29 April 2011

Horticulture College Coming Up in Mizoram

horticulture

Aizawl, Apr 29
: Union Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar today said that a horticulture college would be set up in Mizoram under Central Agriculture University of Manipur.

Addressing a press conference at Raj Bhavan here, Pawar, who arrived today on his maiden visit, said the horticulture college would be established in the state with a separate faculty for food processing if the state government could provide land.

Mizoram State chief minister Lal Thanhawla, who accompanied him in the press conference, said that land would be provided for the purpose.

The Union Minister also said his ministry would send a team of experts to explore the potentials of Chamdur and Phura valleys in south Mizoram to become the rice bowels of the state.

Things To Know About iPad 2

10 things to know about iPad 2

Over a month after it launched iPad 2 in the US, Apple's next-generation tablet, iPad 2, officially arrives in India. Apple tends to roll out iPad and iPhone across the world gradually. The company announced that apart from India, iPad 2 will be available in 11 additional countries.

Earlier, the company received a lot of flak when it launched original iPad in India nearly nine months after its US launch. iPad 2 is a revamped version of original iPad that launched in India in January end. The new tablet features a dual-core processor called A5 and is slimmer and lighter than the earlier version. Apple's original iPad defined the tablet computer market and was swiftly followed by offerings from the tech industry's main players, from Samsung and Dell to BlackBerry maker RIM and Toshiba.

Here are 10 things to know about the new iPad.

Thinner than iPhone 4

Thinner than iPhone 4

New Apple iPad 2 is mere 8.8mm thin. "The new iPad 2 is actually thinner than your iPhone 4," said CEO Jobs during its US launch. "It is dramatically thinner, not a little thinner, a third thinner."

It weighs 1.3 pounds (590 grams) down from 1.5 pounds. It is said to be 33 percent thinner and 15 percent lighter compared to its predecessor.

Retains iPad 1 screen

Retains iPad 1 screen

Apple iPad 2 retains iPad 1 screen size with 9.7-inch LED-backlit display. Also, iPad 2 has the same RAM as the iPad 256MB.

 

Front and rear facing cameras

Front and rear facing cameras

iPad 2 features both front- and rear-facing video cameras to enable video chat. The back camera supports video recording, HD (720p) up to 30 frames per second with audio. While on front there is VGA-quality still camera.

 

Is nine times faster

Is nine times faster

Apple has used in-house designed dual-core 1GHz A5 system-on-chip processor. It would enable multi-tasking, video recording, FaceTime video calls and load apps faster.
Apple claims that iPad 2 is dramatically faster due to its new A5 chip. According to the company, A5 doubles the speed, and graphic display by nine times.

 

Gets SmartCover

Gets SmartCover

iPad 2 comes with a SmartCover that has built-in magnets for a fit more than just protects. On closing Smart Cover, iPad automatically goes off to sleep. Open it, and iPad instantly wakes up (there is just no need to press any buttons).
Also, SmartCover folds into a perfect typing stand. Its magnetic hinge holds iPad in place so that users can type quickly and comfortably. Is can also be set up for hands-free video calling or watching.
Apple has also start selling its Smart Cover for iPad 2 in India. The cheapest version of the cover costs Rs 2,100.

 

Supports wireless streaming

Supports wireless streaming

Apple iPad 2 is said to support wireless streaming of music, photos, and video to HDTV and speakers via AirPlay-enabled speakers or Apple TV (second generation) on a Wi-Fi network.
The facility of wireless printing of email, photos, web pages, and documents from iPad2 is also claimed possible.

Gets HDMI adapter

Gets HDMI adapter

iPad 2 offers 3G network support along with Wi-Fi (802.11 a/b/g/n) and Bluetooth 2.1+EDR. There's also a new HDMI cable connector that promises 1080p HD video output when connected to the 30-pin dock connector port on the iPad 2. This means HDMI is not built into the iPad 2, users need to purchase a special HDMI Apple adapter to use it.
HDMI adapter will work with iPad 1, iPhone 4 and 4th generation iPod Touch.

 

RAM & battery life

RAM & battery life

While Apple has not given iPad 2's full specs, according to tablet's teardowns, it certainly has 512 MB of RAM.
The battery life remains same as in iPad 1, 10 hours when in use and a month long stand by time. iFixit teardown reveals iPad 2's Li-Ion polymer battery made up of three cells and is rated at 3.8 volts, 25 watt-hours. This is slightly more than the original iPad's rating of 3.75 volts, 24.8 watt-hour.

Yes, white iPad!

Yes, white iPad!

While white iPhone may have come now, Apple is shipping white iPad from the day one. As Jobs also jokingly said during iPad 2’s US launch, "And we are going to be shipping white from Day One."
When Apple announced iPhone 4 last year, it showed off both black and white version of the smartphone. However, the company has only recently launched white iPhone 4.

Pricing

Pricing

The pricing for the new iPad is as follows (non-Wifi versions):
* 16GB: $499; 32GB: $599; 64GB: $699
The pricing for the Wi-Fi/3G devices: * 16GB: $629; 32GB: $729; 64GB: $829
Accessories * HDMI Connector Cable: $39; Poly Smart Cover in 5 colors: $39; Leather Smart Cover in 5 colors: $69

 

Availability

Availability

iPad 2 will ship in the United States on March 11 and on March 25 in 26 other countries including France, Germany and Japan. However, there is no information on when the second-generation iPad will launch in India.

'They Raped Me With Their Hands'

Reporter Lara Logan reveals terrifying details of mob sex attack in Egypt

  • Correspondent reveals 200-strong mob 'tore her clothes to pieces'
  • 'I thought, not only am I going to die here, but it's going to be a torturous death'

Lara Logan has spoken out for the first time since her terrifying sexual assault in Egypt, describing how attackers 'raped her with their hands'.

The 39-year-old CBS foreign correspondent said she was convinced she was going to die when the frenzied mob tore her away from her film crew and bodyguard in Cairo's Tahrir Square.

A group of at least 200 men beat her, pinched her and tore at her clothes in a 40-minute attack that only ended when a group of women came to her aid.

Terrifying ordeal: Lara Logan has today spoken publically for the first time about her vicious sexual assault during the Egyptian uprisings. She said she was convinced she was going to die

Terrifying ordeal: Lara Logan has today spoken publically for the first time about her vicious sexual assault during the Egyptian uprisings. She said she was convinced she was going to die

She told the New York Times: 'For an extended period of time, they raped me with their hands...What really struck me was how merciless they were.

'They really enjoyed my pain and suffering. It incited them to more violence.'

She revealed the terrifying details in an interview with the newspaper today, and is expected to speak about her attack at greater length in an appearance on 60 Minutes on Sunday.

Ms Logan, who returned to work this month, has not previously spoken about the assault, which reverberated around the world and highlighted the dangers women face while reporting.

Set upon: Lara Logan was torn away from her film crew just moments after this picture was taken in Cairo's Tahrir Square. She was subjected to a prolonged sexual assault by a terrifying mob of at least 200 men

Set upon: Lara Logan was torn away from her film crew just moments after this picture was taken in Cairo's Tahrir Square. She was subjected to a prolonged sexual assault by a terrifying mob of at least 200 men

But she said these will be her first and last interviews about the vicious assault. She said: 'I don’t want this to define me.'

She was attacked on February 11, on her first day back in the city - and the day Hosni Mubarak's government finally fell.

'What really struck me was how merciless they were. They really enjoyed my pain and suffering. It incited them to more violence'

She had been forced to leave a week before after she was detained and interrogated by Egyptian forces.

Ms Logan and her film crew made their way to Tahrir Square, where a jubilant crowd begged her for autographs.

But suddenly, as she was preparing a report for 60 Minutes, the mood turned violent.

The camera battery went down, forcing the crew to stop.

As they worked to replace it her Egyptian cameraman heard one of the men in the crowd say he wanted to pull her pants down in Arabic.

She told CBS: 'Suddenly, Bahar [the Egyptian cameraman] looks at me and says, "we've got to get out of here".

Strong couple: Ms Logan pictured with her husband Joseph Burkett while she was pregnant. She spent weeks at home recovering with her family

Strong couple: Ms Logan pictured with her husband Joseph Burkett while she was pregnant. She spent weeks at home recovering with her family

'I thought, not only am I going to die here, but it's going to be just a torturous death that's going to go on forever and ever and ever.'

She told the Times: 'That was literally the moment the mob set on me.'

Jeff Fager, the chairman of CBS News, told the Times her producer, Max McClellan, and her two drivers were 'helpless because the mob was just so powerful'.

He said her bodyguard managed to hold on to her for a while, but the mob proved too strong and carried her away.

Mr Fager said: 'For Max, to see the bodyguard come out of the pile without her, that was one of the worst parts.'

Ms Logan described how her hand was sore for days afterwards, and she only later realised it was because she had been holding on so tightly to her bodyguard's hand.

She told the Times: 'My clothes were torn to pieces.'

The attack lasted 40 minutes. She was only rescued when a group of local women brought 20 Egyptian soldiers to her aid.

Mr Fager said he hoped Sunday's interview would help raise awareness of the sexual violence women journalists face when reporting from conflict zones.

He said: 'There’s a code of silence about it that I think it is in Lara’s interest and in our interest to break.'

CBS immediately flew her back to the U.S. The channel posted guards outside her Washington home, where she hid herself away to recuperate along with her husband Joseph Burkett and their two young children.

Anxious to get back: The foreign correspondent said she wants to return to combat zones like Afghanistan, but will avoid the Middle East

Anxious to get back: The foreign correspondent said she wants to return to combat zones like Afghanistan, but will avoid the Middle East

Mr Fager said: 'She was quite traumatised, as you can imagine, for a period of time.'

Four days after the attack, he and Ms Logan drafted a statement released by CBS, until now the only official comment.

It said she had 'suffered a brutal and sustained sexual assault and beating before being saved by a group of women and an estimated 20 Egyptian soldiers'.

Ms Logan said she made the decision to speak out soon after the assault, on behalf of 'millions of voiceless women who are subjected to attacks like this and worse'.

She said the statement 'didn’t leave me to carry the burden alone, like my dirty little secret, something that I had to be ashamed of'.

While physical violence against men is often discussed by the media, sexual threats against female journalists are rarely mentioned.

Reliving the trauma: Lara Logan returned to work only two months after the sexual assault, and will talk about her ordeal on Sunday's 60 Minutes. She said she is determined not to let the attack define her

Reliving the trauma: Lara Logan returned to work only two months after the sexual assault, and will talk about her ordeal on Sunday's 60 Minutes. She said she is determined not to let the attack define her

Ms Logan said, with sexual violence 'you only have your word. The physical wounds heal. You don’t carry around the evidence the way you would if you had lost your leg or your arm in Afghanistan.'

Just two months after the attack, Ms Logan has already vowed to return to Afghanistan and other conflict zones, but said she has decided she will not return to Middle Eastern countries while widespread protests are ongoing.

She told the Times: 'The very nature of what we do - communicating information - is what’s undoing these regimes. It makes us the enemy, whether we like it or not.'

More than a dozen foreign journalists have been kidnapped in Libya since the uprising began there.

Times journalist Lynsey Addario said she was groped and harassed by her Libyan captors, a story which Ms Logan said was a 'setback' to her own recovery.

Website Can Help Find Stolen Cameras

It uses data hidden in old photos to scan the web for new ones

stolen camera

The
Consumerist takes note of a nifty website that might help you track down a stolen digital camera.

The site,
stolencamerafinder.com, works on a relatively simple formula.

You drag and drop one of your old photos taken with the camera, and the site extracts signature data from it and scans the web for matches.

(You can also type in the serial number.)

If the thief has uploaded a photo to, say, a Facebook page or another site with a profile, you might have your culprit.

Of course, it's then up to you to figure out how to get it back.

Gadhafi Troops Issued Viagra to Help Them Rape: US

Susan Rice makes claim at UN

viagra

Moammar Gadhafi’s forces have been issued Viagra, to help them better rape the people of Libya, US ambassador Susan Rice told several other UN diplomats at a closed-door Security Council meeting yesterday.

“She spoke of Gadhafi’s soldiers targeting children, and other atrocities,” one diplomat tells
Reuters.

Rice offered no evidence for her allegations, which diplomats said were designed to win over countries that have grown skeptical of the UN mission in Libya—namely China, India, and Russia.

“Rice raised that in the meeting, but no one responded,” another diplomat said.

Earlier this month the UN’s envoy on sexual violence during armed conflicts said that reports of rape in Libya were unconfirmed, but that they were credible enough that the Security Council should have mentioned them in its two most recent resolutions on Libya.

PlayStation Hackers: We’ve Got 2.2M Credit Cards

Users report fraud, but it may be coincidence

By Matt Cantor

sony playstation
A customer watches a monitor showing Sony's PlayStation 3 at a Tokyo electric shop.

Chatting in online forums, hackers are citing a huge haul from the attack on Sony’s PlayStation Network:

They claim they now have access to some 2.2 million credit cards.

The assertion can’t be verified, say experts—but a number of users are reporting suspicious charges on their cards.

Still, that could be pure coincidence, notes the
Guardian; any large enough sample of credit card users will contain some fraud victims.

The hackers say they even have credit card security codes, but Sony says that’s not possible: "Your credit card security code has not been obtained because we never requested it," the company tells users.

Among the fraud claims: some $1,500 in purchases from a German grocery store using a US credit card, as well as dozens of claims regarding charges from Japanese shops and German airlines.

Hackers are also saying they offered to sell the user database back to Sony, but the firm said no.

A Sony rep says he had no knowledge of any such occurrence.

Prince William & Kate's Royal Wedding Kiss

Prince William and his wife Catherine shared a kiss on the balcony at Buckingham Palace.

The first one was too quick for the crowd's liking, so they went in for another.

Soccer Violence: Nine More African Students Arrested

african criminals killed mizo student

Jalandhar (Punjab), Apr 29
: Nine more African students have been arrested in connection with the killing of a Mizo youth in a case of soccer-related violence at Lovely Professional University (LPU) here, police said Friday.

Of the nine, eight are from Sudan and one is from Tanzania and they have been sent to judicial custody, police said. Three others had been arrested earlier and charged with the murder of fellow student Johnny F. Lalhmangaih Wednesday and they are in police remand.

"We have arrested nine more African students. Though they were not directly involved in killing the Mizo student, they had provoked the other three African students to commit the crime and make the situation deteriorate further," Deputy Superintendent of Police Sandeep Sharma told IANS.

"They are pursuing various courses at LPU. They have been booked under Sections 107 and 151 of the Indian Penal Code and sent to 14-day judicial remand by the court."

The first section relates to abetment in crime and the second to knowingly joining or continuing in assembly of five or more persons after it has been commanded to disperse.

Police are yet to recover the spiked shoes that the accused were allegedly wearing when they kicked the victim. "Our interrogation is on. We are hopeful of recovering those spiked shoes today," said Sharma.

Three African students - Ahmed Al-Nagni and Sayed Feisal from Tanzania, and Hatin Indriss from Sudan - were arrested Wednesday night for thrashing Johnny to death during a soccer match. Following this, they were also suspended by the LPU authorities.

Johnny, who was pursuing civil engineering from LPU, had scored a goal for his team during a friendly football match between students from Africa and Mizoram in the campus, following which the African students got into a brawl and started bashing him.

According to the post-mortem report, Johnny died of internal injuries. His father works as a sub-divisional officer in the public welfare department in Mizoram.

Following the incident, scores of Indian students went on the rampage Wednesday and damaged the hostel furniture and rooms. Heavy police force was called in to control the situation.

In a bid to avoid any further untoward incidents, LPU authorities have closed the varsity for three days till Saturday. The varsity authorities have also shifted all African students, numbering over 45, from their hostels to an undisclosed location.

"We have deployed sufficient police force inside and outside the campus. There is no threat from anybody and force has been deployed as a precautionary measure," stated Sharma.

Currently, over 250 foreign students from 16 countries are studying at the university. Of them, around 50 are from African countries.

Punjab's first private university, LPU is located on the Phagwara-Jalandhar National Highway, 140 km from Chandigarh, and has over 24,000 students on its rolls.