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Tuesday, 16 September 2014
Inder Sethi's invitation is awaiting your response
Monday, 15 September 2014
Suck it Pantone !!
This Could Be Windows 9'S New Virtual Desktops In Action !!
This Could Be Windows 9'S New Virtual Desktops In Action
Eric Limer, Gawker MediaSep 13, 2014, 02.57 AM IST
Earlier today we got a taste of what appears to be Windows 9's new Start Menu in action. Now a leak by the German site WinFuture.de (which has been leaking things left and right ) shows rumored Virtual Desktops doing their thing.
The actual behavior of the things looks pretty unremarkable, as it should be considering that Virtual Desktops have long been part of OS X and Linux. More importantly, this leak lends credence to rumors that Windows 9's announcement and release are right around the corner . This looks pretty polished.
Samsung NX1: A 4K Video Chomping, 28-Megapixel Camera In A Compact Body
Samsung NX1: A 4K Video Chomping, 28-Megapixel Camera In A Compact Body
Mario Aguilar, Gawker MediaSep 15, 2014, 03.30 PM IST
The new NX1 is the first Samsung interchangeable-lens camera that's truly compelling enough to consider alongside the competition. Its billboard feature: 4K video in a tiny package. But more than just trotting out of a glitzy, buzzy feature, the NX1 is loaded with advanced tech, including an industry-leading image sensor.
Despite building some reasonably good mirrorless, interchangeable-lens cameras over the last few years, Samsung has been mostly ignored by the enthusiasts and pros that might be interested in more expensive shooters. The NX1 could help change that with features and tech you just won't find anywhere else for the money. Though we haven't shot the thing yet-we'll report back when we do-there's a lot to be excited about.
Guts and shooting performance
First the nerdy basics. Like Sammy's other NX-series cameras, the NX1 sports a DSLR-sized APS-C sensor. This time, though, it's a 28-megapixlel, backside-illuminated (BSI) sensor, making it both the highest resolution APS-C chip in the world, and the largest sensor to use the backside construction. Higher resolution isn't quite necessary for regular shooters, but for people likely to edit, it's usually desirable if you can get more megapixels without sacrificing quality.
For its part, the backside architecture helps by getting electronics out of the way on the front of the image sensor, and thereby, leaving room for larger light-sensing photodiodes. The tech has been used most prominently on Sony's excellent RX100 line. Now with the NX1, backside illumination makes the jump from 1-inch format to significantly larger APS-C size.
Beyond the image sensor, the NX1 is powered by Samsung's latest DRIMe 6 image processor. enabling the camera shoot at up to a standard ISO of 25,600, and peel off 15 frames per second with continuous autofocus. Speaking of which, the camera's hybrid autofocus is uses 209 phase detect points and 205 contrast detect points on the image sensor. All of this is very impressive, charting above or equivalent to what you'll get from any other camera at the price point.
Finally, it wouldn't be a Samsung product without connectivity built in, and sure enough, the NX1 has Wi-Fi connectivity for easy file transfer as well as Bluetooth, and easy NFC pairing.
4K Video
Besides regular photography powers, the NX's key feature is 4K video. It's capable of capturing high resolution to slightly different huge formats. Though Ultra HD and 4K are used interchangeably by most people, they're actually slightly different resolutions, according to standards czars. The NX1 shoots both; 4K (3840x2160) at 30 frames per second, and Ultra HD (4096x2160) at 24fps. These are common frame rates that are usable for basically anything, but they don't give you a lot of flexibility. The camera's 4K/Ultra HD capture obviously bumps up against what's possible with the technology.
At Ultra HD/4k, the NX1 shoots in the industry standard HEVC h.265 codec, so you'll be able to take footage out of the camera and play it on basically any device that's been updated recently (assuming the device has enough pixels!)
As for regular 1920 x 1080 HD resolution, the camera shoots 24, 30, and 60. Unlike in some other cameras, the 60 fps is captured using progressive, rather than the choppier interlaced capture method.
Hardware
The NX1 19 ounce body isn't as compact and light as other cameras, but it's comparable or lighter than top APS-C sensor DLSRs, like the 23-ounce Nikon D7100. It's slightly heavier than the 17 ounce Panasonic GH4 , which is the only competitor that shoots 4K. Note though, that because the GH4 has a smaller image sensor format, its lenses will be lighter and more compact.
Importantly, the NX1 features both a 1024 x 768 OLED electronic viewfinder and a 3-inch, 1.036 million-dot Super AMOLED display. The former is essential for serious photography. The latter flips out, which makes shooting video with the camera's 4K/UltraHD powers easier.
Bottom line
At $1500 for the body alone, the NX1 comes in a little cheaper than the $1700 4K Panasonic GH4, but the GH4 might be more appealing for the simple reason that there is a massive first- and third-party lens ecosystem of micro four thirds mount lenses whereas glass for Samsung's proprietary mount remains elusive.
From the outset, the Samsung NX1 looks like a beast, which is a little surprising coming from Samsung. Obviously, specs never tell the complete story, and we'll have to wait and see if the high-resolution video and still-image quality holds up to the impressive numbers Samsung's put on the outside of the box. But there's a lot to make you actually consider this camera, and we'll be taking a very close look when it's available in mid-October.
Despite West Asia crisis, oil prices in India may not soar
Despite West Asia crisis, oil prices in India may not soar
Prices have stabilised at under $100 a barrel despite the continuing conflict. That's good news for oil importers like India.
On Wednesday, the day before the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, US President Barack Obama told Americans about his blueprint to deter the jihadist Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (known variously as the ISIS, ISIL or Islamic State). Obama's plans include increased air strikes against the terror outfit and provide training and weapons for regional groupings such as the Kurds and other Shia factions.
According to reports, the Kurds have directly approached India for help with fighting IS. They also want India to invest directly in Kurdistan, which holds significant oil reserves. Baghdad does not currently share its oil revenue with Kurdistan. This approach has come alongside Indian intelligence agencies launching investigations on jihadis of Indian origin fighting with the IS in Iraq.
Instability in West Asia is never good news for emerging economies. As a net importer of oil and gas, India relies heavily on producers such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Iran, Iraq and others for its vast energy needs. India imports around 80% of its oil requirements annually.
Regional tensions in West Asia usually have a direct impact on the price of oil. Any sign of geopolitical friction is reflected in global crude prices, which in the past few years have comfortably risen above $100 per barrel (per barrel). In fact, the price is so high, experts say that it is enough to absorb substantial geopolitical shocks.
Import, subsidise, distribute
India spends a large sum of its annual budget importing oil at market price, and then selling it to its citizens at subsidised rates. High oil prices are often both economically and politically unacceptable in India. However, the price at which the commodity is imported is determined by political conditions at the source of the oil.
Oil pricing is almost exclusively controlled by the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, a Vienna-based forum that includes most of the major oil producers in the world, including the West Asian nations and Venezuela. Pricing depends on how OPEC members control their production numbers.
Stabilised prices
On the face of it, the geopolitical tensions in the parts of West Asia that produce some of the highest volumes of oil might be expected to cause prices of crude to spiral. Paradoxically, they seem to have pushed the price of global Brent crude and West Texas Intermediate southwards. This when West Asia is staring at the possibility of all-out sectarian conflict; Western nations have announced sanctions on Russia – the world’s largest producer of oil – over the Ukraine crisis; and the relationship between Iran and the West is already precarious.
When Obama announced that strikes against ISIS are going to increase, and may spill over into Syria as well, oil prices in Asia increased by a few cents, but remained well below the $100 per barrel mark. While it is too early to speculate whether this will continue, experts have arrived at some reasons for this uncharacteristic stability: caution, regulation and, surprisingly, lower global demand.
Caution, in this discussion, refers to the relatively new global understanding that this is a commodity that must not be taken for granted. Regulation here refers to the new energy policies that most states follow, which emphasise things such efficiency and discourage hoarding.
But what is the reason for the lowered demand?
The slowdown in Asian economic growth has stymied the rise in oil prices. The Indian economy is well behind the targeted 8%-9% annual growth rate, and even China’s demand for oil has fallen on account of slower economic growth. This year, India has consistently outpaced China in oil consumption, according to Barclays PLC. India is the third-biggest oil consumer in Asia after China and Japan and accounted for about 4.2% of the global oil consumption in 2013.
Global economic mosaic
There are more fundamental factors at play as well. Robert Kahn and Steven A Tananbaum, senior fellows for international economics at the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations, have charted the recent disconnect between rising geopolitical tensions and stability in global oil markets. Kahn and Tananbaum highlight that it is not the threat of prolonged war in the Middle East, or possible long-term detachment between the West and Russia, but a return of the economic crisis-like conditions in Europe that would be more lethal to global economics, including oil prices.
Kahn and Tananbaum see Syria, Iraq and the Ukraine crisis as “small pieces of the global economic mosaic”.
Even as IS and other militia groups operating in Syria take over many of the country’s oil fields, it is important to remember that Syria’s oil production is not large enough to cause a major shift in global pricing. Iraq is a different story, as it has sizeable reserves, mostly in the southern part of the country. Over the past few days, IS's progressive capture of Iraqi territory has been slowed by US air strikes and retaliation by the Iraqi army and Kurdish peshmerga. IS has not made significant strides in capturing the capital, Baghdad, or the country’s southern regions.
The US Energy Information Administration now expects oil prices to stay below $100 per barrel till the end of this decade. While this may signal more difficult times for producers, emerging-economy oil importers such as India may benefit greatly from this unexpected stability.
We welcome your comments at letters@scroll.in.
CLOTHESLINE – EPISODE 45
CLOTHESLINE – EPISODE 45
Newslaundry.com
Sep 10, 2014 in Clothesline
Hilarious ! A weekly wrap of the good, the bad and the funny from the world of news. India TV’s Japanese joyride, Modi’s Japan visit, the Meerut braveheart confusion and more.
Omar Abdullah does a Dubya: Here's why Kashmir floods will be his Katrina moment
by Lakshmi Chaudhry Sep 15, 2014 12:19 IST
"Nothing could have prepared me for what I saw as we flew over Srinagar with the PM. I can remember looking out of the window as the plane did a low circuit over the city, absolutely dumbfounded…. I started to realise just how bad the situation was when I saw the scale of the disaster," writes Jammu and Kashmir Chief Minister Omar Abdullah in the Indian Express of the moment when he first grasped the enormity of the devastation wreaked by the floods.
His near-naive astonishment echoes that of another leader during another such crisis in another part of the world.
The plane flew over New Orleans, then traveled along the coast to Mobile, Miss., before turning north toward Washington. “It’s totally wiped out,” Bush remarked as the modified Boeing 747 moved east past Slidell, a Louisiana community reduced to a pile of rubble and sticks. “It’s devastating, it’s got to be doubly devastating on the ground,” Bush said, according to his spokesman Scott McClellan.
Then President George Bush too was looking out of a plane window when he realised — a critical 24 hours too late — the consequences of Hurricane Katrina back in 2005. The natural disaster would prove to be the final nail in the coffin of a presidency already weakened by the debilitating Iraq war.
It is all the more ironic then that Abdullah's Finance Minister Abdul Rahim Rather in a meeting with Prime Minister Narendra Modi would choose to offer the "Katrina defense" to explain his government's inaction, and request large-scale assistance from the Centre. "Quoting the Oklahoma flooding by Hurricane Katrina, Rather is believed to have told the prime minister plainly that no civilian government in the world is ready to face such a calamity," reports Firstpost contributor Aasha Khosa.
Yes, Kashmir is indeed like Katrina but for a number of reasons less palatable to the Abdullah's government.
One, it marks the complete failure of leadership — but in this case, at the local, not national level. Unlike Bush, the Prime Minister's response was swift and generous, aimed to make sure that no one will accuse the Centre of playing step-mother to Kashmir. And whatever the carping about the rescue efforts, except for its most unreasonable critics, most know that the military is doing its best, given weather and terrain conditions. What has been most notable about the floods in Kashmir is the near-absence of the local authorities.
As Basharat Peer tells The Times of India:
The failure of the local government is simply shocking. All you see making an effort are the boys from the army with their boats and machinery and common people. I heard that Omar Abdullah was on television throwing down relief packets, and posing with a chinar in the backdrop, a tokenism of an appearance. But his leadership is nowhere to be seen and I have not seen this kind of failure of the government in a long time.
Photos of Abdullah raining down relief packets at his people, in fact, mark his very 'Brownie' moment — as when Bush told the federal disaster agency head, Michael Brown, "Brownie, you're doing a heck of a job," even as FEMA was botching the rescue effort. As with Bush, the image has become a symbol of just how distant and out-of-touch Omar is from the average Kashmiri.
Two, it has become representative of the problem of privilege. "Flood victims are narrating horrifying tales at make-shift camps, alleging selective approach to rescue operations. The stories are heartrending,'' journalist Shujaat Bukhari told TOI,confirming allegations of "selective rescue." Where Katrina exposed racism in America, as poorer, black neighbourhoods were last to be evacuated, the floods have exposed the age-old VIP culture that afflicts not just Kashmir, but all of India. And while the extent of the problem is likely exaggerated when placed in the context of the sheer numbers that have been evacuated, it would hardly be surprising if authorities were ordered to prioritise those with 'connections', or more affluent areas or tourists (This is India, after all).
It is why Abdullah — while never directly addressing the issue of selective rescue — goes to great, even amusing, lengths to include in his Indian Express essaysuch nuggets as:
My Minister for Sheep & Animal Husbandry was brave beyond belief, his daughters were last heard screaming for help in their official residence where waters were reported to have climbed to the second floor of the two-floor home. He had no idea of their welfare or whereabouts, but he kept working and contributing to the efforts that were unfolding by flying to the airport and helping to coordinate activities there. My uncles, one of them seriously ill, requiring regular dialysis, and sundry other family were trapped in their homes with no contact, but I couldn’t do anything to rescue them in the immediate aftermath. In fact, my uncles came out after three days of being trapped by flagging down a private boat passing through the area.
Their very detail makes the tales sound unconvincing, and Abdullah, weak and defensive, for he knows well that it is his government that will pay the price for this perception. Given the long-fraught relationship, Kashmiris expect little from the Central government and the army — which is why rumors of negligence are easy to believe. Omar Abdullah does not however enjoy the luxury of low expectations, as onestranded Srinagar resident made it clear, “The situation is pathetic. We are wondering why we voted for a state government that does nothing for us.”
That is the question that will loom over Abdullah now that he has compounded his George Bush act with the now classic Sheila Dikshit defence. As Dikshit discovered in the aftermath of the Delhi gang rape, no one will vote for a leader who declares her helplessness. It is unlikely then that Kashmiris will be impressed, come election time, by a Chief Minister who despondently writes, "I can’t remember a single natural disaster in the country where the government tasked with responding was so completely paralysed."
Abdullah's reelection prospects, always precarious, now look inevitably doomed. And as his rivals vie to profit from his losses, the blame game over the floods will get uglier still as Election Day draws nigh. George Bush's Katrina moment offered a vital opportunity to Democrats who had tried but failed to capitalize on the Iraq war. Who will be the winners in this situation — the separatists or the BJP — remains to be seen. The loser, however, has already been declared.
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