Archive for February, 2009

The Faster Ways To Burn DVD

Friday, February 27th, 2009

The Automatic DVD Duplicators are the latest craze in the market and they are the best possible ways of the media duplication available in today’s world. There are systems which can duplicate upto 30 disks at a time. The capacities of these systems are more than the DVD duplicators in the market which used to be termed as the best. These fully automatic systems can burn around 105 full length disks per hour. The automatic DVD duplicators use the DVD burning software suite and the hard drive can be formatted very easily.

The Automatic DVD Duplicator systems have upto 500 GB of internal storage and no host computers are required to support the system. These systems are fully automatic and the user friendly common interface helps the users of all categories to use the machine with the same level of ease.

Taiyo Yuden DVDs are the best options for the media duplication purpose. The burning capacities of these disks are better than their competitors in the market. The TDVD Yuden have a double coated layer which reduces the number of errors while burning the disks in the Automated DVD Duplicators. If you want to order the DVDs from Taiyo Yuden then you can visit their website and place your order online.

Aviation GPS Systems

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Garmin 396 is a global position system designed for the aircrafts. This multi feature device is an ideal match for aircraft’s cockpit and also serves as a good navigator for the pilot. Ranked under the category of most reliable GPS systems, it is packed with XM Weather mapping technology, besides, METARs, TFRs, TAFs, satellite imagery and much more. The GPS comes in sunlight-viewable, 256 color TFT screen and incorporated with ultra modern TAWS-style audio terrain alerts. Garmin 396 is full of potential capabilities that give the pilots a wonderful adventure in air through its full Jeppesen aviation database and more than 150 XM Radio stations.

Another GPS model from Garmin is slightly less advanced than the 396 GPS model. The garmin 296 GPS model is featured with “Terrain” mode that gives the pilots with almost TAWS-like warnings, just like advanced 396 GPS model, but truly lacks whopping 150 XM radio stations. Garmin 296 is packed with automotive facility mode that allows the pilot to give accurate directions after landing. The automatic-routing feature similar to the one as seen in the car navigation system also allows the pilot to make the inspection of the land for any crevices or holes. What’s more, the GPS has high-speed 200-Mhz processor that helps in making fast map redraws.

Computer Based Training

Friday, February 27th, 2009

Every one of us is aware of the importance of the IT. Also the demand for IT professionals is ever increasing ever since it all started. With the demand for IT professionals’ going high there has been neck to neck competition in this field. Meaning you have to be above the rest to keep your job intact. However as you are well aware every now and then there is something new in he computer industry. In order to keep up the pace you need to keep learning the new things. However time is always of major importance and no one can afford wasting time on long courses provided by computer classes.

This is why computer based training was introduced. Earlier this was not everyone’s cup of tea. However we can now afford all this easily, all that you must have a broadband connection and a desktop to learn from. You can now start training yourself with the help of the experts as they provide step by step assistance. The service rendered is of utmost quality and up to date. This means that you can now survive in this cut throat competition world from the comfort of your home. K alliance is a well renowned organization in this business. K alliance has provided assistance to many around the world and continues to.

Surfer injured in second Sydney shark attack

Saturday, February 14th, 2009

Australia’s most famous beach reopened Friday, hours after a surfer’s arm was shredded by a shark — the second shark attack in Sydney in as many days.

The 33-year-old man, whose name was not released, was bitten Thursday around dusk at Sydney’s popular Bondi Beach and suffered severe arm injuries, police said. Other surfers helped him to shore, where volunteers helped to stop his bleeding.

The man underwent a 10-hour surgery at St. Vincent’s Hospital, and was in serious but stable condition Friday, hospital spokesman David Faktor said.

“We could see all of his bones cut like with a big knife. It was very clear,” French tourist Mikael Thomas, 21, told Australia’s Fairfax Media.

Lifeguards sounded the beach’s shark alarm and cleared the water. Surfer James McIntosh, 29, said he tied a leg rope around the victim’s arm as a tourniquet.

“I just kept pulling that leg rope as hard as I could. As soon as we put the tourniquet on there wasn’t any bleeding,” he told Fairfax.

On Wednesday, a Navy diver lost his hand after fighting off a shark in Sydney Harbour, not far from the Opera House. His leg was also badly mauled.

A recent string of shark attacks across Australia has left some swimmers jittery. In December, 51-year-old Brian Guest vanished while snorkeling with his son off a beach in Western Australia. A piece of his wet suit was later found, and officials said he was almost certainly eaten by a shark.

Last month, a 13-year-old surfer in the island state of Tasmania was dragged under water by a 16-foot (5-meter) great white shark, and a 31-year-old surfer was bitten while surfing at a remote beach in New South Wales state the same day. Both survived.

The following day, a shark latched onto the leg of a snorkeler in southern New South Wales. The man survived after pummeling the creature with his fists until the shark let go.

Most experts agree the cluster of attacks is a freak coincidence and say there is no evidence of an increase in the country’s shark population. Nevertheless, some have argued that cleaner, nutrient-rich waters have boosted the animals’ reproduction and drawn them into shallow waters.

Although sharks are often spotted off Australia’s beaches, fatal attacks are rare. On average, just one person is killed by a shark in Australia each year, according to the Australian Shark Attack File database.

Mending broken hearts with skin stem cells possible

Friday, February 13th, 2009

After turning skin cells back into stem cells successfully, scientists now have proof that they can indeed form specialised cells making up heart muscle.

University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-M) School of Medicine and Public Health professor Tim Kamp and his research team showed that they were able to grow working heart-muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) from induced pluripotent stem cells, known as iPS cells.

The heart cells were originally reprogrammed from human skin cells by James Thomson and Junying Yu, two of Kamp’s co-authors on the study.

“It’s an encouraging result because it shows that those cells will be useful for research and may someday be useful in therapy,” said Kamp, who is also a cardiologist with UW Health.

“If you have a heart failure patient who is in dire straits - and there are never enough donor hearts for transplantation, we may be able to make heart cells from the patient’s skin cells, and use them to repair heart muscle. That’s pretty exciting.”

It’s also a few more discoveries away. The researchers used a virus to insert four transcription factors into the genes of the skin cell, reprogramming it back to an embryo-like state.

Because the virus is taken up by the new cell, there is a possibility it eventually could cause cancer, so therapies from reprogrammed skin cells will likely have to wait until new methods are perfected.

Still, the iPS cardiomyocytes should prove immediately useful for research. And Kamp said the speed at which knowledge is progressing is very encouraging.

Jianhua Zhang, study co-author noted that it took 17 years, from when a mouse embryonic stem cells were first created in 1981, to 1998, when Thomson created the first human embryonic stem cells, said a UW-M release.

In contrast, the first mouse iPS stem cells were created in 2006, and Thomson and Yu published their paper in November 2007, announcing the creation of human iPS stem cells that began as a skin cells.

The study was published online Thursday in Circulation Research, a journal of the American Heart Association.

Garmin-Asus to Release Low-cost Eee Phone This Year

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

The Eee Phone, a smartphone that takes its name from popular computer products by Asustek Computer (Asus) including the Eee PC netbook line, will be among the early handsets released by the new Garmin-Asus mobile phone business the two companies announced last week.

GPS (global positioning system) device maker Garmin and Asus said the first Garmin-Asus handset will be revealed in Barcelona at the Mobile World Congress next week.

But it will not be the Eee Phone.

The Eee Phone will be a low-cost smartphone and will be announced later this year, an Asustek representative said Thursday.

Several news reports have speculated that the Eee Phone will be the first Asustek offering to use Google’s Android software, but Asus has not confirmed anything yet.

When the new Garmin-Asus name was announced last week, the heads of the two companies said their handsets will use a variety of operating systems, including Microsoft Windows Mobile, Linux and Android.

The first handset they plan to deliver under the Garmin-Asus name is the Garmin-Asus Nuvifone G60, which will be a refresh of the original Nuvifone G60 that Garmin commissioned Asustek to build last year.

Another Garmin-Asus mobile handset will be announced at the Mobile World Congress as well, but will likely launch in 2010, Asustek executives have said.

India bracing to prevent another terror strike: Antony

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

India is making all-out efforts to prevent another Mumbai-style terror attack by adequately equipping its security forces and beefing up the intelligence network, Defence Minister A.K. Antony said Wednesday.

“After the Mumbai attack Nov 26, we are making all-out efforts to prevent similar kind of incidents by making our armed forces, security forces and intelligence agencies working together as a team and equipping them with the latest arms and ammunition,” Antony told reporters after inaugurating the Aero India 2009 international air show at Yelahanka air base near here.

In a veiled reference to the latest Al Qaeda terror threat against India, Antony claimed that there would not be any change in the security scenario in the Indian sub-continent.

“Considering the present day situation around India, I don’t think there will be a remarkable movement in the security scenario around us. Hence, we have to be prepared for any eventuality by strengthening our armed forces, security forces and intelligence agencies more than ever before,” Antony asserted.

Asked if India was rethinking on its defence requirements and preparedness following the Mumbai terror attack, the defence minister said the government has decided to modernise and strengthen its armed forces in light of series of terror attacks across the country even prior to 26/11 due to deteriorating security scenario in the neighbourhood over a period.

“Anybody seriously looking out at the prevailing security scenario in South Asia, especially in the neighbourhood, India has no alternative, much less choice to beef up its security to face any external or internal threat - be it from terrorists, militants or Maosits - to ensure the safety, security of its people and the country’s economic growth,” Antony noted.

Reiterating that modernisation and upgradation of armed forces was a continuing process, Antony said the government has accorded top priority after the Mumbai attack to equip the services and security agencies with the best of machinery and material, including additional reinforcements.

“After 26/11, we are more vigilant. Security and armed forces are in a state of preparedness to not only prevent repeat of such a dastardly attack, but also counter any such (terror) elements anywhere, anytime,” Antony affirmed.

How does EFT work?

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

EFT is one of the most modern as well as one of the most convenient payment modes that are available to us these days. The EFT is an amazing way of getting transactions and also paying. This is indeed a very useful as well as convenient way of payments. EFT Payment along with eChecks and ACH Processing are some of the most well known and some of the most sought after payment modes available. In case you have selected the ACH Debit as the payment method then you can utilize the following procedures.

Firstly you have to promptly determine all the fields of data and later you have to report on the various preprinted tax returns exactly for the tax you are needed to pay. This payment however includes the tax type that you have as well as the tax period for which you report.

Secondly you have to very carefully review all the instructions that are shown in the user guide of the particular EFT Debit that you use and also for the type of tax you need to pay.

Using EFT Payment you will be able to get faster verifications of your account status without even needing any kind of a shopping cart that is used to process online checks

Mediterranean Diet Aids the Aging Brain: Study

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Chalk up another endorsement for the so-called Mediterranean diet: The eating regimen, which is rich in fruits, vegetables, fish and olive oil, may help the brain stay sharp into old age, a new study suggests.

Following the healthful diet reduced the risk of getting mild cognitive impairment — marked by forgetfulness and difficulty concentrating. And it also cut the risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease if cognitive impairment was already present, said study lead author Dr. Nikolaos Scarmeas, an assistant professor of neurology at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.

“We did two different types of analysis,” Scarmeas said of the study, published in the February issue of Archives of Neurology.

Previous research has found that people who follow the Mediterranean are at less risk of developing a variety of diseases besides Alzheimer’s, including heart disease, cancer and Parkinson’s.

The Columbia researchers began the study by evaluating almost 1,400 people without cognitive impairment and 482 people with mild cognitive impairment, and then followed them for an average of 4.5 years. The participants — average age 77 — also completed a food frequency questionnaire, detailing what they had eaten during the past year.

The researchers divided the participants into three groups — those who adhered somewhat or not at all to the Mediterranean diet, those who adhered moderately to it, and those who adhered regularly. Then they evaluated the participants’ cognitive functioning.

They found that the diet helped in both cases — preventing mild cognitive impairment and also the risk of further decline, even if people weren’t entirely strict in their adherence to the diet.

“As compared to the group that ate very little or not at all of the Mediterranean diet, those who ate it to a moderate degree had 17 percent less risk of developing mild cognitive impairment,” Scarmeas said. “Those who adhered a lot had a 28 percent less risk of developing mild cognitive impairment.”

The diet also helped those who already had mild impairment. “Compared to those who adhered not at all or very little, those who ate the Mediterranean diet to a moderate degree had a 45 percent reduction in risk going from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s disease. Those who adhered a lot had a 48 percent reduction in risk of going from mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer’s,” he said.

Scarmeas said previous research he’s carried out found that a greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was associated with a lower risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

It’s not known exactly how the diet may help keep the brain healthy, Scarmeas said. One possibility is that it might reduce inflammation, which plays a role in brain disease. Or it might work by improving cardiovascular risk factors such as high cholesterol, he said.

Two experts who reviewed the study put their perspective on the findings.

“You see what is called a dose response. The more stringently you follow the Mediterranean diet, the better the outcome,” noted Dr. Gary Kennedy, director of geriatric psychiatry at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City.

Alice Lichtenstein, Gershoff Professor of Nutrition Science and Policy at Tufts University in Boston, said: “It’s encouraging to see the results — those reporting the healthier dietary pattern seem to do better.” What remains to be seen, she added, is whether it was the specific diet that helped people avoid cognitive decline or if those people who ate properly had other healthy habits that decreased their risk.

All three experts agreed: Until more evidence is in that the Mediterranean diet keeps brains sharp, there are plenty of other reasons to follow it, including heart health.

Will the iPhone Kill the Kindle? No Way.

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

It’s no secret that I’ve been a convert to the Amazon Kindle for more than a year now. And now that Amazon has announced its second generation of the Kindle, I’m even more impressed with the device than I was before. But some misguided souls, like my colleague Rick Broida, are throwing down the gauntlet on my favorite eBook reader, saying it’s no match for that little all-in-one wonder from Apple, the iPhone. Here’s why they’re wrong.

1. It’s easy on the eyes. And no, I’m not talking about the design. The Kindle’s 6-inch E-Ink display sports a crisp 600×800 resolution that closely rivals the look of a real printed page. And because it’s as wide as a typical trade paperback, there’s plenty of space on the page to increase the font size to a large, comfortable level while still fitting more than 5 words on the screen.

Rick points out that the Kindle lacks a backlight, but he’s missing the point: E-Ink’s lack of backlighting is a critical factor that makes it so easy to read on. The iPhone’s bright backlit screen may be fine for the kind of infantile picture books Rick likes to “read,” but for those of us who really like to spend a day immersed in a great novel, the iPhone is practically blinding. Sure, I wish the Kindle had some kind of built-in light that would allow me to read in the dark without clipping an external book light to its cover, but backlighting is not the best solution.

2. One-handed control. When I first picked up my Kindle, I wasn’t sure I’d like the layout of its buttons. But by the time I had finished thumbing my way through my first downloaded title, I was sold. The Kindle’s controls make it easy to hold the device in one hand and advance to the next page with a light flick of a thumb or finger, no matter which hand you choose to hold it in. This is one case in which the Kindle trumps both the iPhone and old-school paper books.

3. Low cost of ownership. Yes, the Kindle itself costs $359 out the door, but once you plunk down that cash, you’re done paying for the device. Plus, the books themselves are dirt cheap. New titles typically cost $9.99, even when their dead-tree versions are only available in $30 hard covers. And many titles cost much less, including a huge selection of classics for as little as 99 cents.

4. Free 3G Internet. In addition to being a phenomenal way to carry and read hundreds of books, the Kindle comes with free Internet access for the life of the device. That means you can access just about any information on the Net without spending an additional dime. How much does Rick spend on his iPhone’s wireless service? $70 bucks a month? Win for Kindle.

5. Crazy long battery life. The Kindle’s E-Ink display sips power so efficiently that it can go days at a time without a recharge, so it’s perfect for taking on long trips where you won’t have ready access to a power outlet. And while the iPhone actually gets pretty impressive battery life for a phone, it’s not even in the same sport–let alone the same league–as the Kindle. Considering that the iPhone will inevitably spend most of its day serving as a phone, there’s little guarantee that it’ll have much juice left when book time rolls around.

Ultimately, the iPhone is a great all-around smart phone, and I’m not trying to knock it for that. But compared with a dedicated eBook reader like the Kindle, it’s just another mobile device with a color display. Rick points out that the iPhone will someday support Kindle books, and I’m glad for that. The more devices support Amazon’s format, the better it will be for everyone who loves eBooks. And if Rick wants to read his books on an inferior device, that’s his choice.

Click here for Rick’s side of the argument.