Showing posts with label world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label world. Show all posts

Monday, October 31, 2011

Next generation drones




An artist's impression of the high-altitude spy plane

The maiden flight of a revolutionary drone aircraft that can stay in the air for four days at 65,000 feet is just days away.



The Phantom Eye, made by Boeing's secretive Phantom Works division, is powered by hydrogen and is designed to carry out surveillance and reconnaissance missions while remaining at high altitude. It will produce only water as a by-product.



Its inaugural flight will take place at Edwards Air Force Base in California and is expected to last between four and eight hours.



The maiden flight of a revolutionary drone aircraft that can stay in the air for four days at 65,000 feet is just days away.



The Phantom Eye, made by Boeing's secretive Phantom Works division, is powered by hydrogen and is designed to carry out surveillance and reconnaissance missions while remaining at high altitude. It will produce only water as a by-product.

Phantom Eye: The technology behind it means pilotless dog-fights have come a step closer

Its inaugural flight will take place at Edwards Air Force Base in California and is expected to last between four and eight hours.

'It is a perfect example of turning an idea into a reality. It defines our rapid prototyping efforts and will demonstrate the art-of-the-possible when it comes to persistent intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.



'The capabilities inherent in Phantom Eye's design will offer game-changing opportunities for our military, civil and commercial customers.'

'It is a perfect example of turning an idea into a reality. It defines our rapid prototyping efforts and will demonstrate the art-of-the-possible when it comes to persistent intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance.



'The capabilities inherent in Phantom Eye's design will offer game-changing opportunities for our military, civil and commercial customers.'

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Online prostitution ring








FBI agents busted an online prostitution ring in Detroit that arranged sex parties that gave out goodie bags filled with tokens for free sex with prostitutes.



The location of the parties were announced online, and attendees had to pay for access. The men used the parties as time to size up the prostitutes, some of whom were teenagers, before arranging meetings with them.



The girls were given free drugs, including marijuana and methamphetamines, some of whom became addicted and returned to the parties for the purpose of fuelling their habit. All attendees- both the men and the prostitutes- had to pay a cover charge ranging from $20 to $200 per event.

The three male organizers also sold 'goodie bags' for $10 at the events containing their recipe for 'a good time'.







Goodie bags contained colour-coded tickets for sex acts, chocolate, and a prostitute's set of underwear. Gold tickets signified a free, one-hour appointment with an escort. A black or green ticket was good for 30 minutes of an escort's time. The underwear had the name of the gentleman's escort for the evening. 

Events were always held in public places in Michigan, three of which were the Shark Club, Royal Lanes and at Fairlane Bowl, and the sex acts were all performed after the events.

 

That said, the attendees at events voted for 'best of' awards for the prostitutes, rewarding them for the time they spent with the men after the events.

The FBI identified David Kilvington, Steven Thompson, and Mark J. LeBlanc as the three men who arranged the events and coordinated online chat rooms for the customers.

 

All three men face a maximum jail sentence of up to 20 years for their involvement in 'interstate travel for the purpose of engaging in prostitution.



Authorities were initially tipped off to the ring in March 2007 by someone who claimed to be the parent of a girl who was 'tricked' into attending the event, and later became addicted to the drugs that the organizers handed out.



'My 17 year old daughter got involved with drugs and prostitution through an online escort bulletin board,' the unnamed parent wrote.



The woman wrote of how her daughter attended the events and only knew the organizers by their internet screen names.

'She also had sex with these men many times, some times they paid her sometimes they did not. They are both in their 60's and she did not want to but she need [sic] the drugs and did not want to get into trouble. How can this go on?' the parent continued.



Later in the email, the mother said that her daughter had contracted a sexual transmitted disease from her relations with the men. The mother warned that their was another scheduled event, and she said that previous events had hosted up to 120 people.



Police did not break up the event that the mother warned of, so she wrote in again, and that is when her complaints, which were originally sent to the local county sheriff's office, were forwarded on to federal authorities.



  

The investigation started after the 2007 emails, and the three ringleaders- Kilvington, Thompson, and LeBlanc- were arraigned in a Detroit court Friday. Kilvington is being temporarily detained, while Thompson and LeBlanc were released on bail. --








Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Beauty of Mathematics:









Here are some funny math interesting facts All the below tricks are based around the sequential manipulation of the numbers being used for input and output.





Sequential Inputs of numbers with 8




1 x 8 + 1 = 9

12 x 8 + 2 = 98

123 x 8 + 3 = 987

1234 x 8 + 4 = 9876

12345 x 8 + 5 = 98765

123456 x 8 + 6 = 987654

1234567 x 8 + 7 = 9876543

12345678 x 8 + 8 = 98765432

123456789 x 8 + 9 = 987654321



Sequential 1's with 9




1 x 9 + 2 = 11

12 x 9 + 3 = 111

123 x 9 + 4 = 1111

1234 x 9 + 5 = 11111

12345 x 9 + 6 = 111111

123456 x 9 + 7 = 1111111

1234567 x 9 + 8 = 11111111

12345678 x 9 + 9 = 111111111

123456789 x 9 + 10 = 1111111111



Sequential 8's with 9




9 x 9 + 7 = 88

98 x 9 + 6 = 888

987 x 9 + 5 = 8888

9876 x 9 + 4 = 88888

98765 x 9 + 3 = 888888

987654 x 9 + 2 = 8888888

9876543 x 9 + 1 = 88888888

98765432 x 9 + 0 = 888888888



Numeric Palindrome with 1's




1 x 1 = 1

11 x 11 = 121

111 x 111 = 12321

1111 x 1111 = 1234321

11111 x 11111 = 123454321

111111 x 111111 = 12345654321

1111111 x 1111111 = 1234567654321

11111111 x 11111111 = 123456787654321

111111111 x 111111111 = 12345678987654321





Without 8




12345679 x 9 = 111111111

12345679 x 18 = 222222222

12345679 x 27 = 333333333

12345679 x 36 = 444444444

12345679 x 45 = 555555555

12345679 x 54 = 666666666

12345679 x 63 = 777777777

12345679 x 72 = 888888888

12345679 x 81 = 999999999



Sequential Inputs of 9





9 x 9 = 81

99 x 99 = 9801

999 x 999 = 998001

9999 x 9999 = 99980001

99999 x 99999 = 9999800001

999999 x 999999 = 999998000001

9999999 x 9999999 = 99999980000001

99999999 x 99999999 = 9999999800000001

999999999 x 999999999 = 999999998000000001

......................................



Sequential Inputs of 6




6 x 7 = 42

66 x 67 = 4422

666 x 667 = 444222

6666 x 6667 = 44442222

66666 x 66667 = 4444422222

666666 x 666667 = 444444222222

6666666 x 6666667 = 44444442222222

66666666 x 66666667 = 4444444422222222

666666666 x 666666667 = 444444444222222222


Friday, August 19, 2011

Dalits and others






An Indian couple who met at a legal firm have become the first in Britain to claim 'caste' discrimination, saying they were forced from their jobs following their marriage.
An employment tribunal was told that solicitor Amardeep Begraj, 33, was from a higher caste than her husband Vijay, 32, the practice manager.
He belonged to the Dalits, formerly known as the Untouchables because of the nature of their work in roles such as cleaning, pest control or scavenging, and the lowest class of people according to the ancient Indian caste system.
Mrs Begraj has told the tribunal that a senior colleague warned her against marrying Mr Begraj because people of his caste were 'different creatures', while he was told his position at the firm was 'compromised'.
The case throws a spotlight on how the hereditary caste system, for centuries used to categorise people according to occupation or social standing in India, has gained a foothold in a contemporary Britain where five per cent of the population originates from the sub-continent.
Home Secretary Theresa May is considering whether to add protection to those discriminated because of their caste to existing safeguards governing race, sex, religion and sexuality in British equality law.
Five Law Lords last year inserted a clause into the Single Equalities Act, passed just before the election, giving the Government power to forbid caste discrimination.
But the issue was then referred for public consultation and the Coalition is now considering responses.
Mrs Begraj, a Sikh, belongs to the Jat caste, an agrarian people from the Punjab. She and her husband met when both worked at Coventry-based solicitors Heer Manak and began dating four years later.
Mrs Begraj told the Birmingham tribunal she was warned by a senior colleague. 'He said I should reconsider the step I was taking of marrying Vijay because people of his caste were different creatures. Marriage would be very different from dating.  Vijay was told a number of times that his position had been compromised for entering into a relationship with me.'
She also claimed that her workload increased and secretarial support was reduced 'as a punishment', and she was paid less than colleagues.
The couple married at a Gurdwara, or Sikh temple, in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, three years ago, when a colleague raised a toast to 'Jat girls going down the drain'.
When the couple had their first child, the firm did not send flowers, although this was standard practice.
Mr Begraj, who worked as a practice manager for the firm for seven years, was sacked last year. His wife resigned in January.
Last year the couple briefed a committee of the House of Lords, which swayed them to insert the clause in the legislation recognising caste discrimination. A subsequent newspaper story led to the couple's car windscreen being smashed.
The tribunal will also rule on whether they were discriminated against on grounds of religion or race. Mr Begraj is claiming wrongful dismissal and his wife is claiming unfair constructive dismissal.
The firm's management are said to consider the couple's claims outrageous.
The tribunal continues.






--

Rakesh babu R



Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Sharma and Obama administration




Deven Sharma Deven Sharma, president of Standard & Poor's, testifies during a hearing before the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on Capitol Hill October 22, 2008 in Washington, DC. The hearing was focused on credit rating agencies and the financial crisis.
About four months after MS Dhoni's boys won the Cricket World Cup for India, another man from Jharkhand has now shook up the world. On August 5, Standard & Poor's, led by Jharkhand-born Deven Sharma, struck off the 'AAA' rating of the US, considered the Gold standard in the world of finance, for the first time since 1914.



On that Friday afternoon, S&P officials told Barak Obama's treasury department that the ratings major's analysts have come to a decision that the US no longer deserves to be among the best rated countries in the world. After six hours and a flurry of emails, phone calls and conferences between top officials in the Obama administration and Sharma's team of number-crunchers, the world got to know of the unprecedented move - something that was in the air for a few months but which appeared more like a distant possibility: The US' country rating was downgraded one notch to 'AA-plus'. And suddenly the 57-year old Sharma was in the spotlight, hailed by a select few, but criticized by several in the financial world.





Born in 1955, Sharma was educated in Jamshedpur and Ranchi, and then moved to the US for his masters degree at Wisconsin and his doctoral degree in management from Ohio in 1987. During his initial years, he was in the manufacturing sector, working with Dresser Industries and Anderson Strathclyde. In 1988, he joined Booz, Allen & Hamilton, a global management consulting firm, where he spent 14 years. In 2002, he joined The McGraw-Hill Cos, the parent of S&P.



Sharma took over as the president of S&P in August 2007, just when the sub-prime crisis in the US housing sector was getting out of hand, and credit rating agencies were picked as one of the perpetrators of the meltdown for their flawed ratings models of housing loans. Over the last four years as the head of one of the foremost rating agencies in the world, Sharma has faced several US Congressional grillings, but has negotiated most of those with much elan, people who have followed him closely say. In a recent interview, Sharma admitted that over the last four years, comments made by US lawmakers have changed to appreciation from strong criticism.





No wonder the veteran of several testimonies in the US congress has been able to stand up to the global criticism from all quarters for their critical decision. Since Friday evening, Sharma, along with David Beers, his top lieutenant on the ratings side, have stood firm alongside S&P's analysts and defended the controversial and unprecedented decision saying that such a step was necessary and it was done for the benefit of investors.



People who followed Sharma's recent messages to the world said that there was enough evidence that a rating downgrade was more of a probability than not. Late last month, in a Congressional hearing during the height of uncertainty about raising US debt limit, Sharma was non-committal about what ratings decision his company would take. A Bloomberg report said that he told US lawmakers that S&P was waiting to see what the final proposal would be before deciding whether to keep US debt at the firm's highest ratings level.



While the world criticized S&P for their historic decision, some even questioning the data the analysts used but back home there are some who think Sharma and his men have done a great job. The controversial head of a top brokerage house with strong presence in the US told TOI, that the ratings downgrade had to happen as it was due for years.