11 June 2011

Now, 3-D Printed Bikinis To Custom Fit Every Curve!

For the first time ever, designers have created bikinis called the ‘N12 bikini’ made from 3-D printers which could adapt to fit every woman’s curves perfectly.

The world's first 3-D printed two-piece is made of small nylon discs that are held together by thread-like springs.

Shapeways used their 3-D printing technology to create the material for the designers and called it Nylon 12, which is 'ideal swimsuit material as it is innately waterproof', and this is where the ultimate custom fit 3-D bikinis got its name from.

“Thousands of circular plates are connected by thin strings, creating a wholly new material that holds its form as well as being flexible," Discovery News quoted the designers Jenna Fizel and Mary Haung of Continuum Fashion as saying.

“The layout of the circle pattern was achieved through custom written code that lays out the circles according to the curvature of the surface. In this way, the aesthetic design is completely derived from the structural design,” they added.

First National Lu-Tran Kung Fu Championship in New Delhi

kungfuIn a country where Cricket rules the roost, Om Prakash Thapa, founder of Lu Tran Kung - Fu Association (INDIA) has organised the first ever National Lu-Tran Kung Fu Championship in New Delhi. He plans to take an Indian team to the Kung-Fu World Cup.

By Ashim Sunam

Om Prakash Thapa, founder of Lu Tran Kung - Fu Association (INDIA), is not satisfied as he has not received any financial help from the government in organising National Lu-Tran Kung Fu Championship. In an exclusive interview, Thapa told this CJ that, “People in India only know about cricket, hockey, etc, so this Championship would help in spreading awareness of the game and help in spotting talent across the country.” In a confident tone, he later said, “I would like to place India in the Kung-fu world map”.

Om Prakash Thapa and Sanjay Sharma, founders of Lu Tran Kung - Fu Association (INDIA) decided to host a first ever National Lu-Tran Kung Fu Championship in New Delhi. The event started today at Jamia Millia Islamia university sports complex, which had also been used during the Commonwealth games 2010.

Martial arts players, which includes both boys and girls from Gujarat, Maharashtra, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and Himachal Pradesh along with other states would be competing in the first ever National Lu-Tran Kung Fu Championship in New Delhi. He further said that Delhi and Assam have good Kung-Fu players.

With the Kung-fu World Cup scheduled in the US, he has high hopes of taking an Indian team to the world cup. “One of the main motives for organizing the event is to look out for players who can represent India at the world cup,” says Thapa, who is also the chief coach for LFTKA (India). But he also adds that if he does not find suitable players, India would not be sending a team for the World cup.

The winners of the Kung-Fu championship would be given certificates, medals, and uniforms, etc. They would not be given any cash prize money. It is with some help from his friends and sponsors that he has been able to organize this Kung-Fu championship.

Irom Sharmila's silent resilience ignored

New Delhi, Jun 11 : When it comes to fasts and dharnas, popularity clearly matters. Baba Ramdev and Anna Hazare hog the public limelight and the Centre's attention but a woman who has been on a fast in Manipur against the Armed Forces Special Powers Act has been ignored for ten years now.

The high profile fasts of activists in Delhi and the silent 10-year long fast of Irom Sharmila - Hazare and Ramdev are followed by TV cameras, their voice heard all over the country but Irom Sharmila fasts unnoticed by the national media, alone and ignored.

The Iron Lady of Manipur as she is often called has been on a fast for the last ten years protesting against the AFSPA that is in place in parts of Manipur and the north east and gives the Army and the paramilitary forces the power to shoot or arrest on mere suspicion. The Indian state has kept her alive on a cocktail of vitamins and nutrients. She is force-fed twice a day through her nose.

"I can't tolerate the atrocities on my contemporaries, on my people. This is God's will. I will carry on. It's intolerable," said Irom Sharmila Chanu.

Anna Hazare and Ramdev are known across India but perhaps the true satyagrahi is Irom Sharmila Chanu who for ten years hasn't eaten anything - not a morsel of food, not a drop of water.

Ramdev and Hazare are received at airports, invited to joint panels with government, she is treated like a criminal, perhaps because she's in Manipur and ignored by the media.

"My question is why can't they consider the northeast states like the rest of the country?" said Sharmila.

10 June 2011

MTV Cancels Skins

Advertisers shunned show that depicted teens having sex, taking drugs

James Newman portrays Tony, right, and Sofia Black-D’Elia portrays Tea in a scene from Skins. (AP Photo/MTV)

MTV has pulled the plug on controversial sexed-up teen drama Skins after just one season. The much-talked-about US adaptation of the British hit, deserted by advertisers under pressure from the Parents Television Council, never attracted a huge audience, although it outperformed MTV's other scripted show, The Hard Times of R.J. Berger, which has been renewed, Entertainment Weekly notes.

"Skins is a global television phenomenon that, unfortunately, didn’t connect with a US audience as much as we had hoped,” MTV said in a statement. The PTC says the cancelation should serve as a warning for networks not to push boundaries.

"Life would be easier if MTV and other networks would take the concerns of parents and families seriously before even beginning production on something like this," a spokesman said.

Rachel Thevenard portrays Michelle, left, and Camille Cresencia-Mills portrays Daisy in a scene from "Skins."
(AP Photo/MTV)

4K Google Guitar Tunes Posted to YouTube

http://img1.newser.com/square-image/120682-20110610052253/how-to-play-google-guitar-hits.jpegBonus: Google will leave Doodle up one more day

Got your guitar out? No, not your Stratocaster, but your Google guitar?

Stretch your finger, because the Christian Science Monitor and several other sites are posting directions for and YouTube demos of some of the top songs tech-strummers are playing on the Google Doodle posted yesterday to honor guitar innovator's Les Paul's 96th birthday. Players have already plucked out some 4,000 tunes (or bit of them) and posted them to YouTube, notes CNET.

The doodle's runaway popularity has convinced Google to keep it up another day. The Monitor has tracked down instructions or demos of hits like "Stairway to Heaven," "Joy to the World," "Obladi, Oblida," "Louie Louie," and, of course, "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star."

Citigroup Hacked, 200,000 Accounts Compromised

By Todd Haselton

On Thursday Citigroup announced that hackers had breached its systems in May and accessed personal data from 200,000 accounts — about 1% of its customers.

The hackers managed to steal customer email addresses, contact information and account numbers, but Reuters reported that other information such as birth dates, Social Security Numbers and credit card expiration dates were not accessed.

“We are contacting customers whose information was impacted. Citi has implemented enhanced procedures to prevent a recurrence of this type of event,” Citigroup spokesperson Sean Kevelighan, said.

“For the security of these customers, we are not disclosing further details.”

It is currently unclear who was responsible for the breach.

Read More Here

Why The Fast Weapon Works

By Milind Kokje

Image: Javed Choudhary

The midnight police action against Baba Ramdev and his followers at Delhi’s Ramlila  Maidan may cost the  ruling Congress Party dearly. And surely they are not unaware of this.

Having said that, we must also concede the fact that the Congress showed guts by taking the risk to finally show the world who really calls the shots.

When Anna Hazare, and then Baba Ramdev, entered the political theatre without wearing any party badge and started coercing the administration with their diktats,  the government initially gave in for some time.

It even accepted Hazare’s demand of participation in the Bill drafting process, though in fact that is the job of the government and Parliament.  It also held several ministerial level dialogues with Baba Ramdev. But it was all in vain, with the yoga guru remaining adamant about his scheduled fast. This finally forced the government to act against him.

Thanks mainly to the immature media, which thrives on drama and entertainment, Hazare and Ramdev became instant national heroes.

But though it played a crucial role, one cannot blame just the media.  One must understand that the media has a limited role and impact. The issues have to be sufficiently hot and appealing to the public for sustained media coverage.

The method of  agitation also plays a critical role. A public meeting or a morcha has limited exposure as it gets over in a few hours, as against a dharna or a fast which can go on for days, ensuring prolonged media coverage.

A fast is even much more effective, since it creates an image of someone willing to sacrifice everything, even life, for a social cause. And since no government can risk being seen as apathetic towards someone willing to risk his life for a cause, the chances of success are high.

Hence an indefinite fast has become the preferred weapon of such activists because it generates prolonged media publicity on one hand and puts pressure on the government to accede to their demands on the other.

In order to extricate itself from such situations, sometimes the government gives in to the demands, without really considering whether the cause is really just for everybody concerned.

Take the case of Medha Patkar’s  recent fast in Mumbai for Golibar slum colony people. The Maharashtra government accepted  all her demands, only to face another group of people from the same colony taking out a morcha protesting against Patkar’s role and the state government for acceding to her demands.

Which is why such fasts and other coercive tactics are now being viewed with increasing scepticism by both the public and the government.

But the real reason for the rise of  people like Anna Hazare and Baba Ramdev is the complete vacuum in the real political arena caused by the complete erosion of credibility of all parties and their leaders.

No political party can really organize and lead such an agitation against corruption. Even if they did, they would not garner the same level of public support.

The people have no faith in political parties and leaders,  and hence they are moving towards such non-party leadership.

For instance, the BJP has openly supported Ramdev. But the question is, why didn’t the party organize such an agitation or fast on its own? The answer is simple: its past while in power at the centre will haunt it, and so will the situation in Karnataka.  And that is the weakness of every party in the country.
The inability of mainstream political parties to launch such agitations with popular support,  and the growing support for such movements by non-party leaders is not a good sign.

In a democracy, people elect their representatives to enact laws and to look after their problems. Civil society, different organizations, independent leaders do have a role to play in highlighting certain issues and problems. But this is a limited role.  Crossing those limits can undermine the democratic institutions, which will create new problems.
If the babas and other gurus are to be stopped from taking centre-stage with popular public support,  political parties and leaders of all shades will have to  indulge in some serious introspection. They will have to bring in changes within to instil confidence among the people, make them believe that they are reliable, trustworthy, non-corrupt. They will need to leverage their bonds with the masses, and make them believe that they –and the system—work for the public good.

It is time the political parties took serious steps to re-establish their credibility. Only then the people will turn to them once again.

Mizoram University Tie With Security Firm Under Fire

Mizoram UniversityAizawl, Jun 10 : The Mizoram University (MZU) has come under fire for appointing an 'unlicensed' Guwahati-based security agency for providing security service within the university campus.

Sources said, following a complaint submitted by three Aizawl-based security firms, the Mizoram government has served a show-cause notice to the university and the appointed security firm, North Eastern Security Service (NESS).

According to the complaint lodged with the joint secretary to the government of Mizoram’s home department in April, the NESS did not produce any of the required certificate and licence at the time of submitting quotation.

On the contrary, the local competitors submitted certificate of registration issued by labour and employment department, government of Mizoram, and licence for running the business of private security agency in Mizoram issued by the state home department.

It was stated in the complaint that the NESS later on February 2, 2010 (which was four days after the appointment was made on January 28) obtained a licence from the Assistant Labour Commissioner, government of India, Silchar (Assam).

The three security firms then sought a clarification from the Mizoram’s labour and employment department which state that the licence issued by the assistant labour commissioner in Silchar was however meant for employing labourers, and not security guards.

Moreover, the state’s home department is the sole authority to issue a licence to run a security service business in Mizoram, the complaint stated.

Therefore, the appointment of NESS, which did not have a licence from the state’s home department, is a clear violation of the existing rules under the Private Security Agency Regulation Act, 2005 of the government of India and a notification issued by the government of Mizoram.