3/31/2012

Headline April 1st, 2012 / "History-Hacktivists-Hubbub"

"History-Hacktivists-Hubbub"

 Respectful Dedication Rev Martin Luther King - Fred Shuttlesworth


It is a singular honour to dedicate this very sophisticated post to these two very great humans. Suffice to say that they both helped build 'A New America And Struggled for a Better World"! An all powerful creation and happening is going to shape the future of the world. The like of this, the world may never have felt or known.

Hours after his London arrest last year, the admirers and supporters of Julian Assange and his great service to the world of truth, "Wikileaks", began seeking WikiRevenge!!? Calling themselves by a beautiful name "Hacktivists" from around the globe , struck back against governments and companies, even individuals trying to muzzle Wikileaks!! They had many great successes, including the shutting down of the website of "MasterCard", which had earlier prevented Credit Card donations from reaching Wikileaks!

Hactivists, and in good causes, are likely to be the new definition of the present day and future heroes, and their philosophy may best be summed up by the wonderful idiomatic German expression: 'EineEirelegende Wollmilchsau' --an egg laying, wood yielding and milk giving sow.

It is a rare expression for a person or thing that fulfills your every need! The force and penetration of Technology in the future, to every strata of the society is formidable. But Professor Uma Gupta adds a dimension 'Crackerists' --a person who breaks into a computer system with malicious intents.

So, the Internet with its millions by millions of computers, and billions of users, while growing at a super rate of over 19% every month, and transmitting millions of bytes every few hours, and having almost every country linked and piped, is a true equaliser and leveller for this inequitable and unjust world!!?

This synopsis may date back to as early as 1994. Crackerists had broken into many company networks in USA.The digital climb was in class by itself for scope,audacity and potential damage. At about the same time, writes Professor Gupta, 'Hacktivism' --people who violate computers to convey their political or social view points emerged mass scale.

The Electronic Disturbance Theatre, a group in Mexico, began an electronic campaign of "Web site shut-ins", a leading denial of services. While in 1997, a group called 'Hong Kong Blondes' in China went on a rampage to protest human rights violations by shutting down most of China's Military Computers!!

So let me end this advance part 1 research from !WOW! with a spiritual quotation from Reverend Martin Luther King: "It maybe true that the law can't change the heart, But it can restrain the heartless!" Brilliant Sir!

See ya folks on part 2!! Never miss! God Bless and Good Night!!

SAM Daily Times - Voice of the Voiceless

Can Robo-Readers Help U.S. Teachers Grade And Improve How High School Students Write?

American high school students are terrible writers, and one education reform group thinks it has an answer: robots. Or, more accurately, robo-readers - computers programmed to scan student essays and spit out a grade.

The theory is that teachers would assign more writing if they didn't have to read it. And the more writing students do, the better at it they'll become - even if the primary audience for their prose is a string of algorithms.
That sounds logical to Mark Shermis, dean of the College of Education at the University of Akron. He's helping to supervise a contest, set up by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, that promises $100,000 in prize money to programmers who write the best automated grading software.

"If you're a high school teacher and you give a writing assignment, you're walking home with 150 essays," Shermis said. "You're going to need some help." But help from a robo-reader? "Wow," said Thomas Jehn, director of the Harvard College Writing Program. He paused a moment. "It's horrifying," he said at last.

Automated essay grading was first proposed in the 1960s, but computers back then were not up to the task. In the late 1990s, as technology improved, several textbook and testing companies jumped into the field.
Today, computers are used to grade essays on South Dakota's student writing assessments and a handful of other high-stakes exams, including the TOEFL test of English fluency, taken by foreign students.

But machines do not grade essays on either the SAT or the ACT, the two primary college entrance exams. And American teachers by and large have been reluctant to turn their students' homework assignments over to robo-graders.
The Hewlett contest aims to change that by demonstrating that computers can grade as perceptively as English teachers - only much more quickly and without all that depressing red ink.
Automated essay scoring is "nonjudgmental," Shermis said. "And it can be done 24/7. If students finish an essay at 10 p.m., they get feedback at 10:01."
Take, for instance, the Intelligent Essay Assessor, a web-based tool marketed by Pearson Education, Inc. Within seconds, it can analyze an essay for spelling, grammar, organization and other traits and prompt students to make revisions. The program scans for key words and analyzes semantic patterns, and Pearson boasts it "can 'understand' the meaning of text much the same as a human reader."

Jehn, the Harvard writing instructor, isn't so sure. He argues that the best way to teach good writing is to help students wrestle with ideas; misspellings and syntax errors in early drafts should be ignored in favor of talking through the thesis. "Try to find the idea that's percolating," he said. "Then start looking for whether the commas are in the right place." No computer, he said, can do that.
What's more, Jehn said he worries that students will give up striving to craft a beautiful metaphor or insightful analogy if they know their essays will not be read, but scanned for a split second by a computer program. "I like to know I'm writing for a real flesh-and-blood reader who is excited by the words on the page," Jehn said. "I'm sure children feel the same way." Even supporters of robo-grading acknowledge its limitations.
A prankster could outwit many scoring programs by jumbling key phrases in a nonsensical order. An essay about Christopher Columbus might ramble on about Queen Isabella sailing with 1492 soldiers to the Island of Ferdinand -- and still be rated as solidly on topic, Shermis said. Computers also have a hard time dealing with experimental prose. They favor conformity over creativity.
"They hate poetry," said David Williamson, senior research director at the nonprofit Educational Testing Service, which received a patent in late 2010 for an Automatic Essay Scoring System.

But Williamson argues that automated graders aren't meant to identify the next James Joyce. They don't judge artistic merit; they measure how effectively a writer communicates basic ideas. That's a skill many U.S. students lack. Just one in four high-school seniors was rated proficient on the most recent national writing assessment.
The Hewlett Foundation kicked off its robo-grading contest by testing several programs already on the market. Results won't be released for several weeks, but Hewlett officials said they did very well.
Hewlett then challenged amateurs to come up with their own algorithms.
The contest, hosted on the data science website Kaggle.com, has drawn hundreds of competitors from all walks of life. They have until April 30 to write programs that will judge essays studded with awkward phrases such as, "I slouch my bag on to my shoulder" or "When I got my stitches some parts hurted."

The goal is to get the computer to give each essay the same score a human grader would. Martin O'Leary, a glacier scientist at the University of Michigan, has been working on the contest for weeks.

Poring over thousands of sample essays, he discovered that human graders generally don't give students extra points for using sophisticated vocabulary. So he scrapped plans to have his computer scan the essays for rare words. Instead, he has his robo-grader count punctuation marks. "The number of commas is a very strong predictor of score," O'Leary said. "It's kind of weird. But the more, the better."

As he digs into the data, O'Leary has run into a dismaying truth: The human graders he's trying to match are inconsistent. They disagree with one another on the merits of a given essay. They award scores that seem random. Indeed, studies have shown that human readers are influenced by factors that should be irrelevant, such as how neatly a student writes.

"The reality is, humans are not very good at doing this," said Steve Graham, a Vanderbilt University professor who has researched essay grading techniques. "It's inevitable," he said, that robo-graders will soon take over.
O'Leary won't mind when that day comes. He tests his program against student prose that has already been graded by a teacher. When the scores diverge, O'Leary reads the essay to find out why.
"More often than not," he said, "I agree with the computer."

Original source here.

Poor Parenting 'Fuels Rise In Violent Behaviour'

Poor parenting and family breakdown is fuelling a rise in violent bad behaviour in UK schools, a survey says. A third of teachers polled for the Association of Teachers and Lecturers said they had dealt with violence like pushing, punching or kicking this year.
ATL head Mary Bousted said some pupils had a "total disregard" for school rules. They were as likely to be "overindulged middle class" pupils as disadvantaged ones, she added.

The teaching union surveyed 814 teachers and support staff at UK schools on the issue, and heard tales of violence in the classroom. More than half said they felt behaviour had worsened in the past five years.

One teaching assistant at a state primary in England said: "A pupil once hit me in the back totally unexpectedly, because I asked her to put a book away. I was so winded and hurt that I couldn't carry on that day."

Another, at a school in Wales, said: "I had a female student threaten to kick the smile off my face, in front of the whole class." While a teacher at an English state secondary recalled "six boys refusing to work, throwing glue, pens, fighting and throwing books". When teachers were asked about the root cause of poor behaviour, three-quarters (72.9%) blamed a lack of positive role models at home.

And nearly two-thirds (62.7%) said that breakdown of relationships within a family was a main cause.

Original source here.

Texas Schools Begin New Exams

As Texas students started taking a new state-mandated test this week, districts across the state have gradually signed on to a resolution that says high-stakes standardized tests are "strangling our public schools."
The emphasis on state testing has become so prominent that high school students could spend up to 45 of the 180 days in an academic year just in standardized testing, Denise Williams, testing director for the Wichita Falls Independent School District, told the Times Record News. Those exams are stacked on top of classroom tests, Advanced Placement exams and college entrance exams like the SAT and ACT. Students in the third through eight grades now spend 27 days out of the year in testing, up from a previous 19 days.
The tests administered this year, the State of Texas Assessments of Academic Readiness, made their debut Monday as a more rigorous replacement for the previous Texas Assessment of Knowledge and Skills. 
For ninth graders, a student's STAAR score was originally set to count for 15 percent of a final grade. Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott later decided to postpone that rule for a year, and districts have until May 1 to decide whether to use the STAAR to determine a student's passing of a course.

The resolution against high-stakes tests, sent out by the Texas Association of School Administrators, has been adopted by 192 of the 1,000-plus districts across Texas as of March 27.
The statement calls for, among other things, the state Legislature to reexamine the academic accountability system and create a system that "encompasses multiple assessments, reflects greater validity, uses more cost efficient sampling techniques and other external evaluation arrangements, and more accurately reflects what students know, appreciate and can do in terms of the rigorous standards essential to their success, enhances the role of teachers as designers, guides to instruction and leaders, and nurtures the sense of inquiry and love of learning in all students."
Read detail at the original source here.

Trinity Students to Carry the Olympic Flame for the London 2012 Olympics

Trinity College Dublin students will be carrying the Olympic Flame on June 6th next through the streets of Dublin as part of the London 2012 Olympic Torch Relay. As a presenting partner of the Olympic Torch Relay, Samsung opened up a nomination process at Trinity College Dublin to find inspiring young students who would carry the Olympic Flame in the London 2012 Olympic Torch Relay.

Based on their contribution to the community as well as sporting and academic prowess three Trinity students have been selected. They are Áine Ní Choisdealbha, Natalya Coyle and Mark Kenneally. Trinity College Dublin is the only Irish university to participate in the relay which includes 31 other universities across the UK as well as Queen’s University Belfast in Northern Ireland.
8,000 inspirational Torchbearers will pass the Olympic Flame as it makes its way through Ireland and the UK on its 70 day journey from May 19th.
Trinity College Dublin’s Vice Provost for Global Relations, Professor Jane Ohlmeyer said: “It is a great privilege that our students and graduates will have this opportunity to participate in such an historic and global event. Our selected students are excellent ambassadors for the College and role models for young people. It is appropriate that they should carry the Olympic Flame on the world stage on behalf of Trinity and Ireland, in recognition of their civic engagement and achievement in sports and studies.”

Read more about Trinity torchbearers here.

Queen Mary Olympic projects celebrated at Podium Awards

Two Olympic-themed projects at Queen Mary, University of London, have been recognised in an official celebration of UK universities’ contribution to the 2012 Games.

Podium, the higher education body for London 2012, awarded Bronze medals to the Department of Drama’s ‘Living Map’, and ‘A Living Wage Olympics’, a research project by the School of Geography.
They were chosen from more than 200 nominations, submitted by Olympic and Paralympic Games-related initiatives, programmes and partnerships produced by UK universities.

The School of Geography won Bronze in the ‘RCUK Award for Exceptional Research Contribution’ category, for research conducted by its undergraduates. The students evaluated the success of community organisations such as London Citizens in securing Olympic jobs, paid at the Living Wage of £8.30ph, for unemployed east Londoners.
Professor Jane Wills, who led the research, says: “Not only has our work helped London Citizens’ support job-seekers, the experience has developed our students’ research skills, their understanding of the impact of unemployment in poorer areas, and of the potential economic and social benefits of the Olympic investment in London.”
The project is just one part of Professor Wills’ decade-long research into the development and impact of the London Living Wage – a minimum hourly pay rate that affords a decent standard of living.

Ali Campbell, Senior Drama Lecturer, scooped Bronze in the ‘Award for Creative Cultural Project’ category. His ‘Living Map’ project joins people of different generations and cultures who live and work in the mile stretch from Stepney Green to Mile End tube stations. It won as part of the High Street 2012 celebrations of heritage and community in London’s Olympic boroughs.

‘The Living Map’ will generate: a silent movie chronicling ‘a day in the life’ of Mile End Road, with a soundtrack by a children’s community choir; a full-length film of conversations held by Mile End residents of different ages on a ‘travelling community sofa’; and an interactive website inspired by Google Maps and HistoryPin, co-devised with QM PhD Computer Science students, with content from project participants.

The Award ceremony takes place on 3 May at Forman’s Fish Island, overlooking the Olympic Stadium, with Olympians, Paralympians and government ministers in attendance. The event will be hosted by Rick Edwards, presenter of C4’s That Paralympic Show, with Paul Deighton, Chief Executive of London 2012, as a keynote speaker.

The awards take place during Universities Week (30 April – 7 May), a national campaign to increase public awareness of the varied roles that the UK’s universities play. This year’s theme is the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games. Higher Education Institutions are showcasing the important contribution they make to past and present Games and the Olympic legacy.

Read article at the original source here.

Blood test could predict heart attacks: US study

US researchers have found oddly-shaped blood cells in heart attack patients, indicating that a blood test could help predict whether a patient is at risk of an imminent cardiac emergency. (AFP Photo/Francois Nascimbeni)

US researchers have found oddly-shaped blood cells in heart attack patients, indicating that a blood test could help predict whether a patient is at risk of an imminent cardiac emergency.


The study by the Scripps Translational Science Institute (STSI) found that the endothelial blood cells from heart attack patients are abnormally large and misshapen, sometimes appearing with multiple nuclei.
That could make them reliable indicators of an impending heart attack, according to the study published this week in Science Translational Medicine.
"The ability to diagnose an imminent heart attack has long been considered the holy grail of cardiovascular medicine," said Eric Topol, the study's principal investigator and director of STSI.
Doctors have long been able to identify risk factors -- such as smoking, obesity and high cholesterol -- that can put patients at greater danger of heart disease, but cannot predict imminent attacks.
The study involved 50 patients who showed up at emergency rooms with heart attacks at four acute care hospitals in San Diego, California, and who were found to have the unusually shaped cells.
"With some additional validation, the hope is to have this test developed for commercial use in next year or two," said researcher Raghava Gollapudi.
"This would be an ideal test to perform in an emergency room to determine if a patient is on the cusp of a heart attack or about to experience one in the next couple of weeks.
"Right now we can only test to detect if a patient is currently experiencing or has recently experienced a heart attack."
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States, causing some 800,000 deaths every year, according to the Center for Disease Control.

Source:Yahoo

Amazon To Acquire Robot Manufacturer, Kiva Systems, In $775m Cash


If Google is the search giant then Amazon is undoubtedly the e-commerce giant on the Internet. Amazon has recently announced that it is acquiring Kiva Systems in $775 million, a Massachusetts based company that makes robots to help retailers in the warehouses for inventory purposes. The transaction will be closed in the second quarter of this year.
Dave Clark, Amazon.com’s vice president of global customer fulfillment said in a statement “Amazon has long used automation in its fulfillment centers, and Kiva’s technology is another way to improve productivity by bringing the products directly to employees to pick, pack and stow.”
As a part of its expansion plan the online retailer is adding 17 warehouses to its 52 warehouses, making it a total of 69.
“As we continue to add fulfillment and warehouse capability or add new businesses with different fulfillment requirements, our fulfillment network becomes increasingly complex and operating it becomes more challenging.”
Kiva Systems was founded by Mick Mountz in 2003, since then the company has served the big names like Gap, Staples, and Saks.

etechmag.com

McDonald’s to test Paper Cups for hot drinks




McDonald’s announced it would test paper coffee cups instead of the current foam cups in 2,000 of its U.S. locations. Part of McDonald’s resurgence in recent years was because of their new McCafe drinks and improved roasted coffee. But in addition to giving coffee chains like Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts a run for their money, all those polystyrene foam cups create massive amounts of waste.

In addition to the waste problem, international health organizations like the International Agency for Research on Cancer have suggested that styrene in any form could have links to cancer. And as more consumers question not only the ingredients that make up their food, but the packaging in which they are delivered, even large companies like McDonald’s are taking a hard look at how they wrap and contain their products.
Calls for improved packaging are a familiar refrain for McDonald’s. In the 1980s, growing outcry about those bright polystyrene clamshell burger containers pushed McDonald’s into using paper instead. McDonald’s touts its reduce, reuse and recycle program, and now this is the opportunity for the burger giant to put its money where its mouth is. A change in business practices is important: litter from fast food companies is not only challenging municipalities with their waste diversion plans, but pollutes water supplies across the country, too.

Source:enn.com

70,000 children 'dying every year from tuberculosis'


Tuberculosis patients in South Africa wait to see doctors in 2009                                      
As many as 70,000 children are dying every year fromtuberculosis, as the curable disease often goes unnoticed due to a failure by health workers to recognise the symptoms, the WHO said Wednesday.
"Often TB is undiagnosed in children... because the symptoms in children are not very specific," said Malgosia Grzemska, coordinator at the World Health Organization's Stop TB department.
Unlike adults who often cough incessantly when infected with the disease, "children may not even cough, but may just be less playful, they may be lethargic," said Grzemska.
The UN health agency's expert said that ensuring screening of TB for all children in households with infected adults would help to detect cases early.
Children living in households with TB who are found not ill should be given preventive therapy while those infected should be treated early, she said, adding that about half a million babies and children contract the disease annually.

Source:Yahoo

I Got My Eyes On You


Somewhere in Japan there’s Keio University that has a researcher named Masayasu Ogata, who has made scary looking robotic eye ring with eyelids.
PYGMY robot rings, according to the researcher, are made to enhance the interaction experience between humans and gadgets and to express emotions.
PYGMY robot rings can be remotely controlled via special controller or by a smartphone application. The rings are made in various sizes with each containing an Arduino processor, Bluetooth, and battery.
These eye like robotic rings were demonstrated at Interaction 2012 Conference last week in Tokyo. The researcher deems his application of the technology can be used in teaching environment.

Soyrce:etechmag.com

Daily Aspirin - More Benefit Than Risk?


Taking an aspirin daily
Many people take a low dose of aspirin every day to lower their risk of a further heart attack or stroke, or if they have a high risk of either. While the anticipated benefit is a lower chance of vascular disease, taking daily aspirin is not without danger: for instance it raises the risk of internal bleeding. Hence the important need to discuss beforehand with the doctor, "In my case, doc, should I be taking daily aspirin?"

But this week, the publication of three studies in The Lancet, has added a new benefit to the equation: cancer prevention, and stirred up the pros and cons debate. In those studies, Professor Peter Rothwell of Oxford University in the UK, a world expert on aspirin, and colleagues, confirm that for people in middle age, a daily dose of aspirin can cut the risk of developing several cancers, with effects starting after only two to three years rather than the ten or so previously thought.

Moreover, they propose that treatment with daily aspirin may also prevent an existing, localized cancer from spreading to other parts of the body, which Rothwell says is just as important to know about, since that's when cancer becomes deadly.

Read More

Future Gadgets: Hottest concept tech of 2012

The future gadgets represent the very cutting edge future of technology and product design. A concept is a dream; brimming with the features and design you want with nary a polite ‘hello’ to the physical limitations that’d make it impossible in the real world.
Inevitably either things would cost too much, can’t be made that small, or are light-years ahead of today’s available tech. Either way, it’s not enough to stop us dreaming and admiring the tech of the future.
As a new year beckons, we'll be bringing you the most exciting new concept tech every month. Fasten your seatbelts.

1. March 2012: Apollon

Fancy a bit of social photography action? This concept snapper enables a group of friends who are also need to be in possession of an Apollon camera to take photos of the same event and then combine them wirelessly to deliver the action from different angles. You can then also transfer digital copies of all the images back to your camera, leaving you to choose which ones are keepers.
Designer: Gordon Tiemstra


2. March 2012: OSX on iPad with magic mouse

Those Cupertino chaps continue to work on merging iOS and OSX worlds closer together, but what would it look like if you mix and matched the hardware? Maybe it would look a little something like this. Taking the Bluetooth Magic Mouse and keyboard from a Mac and combining it with the Retina display-toting new iPad, it could just be the ultimate laptop/tablet hybrid...
Designer: Zeki Osek


3. March 2012: The Four concept

Maybe you would never consider hanging up your iPad on the wall, but this 145x235 mm tablet is geared towards adding slate action to your living room or wherever there is a free space to give it pride of place. Toting a multi-touch AMOLED screen, the slick-looking tablet which doubles as a digital painting, will deliver weather forecasts that can be quickly accessed before you head out, deliver travel planning facilities and create a natural ambience to put you in a good mood for the day ahead.
Designer: Marko Vuckovic

4. March 2012: BlackBerry Blade

Assuming a beautiful quad-core phone would ever make it into the real world considering the latest news from RIM, we'd like to think that if BlackBerry changes its mind further down the line, the Blade could compete against the iPhones and Android phones of this world. A quad-core processor running at 1.5GHz, 4.5-inch AMOLED display and 12-megapixel camera are touted for a smartphone we are most certainly never likely to see.
Designer: Pixelcarve

Many more here.



Apple iTV will not launch until 2013, says research group



Apple fans saving their pennies for the eagerly-anticipated iTV flatscreen television are likely to have a little bit longer to accrue the funds after researchers asserted that it won't be arriving in 2012
We're besieged by Apple iTV rumours on an almost daily basis. Will it have Siri? A brand new interface? Never-before-seen screen quality? Content deals to finally free the world from expensive TV packages? Well we're unlikely to find out this year, according to a research group in the far east.
Apple will wait until 2013 to launch the flatscreen TV it hopes will revolutionise the industry, according to the CLSA group, that also notes that the LCD tech is being produced by Sharp electronics, backing up recent speculation.
In a note to investors the group says: "We continue to view Apple TV hardware as a 2013 event.
"The timing of Hon Hai/Foxconn's equity stake and partnership with Sharp along with Hon Hai Chairman Terry Gou's separate 46.5% investment in Sharp's Sakai City plant lends further credibility that Apple TV is in the works.
"This also follows reports that Apple is investing ~$1.3bn in equipment destined for Sharp facilities."
While a lot of that is of little concern to those who simply want to deck out their home entertainment system with a fully-fledged Apple TV, the assertion that a pre-Christmas iTV launch is unlikely to happen will still be a disappointment.
It's still far from confirmed that Apple will indeed enter the competitive flatscreen TV market, the speculation has an air of the iPads about it. By the time the tablet rolled around in 2010 we all knew it was coming, it was just a case of when.


Source: T3

Jennifer Lopez & Pitbull Join Forces in 'Dance Again' Single


It's difficult to listen to a Jennifer Lopez song and not start swaying to the music — and her latest single "Dance Again" is no exception. The American Idol judge premiered the single — which also features the rapping styles of her "On the Floor" cohort Pitbull — on Ryan Seacrest's KIIS-FM radio show March 30. Like most of her other popular hits, the song is made up of extremely catchy lyrics with a fist-pumping beat. It makes you want to get up and dance again.

"First of all, I love it," Lopez told Seacrest about her newest collaboration. "I love the message of the song — that when something bad happens, your life is not over. You have to get up. You're gonna live. You're gonna be OK. You're gonna dance again." And, of course, JLo admitted to using her own personal experiences to help relate to the lyrically empowering message. 

She even altered some of the lyrics after her shocking split with Marc Anthony surfaced. "I think when [the song] came to me, it was the perfect moment," Lopez explained. "I definitely related to that. I think it's a good thing to put it out there right now, because everybody goes through tough moments. Everybody goes through hard times, and I am no stranger to that myself... Actually, we rewrote some of the lyrics to fit into that message."

But as for what words she ended up changing, JLo says you'll have to figure that one out for yourself. "You listen and you decide!" she laughed.

Source: Hollywood

New development bank could help emerging nations: BRICS


NEW DELHI -- The leaders of five of the world's fast-rising powers agreed Thursday to move toward creating a new development bank that would improve access to capital for poor nations.


Accusing current international institutions of failing to lift up poor countries, the BRICS group — Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — asked their finance ministers to investigate setting up a development bank like the World Bank or Asian Development Bank that they would back. The also agreed to boost business and trade in their own local currencies.

“Institutions of global political and economic governance created more than six decades ago have not kept pace with the changing world,” India's Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told the gathering. “Developing countries need access to capital.”

The five countries represent 45 percent of the world's population, a quarter of its land mass and a quarter of its economy at US$13.5 trillion. World Bank President Robert Zoellick, underscoring the importance of the emerging world's biggest economies with his own trip to India, welcomed the idea of a new development bank.

South Africa's President Jacob Zuma said the bank could “help us create good jobs.” The countries will look at the proposal again during next year's summit in South Africa.

Experts have questioned whether the bloc represents no more than just promising markets and financial opportunities. They have no common security platform and vast differences in foreign policy. But the leaders insisted on the grouping's importance in shifting the global dialogue on international politics and finance.

Within the bloc “we have a place where we feel Africa is treated with respect,” Zuma said. “There's no feeling that people are looking down upon the continent.”

Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff said in an opinion piece in the Times of India that it had changed “the axis of international politics.”

Their arguments for more inclusive finance policies might be making an impact. U.S. President Barack Obama's nominee for the next World Bank president, Jim Yong Kim, said the bank needs to be “more inclusive” and receptive to hearing poor countries' ideas for solving their own problems. (chinapost.com.tw)

Humans become guinea pigs for pets


FOR years animals have been used in the testing of medicines and other drugs to treat myriad human afflictions.

In a world first, an Australian biotech company wants to make humans the guinea pigs in the development of drugs to treat cancer, arthritis, chronic pain and other conditions in household pets.

Melbourne-based company Nextvet will mine decades of research and clinical trials into human drugs to convert them into pet-specific versions.

Animals are physiologically very different to humans and, while some human drugs may produce a short-term desired effect in another species, more often than not they result in nasty side effects.

Nextvet has developed a way of converting human monoclonal antibody drugs for pets in a process it has trademarked "PETization".

"We're taking drugs that have been very effective in humans and making them specific for a cat, dog or horse," said Nextvet co-founder Mark Heffernan.
Animal foster carers Sally Ambrose and Sue Seiver from Sawyers Gully Cat Haven near Newcastle know first hand how upsetting it can be to see an animal in pain.

"There's quite a few serious viruses around and there are not even enough tests to find out what's wrong," Ms Ambrose said.

"You go to the vet ... but often you just have to wait it out and hope the animal comes through." (dailytelegraph.com.au)

Neutrino 'faster than light' scientist resigns


The head of an experiment that appeared to show subatomic particles travelling faster than the speed of light has resigned from his post.
Prof Antonio Ereditato oversaw results that appeared to challenge Einstein's theory that nothing could travel faster than the speed of light.
Reports said some members of his group, called Opera, had wanted him to resign.
Earlier in March, a repeat experiment found that the particles, known as neutrinos, did not exceed light speed.
When the results from the Opera group at the Gran Sasso underground laboratory in Italy were first published last year, they shocked the world, threatening to upend a century of physics as well as relativity theory - which holds the speed of light to be the Universe's absolute speed limit.
The experiment involved measuring the time it took for neutrinos to travel the 730km (450 miles) from Cern laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland to the lab in Italy.
Call for caution
Speaking at the time, Professor Ereditato added "words of caution" because of the "potentially great impact on physics" of the result.
"We tried to find all possible explanations for this," he said.
"We wanted to find a mistake - trivial mistakes, more complicated mistakes, or nasty effects - and we didn't.
"When you don't find anything, then you say 'well, now I'm forced to go out and ask the community to scrutinise this'."
Despite the call for caution, the results caused controversy within the world of physics.
If the findings had been confirmed, they would have disproved Albert Einstein's 1905 Special Theory of Relativity.
Earlier this month, a test run by a different group at the same Italian laboratory recorded neutrinos travelling at precisely light speed.
Sandro Centro, co-spokesman for the Icarus collaboration, said that he was not surprised by the result.
"In fact I was a little sceptical since the beginning," he told BBC News at the time.
"Now we are 100% sure that the speed of light is the speed of neutrinos."
So far, Professor Ereditato has not commented on his decision to step down from his post. (BBC)

Hitler Parents Grave's Headstone To Be Removed


VIENNA -- The mayor of an Austrian village where Adolf Hitler's parents are buried says the tombstone marking the grave will be removed.

Leonding Mayor Walter Brunner says the decision was made by a relative of the family who says she does not want the grave to continue serving as a neo-Nazi pilgrimage site.

Hitler was born in Braunau, an upper Austrian town near Leonding. But he spent his boyhood in Leonding, about 10 kilometers (6 miles) southwest of the city of Linz.

Brunner said Friday that he had no details over the Hitler relative but is happy over her decision.

He said the grave was regularly visited by rightist extremists who left flowers and Nazi slogans at the site. (AP)

Vote on nano SIM Technology delayed

A decision on what will be the next SIM card technology for smartphones and other portable devices has been delayed following a spat between competing hardware makers.

In a statement today, the European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI) said that it is postponing its decision on what's come to be known as nano-SIM until the end of May.
"The committee decided to delay any vote on the subject in the interest of trying to achieve a broad industry consensus, which is in keeping with the preferred decision making process at ETSI," the group said in a statement.

The move follows claims by Research In Motion that rival Apple was trying to skew the results by having company representatives change their company affiliation when they cast their proxy votes. Both companies, along with Motorola Mobility and Nokia, hope to have their own version of the technology picked as the new standard, which will then be used in new handsets.
SIM cards store the device user's phone number and mobile identity on the network. A smaller version of the micro-SIM, which contains the nano-SIM new technology features additional storage for increased functionality. It's the latest in a series of updates to shrink the size of the hardware to help make more room inside mobile devices.


Apple has reportedly offered to provide the technology's patents to fellow mobile device makers at no cost. However, in exchange, those firms would have to adopt Apple's technology as an industry standard and offer the "same terms in accordance with the principle of reciprocity."
French outlet Les Echos first reported the delay last night.

Fireflies' Unique Flashes Help Distinguish Species

Fireflies are a diverse lot. Some flash their lights Morse-code style, some glow more languorously, some synchronize with others around them, and some fly in a distinctive pattern while flashing.

The diversity of signals allows species living in the same habitat to distinguish among themselves while looking for mates, according to firefly expert Marc Branham, an associate professor at the University of Florida.
"That is the same in birds, every bird species has its own song, and that is why in a swamp or in a wet place you can hear lots of different species based on their mating calls," Branham said.

A male firefly's flashes also encode some information about him, so when a female on the ground below sees what she likes, she signals back.