Jan 26, 2012

Flights rerouted as massive solar storm slams Earth

Washington: Solar radiation from a massive sun storm - the largest in nearly a decade - collided with the Earth's atmosphere on Tuesday, prompting an airline to reroute flights and sky watchers to seek out spectacular light displays.

US carrier Delta Air Lines said it had adjusted flight routes for transpolar journeys between Asia and the United States to avoid problems caused by the radiation storm, a spokesman said.

NASA confirmed the coronal mass ejection (CME) began colliding with Earth's magnetic field around 10:00 AM (1500 GMT) on Tuesday, adding that the storm was now being considered the largest since October 2003.

Radiation storms are not harmful to humans, on Earth at least, according to the US space agency. They can, however, affect satellite operations and short wave radio.

The storm's radiation, likely to continue bombarding Earth's atmosphere through Wednesday, and its possible disruption to satellite communications in the polar regions prompted the flight rerouting, airline officials said.

Atlanta-based Delta, the world's second largest airline, said 'a handful' of routes had their journey adjusted 'based on potential impact' of the solar storm on communications equipment, spokesman Anthony Black told AFP.

Routes from Hong Kong, Shanghai and Seoul took a more southerly route after the solar flare erupted on Sunday.

The airline said it would continue to monitor solar activity before return flights to their normal routes.

Due to the unusual intensity of the photons raining on Earth, the spectacular aurora borealis - the stunning 'Northern Lights' display - which is often seen closer to the Arctic pole at this time of year, has been seen as far south as Scotland and northern England, and at lower latitudes in the United States.

The event started late Sunday with a moderate-sized solar flare that erupted right near the centre of the Sun, said Doug Biesecker, a physicist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Space Weather Prediction Center.

'The flare itself was nothing spectacular, but it sent off a very fast coronal mass ejection traveling four million miles per hour (6.4 million kilometres per hour),' he told AFP.

Space weather watchers said the best aurora sightings are normally around midnight local time.

Rob Stammes, who runs the Lofoten Polar Light Centre in Lofoten, Norway said the CME's arrival Tuesday had produced a surge in ground currents outside his laboratory.

'This could be a happy day for many aurora watchers,' he told aurora tracker website spaceweather.com

Jul 15, 2011

Tendulkar wants to enjoy England tour, not thinking of 100th ton

London: A billion-plus fans in India would be expecting a record 100th ton when Sachin Tendulkar walks out to bat against England in the first cricket Test at Lord's but that is the last thing on the batting maestro's mind as he simply wants to enjoy during the tour.

Sachin, who is on a vacation here with his family, insists that enjoying the game is the key to success.

'I am not thinking of records,' Sachin was quoted as saying by The Daily Telegraph.

'I am just thinking of enjoying this tour. The secret to any performance is not in chasing records. I think about, 'What is the best way to enjoy the game, and how can I enhance that enjoyment factor?'

'If I enhance the enjoyment then, naturally, the standard of play becomes higher. To me, that is more important. If I am playing well, things can happen. I don't need to go around chasing them. It is a process. You construct a solid foundation and build on it.'

Besides spending time with family, Tendulkar has been training here for the four-Test series while his team mates are set to join him soon from the West Indies.

Tendulkar said that being in England enables him to balance life by doing thing he will not be able to do in India due to the crazy fan-following.

'When I spend time in England, it is different. I get to do certain things that I wouldn't be able to do in India: to go into the park with my children, to do whatever they want to do, whether it be a game of soccer or cricket. I enjoy the best of both. The idea is to balance life in India with life away from India, to get the best of both and to be a happy man.'

When asked about retiring from the game he has played for over 20 years, Sachin said: 'I haven't. I am enjoying every moment. It has been fun. In fact, I am looking at how to enjoy the game more and how to improve the standard of play. It is about getting better. Nobody knows what is going to happen tomorrow. At least today I know that I want to enjoy cricket, to enjoy the moment.'

Feb 3, 2011

Camera to record what teenagers do behind the wheel

Driving has always been synonymous with teenage independence. But not anymore, as an insurance company is offering parents the chance to place a video camera in cars driven by their children.
The tiny two-way camera, which also records audio, is placed on the rear-view mirror at the centre of the windshield. It tapes both the driver and his view of the road ahead.

Should a driver violently swerve or even brake too hard, a video report of what happened before and after the event is sent by the insurance company to the teenager and his parents, the Daily Mail reports.

The desired effect is to force teenagers to drive sensibly and, therefore, prevent deaths on the road caused by careless and inexperienced drivers.

American Family Insurance (AFI) has teamed up with California-based technology company DriveCam to offer protective or just paranoid parents the opportunity to spy on their children's habits behind the wheel.

The service is offered at no extra cost, the insurance company said.

However, the teenagers' primary complaint is that their parents will be able to see what they get up to at precisely the moment when they have traditionally broken free and hit the open road.

But Phil Reed, senior consumer advice editor at US car website Edmunds.com, said: 'Once teenagers know that the only way their parents are going to see any of the video is when they do something erratic in the car, then they become more open to using this.'

Jan 26, 2011

Happy Republic Day


Google's Larry Page to take over as CEO

Google CEO Eric Schmidt will step down from his role and will be replaced by co-founder Larry Page, 37, in April. Schmidt who joined Google in 2001 to become its chief executive, will stay on as executive chairman after he leaves his CEO role. This unexpected shake-up has surprised many in the tech world, as Schmidt was widely credited with maintaining Google's dominance in the internet search and advertising, software, operating system businesses, despite competition from the likes of Microsoft, Apple and Yahoo. Schmidt was brought in as CEO as investors believed the company needed a more mature leader.

According to the company, after retirement he will focus on deals, partnerships, customers and broader business relationships, government outreach and technology thought leadership. He will also continue to act as an advisor to co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin.

In my clear opinion, Larry is ready to lead and I'm excited about working with both him and Sergey for a long time to come,' Schmidt said.

Page praised Schmidt, too. 'There is no other CEO in the world that could have kept such headstrong founders so deeply involved and still run the business so brilliantly,' Page said.

'Eric is a tremendous leader and I have learned innumerable lessons from him.'

In a Twitter message today, Schmidt wrote: 'Day-to-day adult supervision no longer needed!,'

The surprise move shocked the tech industry. Schmidt, Page and Brin have long run Google as a trio, an approach they spelled out in an 'owner's manual' included in the company's 2004 IPO filing.

'We run Google as a triumvirate,' Page and Brin wrote. 'The three of us run the company collaboratively with Sergey and me as presidents. The structure is unconventional, but we have worked successfully in this way.'

Page, Google's founding CEO, served as chief executive from 1998 to 2001. He will once again take charge of the company's day-to-day operations, and he will also be in charge of Google's product development and technology strategy. Brin, Google's other co-founder, will continue to work on Google's new projects, but will no longer serve as a company president.

Also Thursday, Google reported a quarterly profit and sales that rose from year-ago results and beat Wall Street's forecasts.

The world's online search leader said its net income in the fourth quarter rose to $2.5 billion, up 29% from a year earlier.

Google noted that new products like mobile and display advertising continue to perform very well. YouTube's revenue more than doubled in 2010.