart Rothenberg, publisher of the non-partisan Rothenberg Political Report, which analyzes political races.
But given the number of public - and internal campaign polls - with similar results, Rothenberg said it was clear that Obama had a healthy lead over Romney, 40 days before Election Day.
"If I don't focus on an individual poll here or there and look at the dynamic of the race, and the broad array of polls, it tells me that the president has a significant lead at this point," he said.
The debate over polls intensified on Wednesday, when a trend of improving numbers for Obama solidified. A Quinnipiac/New York Times/CBS poll in particular drew protests for giving Obama big leads in the swing states of Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania.
Peter Brown, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University polling institute, said Quinnipiac's samples were random.
Quinnipiac, like most pollsters, does not choose who it will interview based on party affiliation.
If a certain percentage of respondents are Democrats, then that is just because it has turned out that way, Brown said.
"Our numbers are based on a random sample," he said. "We get what we get."
Some conservatives agree reluctantly that, overall, the polls are not going in Romney's favor.
"I've been in politics long enough to know that the louder one side gets complaining about the polls, the more likely it is that this is the side that, in reality, actually is losing," conservative commentator Erick Erickson, who runs the RedState blog, wrote on Thursday.
POLLS 'PERFORM QUITE WELL'
Pollsters point to history, noting that surveys often get the races right.
"I don't want to be making a claim that the polling is infallible, or even that the average of the poll is infallible," said Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette University poll in Wisconsin. "But the more polls we have across more races, meaning different states and nationally across different years ... on average they perform quite well."
In 2010, when Republicans won huge victories in the midterm elections, Democrats accused polling firms of oversampling Republicans, but the results proved them wrong.
The last presidential election when pollsters were off track was George W. Bush's Electoral College victory in 2000, when opinion surveys forecast that the Republican would win the popular vote, but he ended up trailing Al Gore.
This year, conservatives began grumbling about alleged Democratic oversampling after the two parties' conventions, when Obama's poll numbers began to tick upward.
The complaints got louder as the Democrat's post-convention "bounce" became a consistent lead in many national polls. Virtually every poll, the critics said, except for the one run by conservative commentator Scott Rasmussen, oversamples Democrats to boost Obama's election prospects.
Conservative talk-radio host Rush Limbaugh told his listeners the new polls were part of a conspiracy to convince Republicans to give up on winning the White House.
"They are designed to do exactly what I have warned you to be vigilant about, and that is to depress you and suppress your vote," Limbaugh said on his popular show.
Obama is leading Romney by 7 percentage points in the Reuters/Ipsos daily tracking survey, roughly in line with many other polls. Rasmussen has the race tied at 46 percent.
Some conservative outlets, like the website unskewedpolls.com, recast polls to reflect what they say is the true Republican share of the electorate. The website has Romney leading by an average of 7.8 percent nationally.
Top Romney adviser Eric Fehrnstrom said some surveys were assuming a higher Democratic turnout in 2012 than was likely.
"They contain some flawed methodology that's been pointed out by other people that assume a higher Democratic turnout in 2012 than we actually experienced in 2008. I don't know any political operative or political scientist who believes Democrats are going to turn out in the same numbers that they did four years ago," he said.
The stakes are high for candidates when polling gets bad. Donors are unlikely to open their wallets for races they see as lost causes, and supporters are less likely to turn out to volunteer or vote for a candidate who seems headed for defeat.
There are also risks to looking too good. A candidate who seems to be cruising to victory might lose donors who decide he does not need their money. Complacent supporters are also more likely to stay home on Election Day.
But pollsters note their stakes are equally high, with solid business reasons to get their calls right.
"Our reputation is based entirely on our ability to accurately call the election," noted Cliff Young, managing director of Ipsos Public Affairs, which is conducting polls this year for Reuters.
"At the end of the day, calling the election correctly is the key proof point that you are a competent pollster."

Monday, 24 September 2012

HOT! Karishma Tanna's latest shoot! sHe is so SexY and SO hot her latest picture's make her so beautiful and so sexy. 







Why New Jersey's DMV smiling-ban won't be hard to implement

The New Jersey Department of Motor Vehicles, often referred to as the happiest place in the Garden State, is turning those smiles upside-down with a new policy forcing motorists to simmer down in their drivers license photos, or else expensive face-recognition software won't work.
When I showed the cartoon above to my editor here at Newsworks, he told me he thought it was funny that because of technology, New Jerseyans are frowning to make software happy.
Technology is a confounding thing - making our lives easier while simultaneously making them miserable. Who hasn't thrown their cell phone across the room in frustration or slammed their cable box when the image becomes pixilated and frozen? Facebook keeps us connected to friends and family in a way we couldn't have imagined 15 years ago, but also makes us all depressed addicts envious of our friends' happiness.
But not being able to smile to keep some computer happy? It sounds like something from a Phillip K. Dick novel – placating the needs of a cold, calculating machine so it doesn't turn on us. I'm a huge Superman fan, but even as a kid I thought it was ridiculous that all it took to hide his secret identity was putting on a pair of glasses. Turns out, all he needed to do was crack a grin and no one would be the wiser.
Mike Horan, the cheery spokesman for the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission, told the The Philadelphia Inquirer, "To get an accurate photo, you don't want an excessively expressive face in the photo." 
I can't wait to see the bureaucratic government nomenclature that covers what constitutes an excessively expressive smile. Can you smile, but show no teeth? Could Jim Carrey not qualify for a driver's license? Does it also work in reverse - does being angry after waiting several hours to take a photo and excessively frowning screw with the software as well?
When I was in high school, I was allowed to keep my hat on for my driver's license photo because, like an idiotic teenager, I had dyed my hair green. This resulted in numerous police officers convinced the license was fake. Will the same thing happen to motorists who happen to get a smile past the frowning drones at the DMV?
Luckily for the DMV, we don't have much to smile about these days in the great Garden State. Unemployment ticked up to 9.9 percent last week, and the revenue numbers coming in to Trenton are far below what Governor Optimistic predicted they were going to be to justify his resume-padding tax cut. Plus, we still have record-high property taxes to contend with. Wall Street even downgraded the states' credit outlook.
Interestingly, right across the river in Pennsylvania, they use the same exact facial recognition software, but according to Jan McKnight, a spokeswoman for the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, "You can smile in Pennsylvania."
But then again, the unemployment rate in Pennsylvania is a full two points below New Jersey's, and the state ranked 12th out of the 50 states in CNBC's ranking of the top states to do business in, all reasons to smile if you're a Pennsylvania motorist. Meanwhile, New Jersey ranked 30th.
It's no wonder sci-fi novelists always point to a future where mankind serves the robots, and not the other way around. We already search relentlessly for Wi-Fi hotspots, hold our cell phones in the air like the Statue of Liberty to get a better signal and gravitate towards electrical sockets like moths to a flame to keep our gadgets juiced up.
We've made holograms of dead performers so they can sing again on stage, yet we can't build hardware that works properly without the need to turn them off and on again?
You can deny that you're the slave of technology all you want, but let me ask a simple question to prove my point: Did you wait in line this weekend to purchase the new iPhone?
Case closed :(
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Superstarsleaks it's all about you.www.superstarsleaks.blogspot.mco


  • Coriell to test Air Force DNA to check predisposition for disease.
Saliva samples from 2,000 Air Force medical personnel soon will be collected and cryogenically frozen in tanks at the Coriell Institute in Camden.
DNA from volunteer doctors, nurses and administrators will be analyzed to determine their genetic predisposition for conditions such as heart disease and cancer, and, to tell if certain common medications will not work on them.
Coriell president Michael Christman said the study seeks to answer a simple question.

"Are the health outcomes actually better in the subset of people who are receiving genetic information than it is in an equivalent group that is not receiving genetic information?" Christman said.
Lt. Col. Cecili Sessions is head of personalized medicine at the Air Force Medical Support Agency, which approached Coriell to run the study.
"This is what I like to call our pilot study that doesn't involve pilots," Sessions said. "It's really to demonstrate the clinical utility of this type of service, so we can ... determine if there's evidence that this is something we should roll out to a larger group."
The Air Force volunteers will be followed for about 10 years to track long-term health outcomes.
California-based Air Force medical researcher Maj. Carlos Maldonado said medical personnel are being tested first for a reason.
"You have to go through this first before you start recommending it to patients.," Maldonado said. "Providers need to know what's involved, how's the data translated, what's it mean to be personalized."
Maldonado has already submitted a saliva sample to Coriell for analysis.