2015, മേയ് 15, വെള്ളിയാഴ്‌ച

No need to switch off your smartphone at night

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New York: If you often switch off your smartphone at night to give it some rest do remember that such 'rest periods' don't do any good to your cell phone.

'I would say that shutting down your phone at night isn't something that necessarily falls under routine maintenance,' observes iFixit founder Kyle Wiens, a technology expert.

According to Wiens, shutting your smartphone off won't necessarily help save your battery.

'Batteries in phones have a finite lifespan -- the more that you use them, the faster that battery wears out,' he says.

In general, smartphone batteries have a life of between 300 to 500 full-charge to fully-discharged cycles. And even if you only use a fraction of your phone's battery and then recharge it to 100 percent, that still counts towards a full cycle.

'If you wear your battery down 50 percent then charge it back up, that's half a cycle,' says Wiens.

Powering down your smartphone at night won't help preserve the battery, since it's unlikely that you would be using the device at that time, anyhow.

'It comes to how hard you use your phone,' says Wiens. For instance, if you're constantly streaming music, watching videos, or using it as a Global Positioning System (GPS) device while mounted on a car's sun-soaked dashboard (heat kills batteries too), your phone's power won't last very long.

Instead, what you can do, advises Wien, is periodically drain your battery to zero percent and let your smartphone die.

'If you run your battery all the way down to zero every once in a while -- once a year is fine -- it makes the percentage count,' says the tech expert.

IANS

SC allows Madhani to visit Kerala

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New Delhi: The Supreme Court has given permission to Abdul Nassar Madhani to visit Kerala for 5 days. The permission was granted to visit his ailing mother who is undergoing treatment at the Thiruvananthapuram RCC and his paralytic father. The SC also informed that it is the Karnataka police which must ensure security for Madhani when he visits Kerala.

Madhani had sought permission to visit Kerala in the affidavit filed in the Supreme court. In the affidavit, he had also stated that the Karnataka govt was trying to ruin the case by sabotaging it.

Meanwhile, the trial court informed SC that it would take 2 years to complete the investigations relating to the Bangalore blast case. It was the Bangalore Additional City Civil and Sessions Court which informed this to the SC through the Karnataka High Court.

2015, മേയ് 12, ചൊവ്വാഴ്ച

Picasso's Women of Algiers smashes auction record

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Media caption "It's yours, sold" - the moment Women of Algiers breaks record
Picasso's Women of Algiers has become the most expensive painting to sell at auction, going for $160m (£102.6m) at Christie's in New York.
Eleven minutes of prolonged bidding from telephone buyers preceded the final sale - for much more than its pre-sale estimate of $140m.
The final price of $179.3m (£115m) includes commission of just over 12%.
The sale also featured Alberto Giacometti's life-size sculpture Pointing Man, which set its own record.
It is now the most expensive sculpture sold at auction, after going for $141.3m (£90.6m). Both buyers chose to remain anonymous.
The previous world record for a painting sold at auction was $142.4m, for British painter Francis Bacon's Three Studies of Lucian Freud in 2013.
The Picasso oil painting is a vibrant, cubist depiction of nude courtesans, and is part of a 15-work series the Spanish artist created in 1954-55 designated with the letters A to O.
"This is an absolutely blockbuster picture - it's one of the most exciting pictures that we've seen on the market for 10 years," said Philip Hoffman, founder and CEO of the Fine Art Fund Group.
"Yes there are one or two [Picassos] that could even smash that record but it has a huge wall presence, it's a big show-off picture.
"For anybody that wants to have a major Picasso, this is it - and $179m in 10 years' time will probably look inexpensive," said Hoffman.
Man Pointing by Alberto Giacometti also set a record

Analysis: Arts Editor, Will Gompertz

Make no mistake; this is a fine painting, by a great artist, produced at an important time in his career.
He started the Women of Algiers series in 1954 shortly after the death of his friend and competitor, Henri Matisse, the master of what he called the Odalisque - exotic paintings of Turkish women in harems.
Now in his 70s, Picasso felt he should pick up the Orientalist mantel from Matisse while also looking to bring together many of the influences that informed his own art. You can see an echo of his famous proto-Cubist work Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) and the debt it owes to Cezanne and El Greco. There was his lifelong admiration for the French romantic painter Eugene Delacroix who painted the original Women of Algiers (1834), and - of course - his adoration of the female form.
Added to this rich mix was the geo-politics of the time, which saw an uprising in the French colony of Algeria that would eventually lead to the country's independence.
In Women of Algiers version O, Picasso has distilled all of these ingredients into one large-scale painting of great quality: a study not only of the Arabesque, but also a serious enquiry into the nature of colour, line and composition.

$100M artworks

  • Picasso, Women of Algiers - $160m (2015)
  • Alberto Giacometti, Pointing Man - $141.3m (2015)
  • Francis Bacon, Three Studies of Lucian Freud - $142m (2013)
  • Edvard Munch, The Scream - $119.9m (2012)
  • Picasso, Nude, Green Leaves, and Bust - $106.5m (2010)
  • Alberto Giacometti, Walking Man I - $104.3m (2010)
  • Picasso, Boy With a Pipe - $104.1m (2004)
Experts believe the investment value of art is behind the high prices.
"I don't really see an end to it, unless interest rates drop sharply, which I don't see happening in the near future," said Manhattan dealer Richard Feigen.
"There's a huge amount of demand," added Hoffman, founder and CEO of the Fine Art Fund Group.
"The world's billionaires are in New York, the world's museum buyers are there.
"I don't think we've ever seen a sale as important as this in Christie's and Sotheby's in my 25 years of working in the art world."

Exports of coconut, products from India touch record high

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 Kochi: While coconut yield in major producer states like Andhra Pradesh, Kerala and Karnataka is showing a decline, the export of coconut and coconut products from the country in the last fiscal touched a record high of Rs.1,312.38 crore.

A report prepared by V.C. Vasanthakumar of the Coconut Development Board (CDB) says there has been a 13.5 percent growth in exports as compared to the 2013-14 figures.

According to the CDB's estimates for 2014-15, the coconut production in the country is expected at 20,000 million nuts, a drop of 10 percent compared to 2013-14.

Among various coconut products, the share of activated carbon alone in the exports accounted for Rs.557.80 crore.

The primary raw material used for activated carbon is any organic material with a high carbon content, and coconut shell is one such product that has now started fetching good money.

Exported dry coconut accounted for Rs.194 crore followed by coconut oil Rs.147.07 crore, and other fresh, dried, shredded and frozen products accounted for Rs.135.84 crore.

Export of dry coconut to Pakistan accounted for Rs.183.06 crore.

The report pointed out that during the last fiscal, India imported coconut products worth Rs.421.66 crore, including products like coconut fatty acid, copra, expeller cake and coconut oil.

During the period, domestic price of coconut oil continued to remain high over the international prices, said the report.

Speaking to IANS, CDB chairman T.K. Jose said for the past few years this has been the trend in exports, and the need of the hour is to increase the production of coconuts and make value addition to it.

'What has to happen with immediate effect is there should be value addition, especially in the production of coconut fatty acids, coconut cream and milk products. Today, these products are imported. If this happens, there will be a huge surge in exports,' said Jose.

Vasanthakumar added that the exports of coconut and coconut products will be higher this year as the export of virgin coconut oil is expected to rise from 815 tonnes in the last fiscal to over 2,000 tonnes.

Several people killed as another big quake jolts Nepal

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File photo
Kathmandu: A major earthquake on Tuesday jolted Nepal, striking fear among the people and causing panic in a country which was barely recovering from the devastating April 25 temblor.
Cracked buildings collapsed in a heap of debris and landslides cut off roads as an earthquake measuring 7.3 on the Richter scale hit Nepal, with its epicentre not far from Mount Everest -- the world's highest peak at 8,848 m.
Terrified people ran out of homes and offices as the buildings began to shake violently due to the earthquake. They ran to open space and parks here.
"It was frightening," said an eyewitness who clutched her daughter. "It felt worse than last time," she added
Media said seven people were killed in Chautara Town, east of Kathmandu, where buildings also collapsed. The toll is likely to rise as several people have been injured in the quake.
Six strong aftershocks followed in quick succession. Four of the aftershocks were in the epicentre Kodari while the strongest aftershock measured 6.3 on the Richter scale.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi said he has directed authorities to be on alert for rescue and relief operations.
A tweet from the prime minister's office said: "PM took stock of the situation following the fresh major earthquake felt in Nepal and parts of India, at a high-level meeting."
India Meteorological Department chief L.S. Rathore said that aftershocks could well continue for a few more weeks and months.
The tremors were felt in India, particularly in capital Delhi, Lucknow, Jaipur, Amritsar, Kolkata and the northeastern city of Guwahati. Buildings also shook in faraway Kochi in Kerala.
In Delhi, people ran out as buildings began to shake. Metro services were brought to a halt.
Rohtash Sharma said in Delhi: "I was at a bank when I felt the earthquake. I immediately ran out along with others."
"Oh...this time I felt that it lasted longer than the one that we had in April. We all rushed out of our houses," said Rakesh Sharma, who lives on the fifth floor in a high-rise building in C-Scheme area of Jaipur in India's Rajasthan state.
In Kathmandu, an eyewitness said that he saw a building fall.
Another witness told IANS that he saw debris falling on a taxi packed with people. The fate of the people in the taxi was not immediately known.
Onlookers were left dazed and distraught on seeing the buildings collapse with a roar, a replay of the April 25 quake horror.
There was no electricity in Kathmandu. Internet connectivity too snapped.
People desperate for news tried to get in touch through their mobile phones, but that too did not work. The mobile network was jammed.
In Kathmandu, people made a beeline for shops to stock on water and other essential commodities here.
Harried shopkeepers were seen trying to manage the surging crowds at their shops.
People feared a repeat of the April 25 earthquake which caused widespread devastation.
"It is really scary," said a Kathmandu resident as he rushed to join the people at the local grocery shop.
Nepal's National Assembly was in session when the earth began to shake, creating panic among the lawmakers. They quickly trooped out of the building, which was soon plunged into darkness.
Kathmandu airport was closed temporarily as the ATC staff hurried out of the tower.

2015, മേയ് 11, തിങ്കളാഴ്‌ച

Cosmic 'dinosaur egg' about to hatch discovered

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Image of dense cores of molecular gas/ source: news.co.au

Washington: Astronomers have discovered what may be the first known example of a globular cluster about to be born - an incredibly massive and extremely dense yet star-free cloud of molecular gas.

Globular clusters -- a dazzling group of up to a million ancient stars -- are among the oldest objects in the universe.

Though plentiful in and around many galaxies, newborn examples are rare and the conditions necessary to create new ones have never been detected till date.

'We may be witnessing one of the most ancient and extreme modes of star formation in the universe,' said Kelsey Johnson, astronomer at University of Virginia in Charlottesville and lead author of the paper.

This remarkable object looks like it was plucked straight out of the very early universe.

This object, which the astronomers playfully refer to as the 'Firecracker,' is located approximately 50 million light-years away from the Earth.

What makes the 'Firecracker' unique is its extraordinary mass, comparatively small size and apparent lack of stars.

With Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimetre Array (ALMA) telescope, the astronomers were able to find and study in detail a pristine example of such an object before stars forever change its unique characteristics.

Most globular clusters formed during a veritable 'baby boom' around 12 billion years ago at a time when galaxies first assembled.

Each contains as many as a million densely packed 'second generation' stars.

Our own Milky Way is known to have at least 150 such clusters, though it may have many more.

Globular clusters evolve out of their embryonic, star-free stage very rapidly -- in as little as one million years.

This means the object discovered by ALMA is undergoing a very special phase of its life, offering astronomers a unique opportunity to study a major component of the early universe.

The paper is set to appear in the Astrophysical Journal.

IANS

Jayalalithaa acquitted in disproportionate assets case

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Bengaluru: A special bench of the Karnataka High Court on Monday acquitted former Tamil Nadu chief minister J. Jayalalithaa in the disproportionate assets case in which she was convicted and sentenced for four years' imprisonment by a trial court on September 27, 2014.

Pronouncing the verdict, single-judge bench of Justice C.R. Kumaraswamy said all the charges on which Jayalalithaa was convicted and sentenced by the trial court were not sustainable and upheld her appeal.

Meanwhile, security has been stepped up in Bengaluru ahead of Monday's crucial verdict by a special bench of the Karnataka High Court on former Tamil Nadu chief minister J. Jayalalithaa's appeal against her conviction in a disproportionate assets case.

'We have deployed additional forces in the city and imposed ban order within 1km radius of the Karnataka High Court from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Monday to maintain law and order,' Additional Commissioner of Police Alok Kumar told IANS.

'Ten platoons of the Karnataka State Reserve Police, 500 policemen and 25 senior police officers will be present in and around the high court to ensure peace and prevent any untoward incident. Entry into the high court will also be restricted to avoid crowding,' Kumar said.

A trial court, headed by special judge John Michael D'Cunha, had on September 27, 2014 convicted and sentenced Jayalalithaa and her three accomplices to a four-year jail term in the Rs.66.65-crore illegal assets case that dragged on for 18 years.

The three co-convicts are Sasikala Natarajan, her nephew V.N. Sudhakaran and her aunt J. Ellavarsi. Sudhakaran is also the disowned foster son of Jayalalithaa.

The apex court on October 17, 2014 had granted interim bail till December 18 to the 67-year-old Jayalalithaa and her three co-convicts. Their bail was subsequently extended till May 12.

The general secretary of Tamil Nadu's ruling AIADMK had also spent three weeks in the central jail on the city's outskirts after the high court rejected her bail petition.

Simple exercises can help control snoring

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New York: If snoring is hampering your partner's sound sleep, simple mouth and tongue exercises can do wonders.

Researchers have found that these exercises can reduce frequency of snoring by 36 percent and total power of snoring by 59 percent.

'This study demonstrates a promising, non-invasive treatment for large populations suffering from snoring, the snorers and their bed partners, that are largely omitted from research and treatment,' said Barbara Phillips, medical director, sleep laboratory at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine in the US.

Snorers can try pushing the tip of the tongue against the roof of the mouth and sliding the tongue backward.

Sucking the tongue upward against the roof of the mouth, and pressing the entire tongue against the roof of the mouth can also help.

Forcing the back of the tongue against the floor of the mouth while keeping the tip of the tongue in contact with the bottom, front teeth and elevating the back of the roof of the mouth and uvula while saying the vowel 'A' are other exercises that the researchers suggested.

The study was conducted on 39 patients who were randomised for three months of treatment with nasal dilator strips plus respiratory exercises (Control) or daily oropharyngeal exercises (therapy).

The participants were evaluated at study entry and end by sleep questionnaires and full polysomnography with objective measurements of snoring.

'The exercises significantly reduced snoring in our study group,' said study author Geraldo Lorenzi-Filho from University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

2015, മേയ് 7, വ്യാഴാഴ്‌ച

40 French journalists publicly denounce sexist politicians

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 Paris: Forty female French journalists have signed an open letter of complaint that harshly accuses select French politicians of making sexual, offensive insinuations that they described as 'lewd paternalism'.

Lenaig Bredoux, a signatory investigative journalist with the web site Mediapart, told Efe news agency: 'If the situation continues, the next step will be publishing the names' of the specific politicians.

The letter came out in response to a silence that has 'lasted too long', while it seeks to expose the systematic behaviour, it does not generalise the treatment, but it can often be described as 'structural', Bredoux explained.

Driven by journalist Laure Bretton from Liberation daily newspaper, the initiative succeeded in collecting signatures from all over the French media: from the Paris Match weekly, France Inter radio station, the historic Le Monde, and the popular Le Parisien.

The text, which is simply called, 'We, the political reporters', condemns the 'intolerable' sexist behaviour exhibited by certain parliamentarians, senate members and figures from the French political class.

IANS

Afghan judge sentences 4 to death in mob killing of woman

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KABUL: An Afghan court on Wednesday convicted and sentenced four men to death for their role in the brutal mob killing of a woman in Kabul in March — a slaying that shocked the nation and spurred calls for authorities to ensure women's rights to equality and protection from violence.

The sentences were part of a trial of 49 suspects, including 19 police officers, over the March 19 killing of the 27-year-old woman named Farkhunda who was beaten to death in a frenzied attack sparked by a bogus accusation that she had burned a copy of the Quran.

The trial, which began Saturday, only involved two full days of court proceedings — an unusual swiftness in the slow-moving Afghan judicial system. It was broadcast live on national television, reflecting huge public interest in the case.

Judge Safiullah Mojadedi handed down the four death sentences at Afghanistan's Primary Court in Kabul on Wednesday. He also sentenced eight of the defendants to 16 years in prison and dropped charges against 18. The remaining suspects are to be sentenced on Sunday.

The defendants have the right to appeal their sentences. The charges included assault, murder and encouraging others to participate in the assault. The police officers were charged with neglecting their duties and failing to prevent the attack.

Farkhunda's brother, Mujibullah, told The Associated Press that her family was angered by the leniency of the court toward the majority of the defendants.

'The outcome of the trial is not fair and we do not accept it — you saw just four people sentenced to death but everybody knows that more than 40 people were involved in martyring and burning and beating my sister,' said Mujibullah, who like many Afghans, including his sister, uses only one name.

'Eighteen people have been freed. The court should punish them and that should be a lesson for anyone who would commit this sort of crime, anywhere in our country, in the future,' he added.

Farkhunda's brutal killing shocked many Afghans, though some public and religious figures said it would have been justified if she had in fact damaged a Quran. A presidential investigation later found that she had not damaged a copy of the Muslim holy book.

The last agonizing and brutal moments of her life were captured on mobile phone cameras by witnesses and those in the mob that attacked her. The videos of the assault circulated widely on social media. They showed her being punched, kicked, beaten with planks of wood, pushed by police onto a roof and dropped from it, thrown in the street and run over by a car. She then had a lump of concrete dropped on her and her body was dragged along the road outside the mosque were the assault took place and tossed onto the bank of the Kabul River. A crowd watched as her body was set on fire.

The incident sparked nationwide outrage and soul-searching, as well as a civil society movement seeking to limit the power of clerics, strengthen the rule of law and improve women's rights.

Farkhunda's parents addressed the court before the sentences were handed down, asking that the accused be dealt with according to the law.

'Everybody saw what happened and I insist on justice,' her mother, Bibi Hajira told the court Wednesday. 'That's all I want.'

Afghanistan's judicial system has long faced criticism for its inability to offer the majority of Afghans access to justice. Women especially are sidelined, despite constitutional guarantees of equality and protection from violence, a recent report by the United Nations concluded.

The attack on Farkhunda was widely seen as symptomatic of the general low regard for women in Afghan society, where violence against women often goes unpunished.

AP

ആബുലൻസ മറിഞ്ഞ് രോഗി തീ പിടിച്ചു മരിച്ചു.

[ The ambulance overturned and caught fire and the patient was burnt Pay caculans fell into the Kalad hospital and caught fire. Nadapur...