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Friday, August 13, 2010

Oracle sues Google over Java usage in Android

 Oracle has filed a lawsuit against Google, charging that its Android phone software infringes Oracle patents and copyrights related to Java, Oracle said Thursday.


"In developing Android, Google knowingly, directly and repeatedly infringed Oracle's Java-related intellectual property. This lawsuit seeks appropriate remedies for their infringement," Oracle spokeswoman Karen Tillman said in a statement.

The suit was filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in San Francisco and seeks a jury trial.

Google could not immediately be reached for comment on the lawsuit.

Wipro signs pact to implement Messaging service with Arcelor

Wipro Technologies has signed a five-year agreement with steel company ArcelorMittal to implement messaging service for Arcelor. Under the agreement, Wipro will consolidate and migrate Arcelor's messaging systems to the Microsoft Exchange 2010 messaging platform.

As per the engagement, ArcelorMittal's global messaging system will be secured by Wipro using anti-virus, anti-spam and archival solutions. It will host the new global messaging system on its hardware, hosted at six ArcelorMittal data-centres, spanning across North America, Latin America, East and West Europe and Asia.

This engagement will help transform ArcelorMittal's messaging environment and curtail their global messaging spending. Wipro will use its Next Generation Global Command Center for rendering the global messaging management services.

Civil aviation ministry halts T3 in IGI till Sept 15

The domestic flight operations at the Terminal 3 (T3) of the Indira Gandhi International (IGI) Airport in New Delhi have been delayed at least till Sep 15 as basic infrastructure like power and water supply is still not in place, the government said Friday.


A team of officials led by Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel Thursday evening reviewed the preparedness of various stakeholders for effecting transition of domestic operations to IGI's T3.

It found a 220 KVA sub-station, which was to be commissioned by July 31, would be ready only by the middle of September.

India's own satellite based nav system soon

India is set to launch its own satellite-based navigation system - GPS Aided Geo Augmented Navigation or GAGAN.

In the next five years the Indian airspace will get more crowded and the chances of accidents may increase. To reduce the chances of future air disasters, India has endeavoured on the GAGAN project for traffic and directional guidance from outer space.

"The scope for GAGAN extends far beyond Indian borders. It reaches up to Africa and south East Asia. It is a huge airspace that we can monitor with this technology," says Praful Patel, minister of state for civil aviation.

The GAGAN project receives GPS signals from international satellites, but it boosts their accuracy, locking a plane's position anywhere in India to within three meters.

This is made possible by tracking satellites from 15 locations across India and comparing and correcting their data in Bangalore.

When this refined data is beamed to pilots, they will be able to navigate without fear even in bad weather and land at geographically tough airports like Mangalore and Leh. Pilots will also be able to plot shorter, direct flights to destinations. With exact information on plane location, more flights can land safely at airports every hour.

To remove India's dependence on foreign GPS signals, the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) plans to launch seven Indian satellites in the next five years.

When ISRO's satellites are placed into orbit, India will join an elite club that includes USA, Russia and European Union, who run their own GPS networks.

Lang barrier adjourns Lok sabha for 15mins

There was peace in the Lok Sabha on Friday with no protests from opposition MPs, but a technical problem that hampered English translation led to a minor commotion and disruption of the house.

SpeakerMeira Kumar adjourned the house for 15 minutes at 11.30 am when some MPs from southern states complained that they were not receiving the English translation of minister of state for power Bharatsinh Madhavsinh Solanki's speech in Hindi.

DMK member T R Baalu was the first to raise the issue and asked the speaker to "adjourn the house, suspend the question hour" if the problem could not be resolved.

Maruti launches CNG version of its top selling models

 Maruti Suzuki Friday launched eco-friendly compressed natural gas (CNG) versions of five of its top selling cars and gain market share.

The country's largest car manufacturer unveiled here the new variants of its Alto, Wagon R, Estilo, SX4 and Eeco with CNG engine kits.

'This is the first instance when a car manufacturer has developed and launched factory-fitted technologically superior CNG engines in India. CNG is environmentally friendly and also reduces the country's dependence on imported fuel,' said Shinzo Nakanishi, chief executive, Maruti Suzuki.

Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh, who was present at the event as chief guest, said: 'This is a bold step by Maruti to bring in this technology. By providing supply first, they will create automatic demand.'

Rotting food grains in Govt Godowns

Even as tonnes of foodgrains are rotting in Food Corporation of India (FCI) warehouses across the country, little has been done by the union agriculture ministry to address the issue, an RTI activist said Friday.

Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar had last year promised the Lok Sabha that his ministry would set up a panel to probe the issue and take corrective action, according to a Right to Information (RTI) finding.

Between 1997 and 2007, 1.83 lakh tonnes of wheat, 6.33 lakh tonnes of rice, 2.20 lakh tonnes of paddy and 111 lakh tonnes of maize were damaged in various FCI warehouses, revealed Dev Ashish Bhattacharya, who filed the RTI query on the issue.

8 died of H1N1 in Pune

Eight people died of the H1N1 influenza here on Tuesday and Wednesday, taking the toll in the city due to the contagion up to 331 since August last year.

As many as 46 people tested positive on Wednesday. Twenty-five patients are in a critical condition and have been put on the ventilator in various hospitals, the district information officer said.

A ten-month-old baby, Raj Narayan Aadmani, of Satavnagar, died of swine flu at Sassoon hospital on Wednesday. The boy was suffering from cold and cough for five days and was admitted to hospital on Tuesday.

Surekha Dhumal (21) of Purandar taluka in Pune district also died at the Sassoon hospital on Wednesday. She was suffering from a cold and breathlessness for three days and was admitted to hospital on Monday.

India may ask Google & Skype for solution

India's showdown with BlackBerry  could reportedly widen to encompass Google  and Skype  after the government threatened to cut off core features of the popular smartphone on security grounds.

Research In Motion, the BlackBerry's Canadian maker, gave no immediate indication that it would accede to the latest pressure from an emerging economy to open up its services to security agencies.

"If a technical solution is not provided by August 31, 2010, the government will review the position and take steps to block" BlackBerry email and messenger services, India's home ministry said on Thursday.

New Delhi, battling insurgencies ranging from Kashmir in the northwest to the far-flung northeast, fears that heavily encrypted BlackBerry communications could be used by militants.

We`ll provide access to Indian security agency - RIM

Research In Motion, the maker of BlackBerry smartphones, will provide technical solutions next week, that will help Indian security agencies access its encrypted data, a government source said on Friday.

"They have assured that they will come with some technical solution for messenger and enterprise mail next week. Our technical team will evaluate if it works," the source said.

India has given RIM until August 31 to comply with a request to gain access to encrypted corporate email and messaging services or those services will be shut.

CWG financial scandal widens as CAG investigates 60 bids

It’s not just the Commonwealth Games Organising Committee (OC) that is being investigated for financial irregularities. For the first time, the Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) has named Commonwealth Games Federation president Mike Fennel and CEO Mike Hooper, besides OC chairman Suresh Kalmadi, as party to a dubious selection process for consultants for international broadcasting rights.

This, the national auditor says in its internal report, led to a loss of R24.6 crore for the OC. It has also come across fresh cases of financial wrongdoings by the OC, resulting in a total loss of R66.49 crore.

Dubious appointment

The CAG report, based on a February-April audit, says the OC skipped a detailed technical evaluation of bidders before picking a consultant for international broadcast rights. “The OC executive board in principal approved M/s Fast Track Sales Ltd only on the basis of suggestions made by the CGF president and CEO and the OC chairman,” it says.
  
Not only did the OC pay Fast Track a higher commission than the other bidders, resulting in a loss of R5.20 crore, the firm’s failure to finalise a broadcasting rights agreement on time led to a further loss of R19 crore.

Hooper, however, told HT: “We recommended Fast Track on the basis of its record. They have also performed and brought revenue for the Games. OC was the agency that decided on the deal, not us. Fast Track also exceeded the revenue target. We stand by the decision.”

Chernobyl fallout dangerous yet

Fears that fires scorching forests polluted by Chernobyl fallout may propel dangerous amounts of radioactivity into the air are overblown, scientists say, and the actual health risks are very small.

Even firefighters tackling the blazes, which officials say have hit forests in Russia's Bryansk region tainted by radioactive dust from the 1986 Chernobyl reactor disaster, are unlikely to run any added nuclear contamination risks.

The amount of radiation in smoke would be only a fraction of the original fallout, they say.

"Of the total radioactivity in the area, much less than one percent of it will be remobilized," said Jim Smith, an expert on Chernobyl and a specialist in Earth and Environmental Sciences at Britain's University of Portsmouth.

Radioactive contamination in the area has substantially diminished in the almost two and a half decades since explosions at Chernobyl's reactor No. 4 caused the world's worst civil nuclear disaster on April 26, 1986.

"Most of the radioactivity is in the soil, which will not be affected by the fires, and only a small proportion is in the vegetation," Smith said in a telephone interview. "And of that only a very small proportion of that will get re-suspended in the smoke from the fires."

Russia's forest protection agency said on Wednesday that fires covering an area of 39 square kilometers (15 square miles) had been registered in regions with forests polluted with radiation. The regions affected included Bryansk province, which borders Ukraine, southwest of Moscow.

"NEGLIGIBLE" HEALTH RISK

Both France's Institute for Radiation Protection and Nuclear Safety and Germany's Federal Office for Radiation Protection said on Thursday that while some radiation was likely to be remobilized in smoke, the health risks were minimal and would have no impact on either Russia or neighboring countries.

Maria Neira, the World Health Organization's director of public health and environment said the WHO had data from controlled burning experiments conducted in the region in recent years and these suggested no reason for concern.

"We know from these experiments that the redistribution and re-suspension of radionuclides (radioactive particles) will be negligible for people's health," she told Reuters.

According to experts, the types of radioactive isotopes that might still be active in the Bryansk area include strontium 90 and caesium 137. These substances have half lives of about 30 years, meaning that only about half the radioactive material emitted by Chernobyl is still around now.

France's Institute for Radiation Protection said there may be a slight increase in radioactivity in the nearby environment due to re-suspension of caesium-137, "but it would be very much lower than the natural radioactivity."

Portsmouth's Smith and Stig Husin, an analyst in emergency preparedness at the Swedish Radiation Safety Authority, said the main threat from the fires both locally and nationally in Russia was the choking smoke from forest and peat fires, and the smog which is clouding the air in Moscow -- all of which can cause lung and heart problems.

"I would be much more concerned about the smog in Moscow and the health impacts of that -- not because of radiation but because of people inhaling harmful air pollution," said Smith.

Husin said those living near the Chernobyl-contaminated areas where fires have been reported would be wise to protect themselves by staying inside or wearing masks.

"Naturally it would be good if you are living close to the fires to protect yourself from the smoke itself. If you do protect yourself then naturally you protect yourself from the radioactive substances that may be in the smoke."

Tharoor weds Sunandha on Aug 22



It's finally official. Shashi Tharoor is marrying Sunanda Pushkar on August 22 in a "quiet family affair" to be held at his "crumbling 200-year-old ancestral home" in Kerala.

In a letter to close friends, the former minister, who had to step down because of his links with the Dubai-based Pushkar and her stake in the Kochi IPL team, said the wedding would be followed by a "modest reception" on August 23 in his constituency Thiruvananthapuram and a "final reception" in Delhi on September 3.

"I am writing to convey to you with joy -- while I realise you may perhaps have learned this already from our intrusive media, though I have not confirmed it publicly -- that I will soon be marrying Sunanda Pushkar," Tharoor wrote.

Law minister says he's concerned over compulsory voting bill

Observing that people cannot be forced to vote till they have a choice to elect candidates with a clean image, the government on Friday expressed its inability to enforce compulsory voting in the country.

“Till the time people have a choice to vote for candidates with clean image, they cannot be forced to vote. It would be fatal for democracy and lead to disillusionment,” Law Minister M. Veerappa Moily said in the Lok Sabha.

He was replying to a private member’s bill on compulsory voting tabled by J.P. Agarwal (Congress), who later withdrew it.

Mr. Moily said while he was not against the idea of compulsory voting, “a stand alone law won’t take us anywhere.” He said enacting another law was not a remedy. “It should not be ornamental. We have to add flesh and blood to it,” he said.
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