Saturday, 23 July 2011

Hrithik Roshan's show "Just Dance" is on a High




Bollywood hunk Hrithik Roshan has made his debut in television industry with his realty dance show Just Dance on star Plus. The buzz is that with the opening of its first episode, the show has got the highest television rating points (TRP) 4.7  for a non-fiction show.
Talking about the show, Just Dance is a show where the best dance talents have been selected following a series of global auditions in cities from New York to Kolkata. Fifty two contestants were chosen among 30,000 contestants and they will show their dance to choreographer Farah Khan, Vaibhavi Merchant and Hrithik Roshan. In the show, contestants get intense training and Hrithik will also give them  important dance tips.

The first week of Just Dance was got the good
response by the viewers. Hrithik Roshan is very
happy and told that, the all credit for this super
opening must entirely go to the channel's team, SOL
and Carving Dreams. “I am super excited and am
looking forward to the next vigorous round of
competition between the best dancers from across
the world!", added the superstar.




Here i put a clip of the official video of the show.

Check it out and enjoy  : ------------              

Friday, 22 July 2011

Dhoni's World Cup winning bat auctioned for Rs 72 lakhs in London


  


Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni's 2011 World Cup winning bat was auctioned of on Monday for Rs. 72 lakh at London's Hilton Hotel.
Man of the Match in the finals Dhoni scored 91 runs and hit the winning six to bring millions of smiles and cheers across India on April 2 this year.
The objective of auctioning the bat was to raise funds for the Sakshi Foundation that functions for the benefit of underprivileged children in India. It is run by Dhoni's wife Sakshi
The lucky winner of the celebrated bat was Indian investment group R K Global.
India overcame Sri Lanka by six wickets in the final in Mumbai, chasing down a target of 275 for the loss of four wickets with ten balls remaining.
The total collection from the auction on late Monday evening was 450,000 pounds, where Sacha Jafri's Original Artwork also went under the hammer.
Jafri, one of the most celebrated artists of the world, was commissioned to create the official painting to commemorate Dhoni's historic World Cup winning team as well as the greatest batsman of all time - Sachin Tendulkar.
The painting, which includes hand prints and signatures from some of the games' greatest players, including the likes of Ricky Ponting, Andrew Flintoff, Allan Border and Lasith Malinga, went for 250,000 pounds.
A bound copy of the original script of Bollywood blockbuster '3 Idiots' went for 17,500 pounds.
With this, Dhoni launched his charitable foundation, 'Winning Ways Today for Tomorrow', at the function.
The charity had already been launched in India in March last year and has helped cricket flourish in areas where children hail from poor socio-economic backgrounds.
The event was attended by the Team India, senior officials and owners of IPL franchisees, many former captains and cricketers like Brian Lara. y Praful Kumar Singh (ANI)

Cyber theft illustrates Pentagon security challenge

           A foreign intelligence service stole 24,000 files from a U.S. defense contractor earlier this year, a dramatic illustration of the threat confronting the Pentagon as it works to bolster military computer security, a top defense official said on Thursday.
Deputy Defense Secretary William Lynn revealed the theft as he unveiled a new Pentagon cybersecurity strategy that designates cyberspace as an "operational domain" like sea, air and land where U.S. forces will practice, train and prepare to defend against attacks.
Lynn said the theft occurred in March and was believed to have been carried out by a foreign intelligence service and targeted files at a defense contractor developing weapons systems and defense equipment. He declined to specify the country behind the attack, what company was hit or what the files contained.
"It was 24,000 files, which is a lot," Lynn said. "But I don't think it's the largest we've seen."
The theft was a dramatic illustration of the rising difficulties the Pentagon faces in protecting military and defense-related networks critical to U.S. security.
Defense Department employees operate more than 15,000 computer networks and 7 million computers at hundreds of installations around the world. The department's networks are probed millions of times a day and penetrations have compromised huge amounts of data.
Lynn said a recent estimate pegged economic losses from theft of intellectual property and information from government and commercial computers at over $1 trillion.
NEW CYBERSTRATEGY
In addition to calling for the Pentagon to treat cyberspace as an "operational domain," Lynn said the new strategy includes four initiatives aimed at bolstering network security by layering defenses and improving cooperation with other network operators.
Lynn said as part of its active defenses, the Pentagon would introduce new operating concepts and capabilities on its networks, such as sensors, software and signatures to detect and stop malicious code before it affects U.S. operations.
"Our strategy's overriding emphasis is on denying the benefit of an attack," he said in a speech at the National Defense University. "If an attack will not have its intended effect, those who wish us harm will have less reason to target us through cyberspace in the first place."
The strategy also calls for greater U.S. military cooperation on cybersecurity with other government agencies, defense contractors and U.S. military allies abroad in order to take advantage of the open, interwoven nature of the Internet.
Former Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff, who now heads the Chertoff Group risk management firm, praised the strategy as a "good first step" but said the challenge would be filling in the details.
"It's not put your pencil down, work is done," he said. "It really just sets the table for a lot of hard work thinking through the details of what the plans are going to be, what the capabilities have to be and how we're going to build the various layers of defense."
He cited the possibility of creating secure communities on the Internet for some functions, finding ways to encourage individuals to practice computer security and sharing security-related information more widely between public and private sectors.
"These are going to be hard things to do because they are going to require trade-offs," Chertoff said. "You're not going to eliminate the risk of cyberattacks. What you have to do is minimize and manage those risks."
OFFENSE VERSUS DEFENSE
General James Cartwright, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the Pentagon must shift its thinking on cybersecurity from focusing 90 percent of its energy on building better firewalls and only 10 percent on preventing hackers from attacking U.S. systems.

"If your approach to the business is purely defensive in nature, that's the Maginot line approach," he said, referring to the French fixed defensive fortifications that were circumvented by the Nazis at the outset of World War Two.

"If it's OK to attack me and I'm not going to do anything other than improve my defenses every time you attack me, it's very difficult to come up with a deterrent strategy," he said.
Cartwright said part of the answer was to build up the military's offensive response capabilities.
"How do you build something that convinces a hacker that doing this is going to be costing them and if he's going to do it, he better be willing to pay the price and the price is going to escalate, rather than his price stays the same and ours escalates," Cartwright said.
"We've got to change the calculus."

"Harry Potter" puts on magic with record $92.1 million

The eighth and final "Harry Potter" movie sold $92.1 million worth tickets in the United States and Canada on its first day in theaters to set a single-day box-office record, according to studio estimates released on Saturday.
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows -- Part 2" shattered the single-day record set in 2009 when "The Twilight Saga: New Moon" earned $72.7 million in theaters, said Paul Dergarabedian, head of tracking firm Hollywood.com Box Office.
"To even be close to $100 million for a single day is unprecedented," Dergarabedian said.
Hollywood watchers are attributing the high interest in the film from Time Warner Inc's Warner Bros unit to strong critics' reviews and the fact this is both the final film in the "Harry Potter" series and the only one released in 3D.
"This will be the first 'Potter' movie to earn over a billion dollars at the worldwide box office," Dergarabedian said.
"Harry Potter," which is already the highest grossing film franchise ever with over $6.4 billion in global ticket sales, is based on the novels of author J.K. Rowling and it revolves around the adventures of a young wizard, his friends and their battle against evil.
The record-setting $92.1 million in the United States and Canada was earned at more than 4,300 theaters, including the midnight screenings that extended into the early morning hours of Friday and by themselves earned a record-setting $43.5 million.
Outside the United States and Canada, the film earned an estimated $75 million in 59 countries, Warner Bros officials said.
The movie brought in a record-setting 9.3 million pounds ($14.8 million) in the United Kingdom on Friday, the studio said

Katrina Kaif chooses Ranbir Kapoor over Aamir Khan


Eventually It came on news that Katrina Kaif is not a part of ‘Dhoom 3’, we all know that but what’s the real reason behind it. According to sources, Katrina was facing date problems between ‘Dhoom 3’ and Ayan Mukherjee’s next starring Ranbir Kapoor. Both the films couldn’t be delayed and Katrina chose Ranbir over Aamir.  It must be a wait and watch episode for the fans.
Lets see how much it costs For  choosing Ranbir Kapoor over Aamir Khan.

Human trials to begin on genetically-engineered malaria vaccine

There were 247 million cases of malaria and 881,000 deaths worldwide from the disease in 2006, making it one of the world’s most common infectious diseases and an enormous public health problem, particularly in poverty stricken areas. We’ve previously looked at various proposals to fight the disease, from targeting the mosquitoes that spread it, to research into a possible vaccine. Now researchers at the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute in Melbourne, Australia, working in collaboration with researchers from the US, Japan and Canada, have renewed hopes by creating a weakened strain of the malaria parasite that will be used as a live vaccine against the disease. Human trials will begin in 2010.
To develop the vaccine the research team deleted two key genes in the Plasmodium falciparum parasite – which causes the form of malaria most deadly to humans. By removing the genes the malaria parasite is halted during its liver infection phase, preventing it from spreading to the blood stream where it can cause severe disease and death. This approach to vaccine development of using a weakened form of the whole organism that causes a particular disease has already proven successful in eradicating smallpox and controlling diseases such as flu and polio.
Professor Alan Cowman, head of the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute's Infection and Immunity division, said similar vaccines had been tested in mice and offered 100 percent protection against malaria infection. He said it was hoped the vaccine would produce similar results in humans. "Although two genes have been deleted the parasite is still alive and able to stimulate the body's protective immune system to recognize and destroy incoming mosquito-transmitted deadly parasites."
In developing the vaccine the researchers used knowledge from several decades ago when scientists proved that irradiated malaria parasites provide protection against subsequent malaria infection in animal models and humans.
"Although vaccines are under development that use whole malaria parasites weakened by irradiation to protect against infection, their safety and effectiveness rely on a precise irradiation dose and trial results have been variable," Professor Cowman said. "We believe that our genetically-attenuated parasite approach provides a safe and reproducible way of developing a whole organism malaria vaccine."
Professor Cowman said it was unlikely the weakened parasites used in the vaccine would regain their potency as the genes had been deleted from the genome and could not be recreated by the parasite. "In addition, the 'one-two punch' approach of deleting two essential genes make it extremely unlikely that the attenuated parasite vaccine could restore its capacity to multiply and lead to disease," he said.
The research is supported by a USD$17 million, five-year grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which has stated the eradication of malaria as one of its primary goals. The human trials of the vaccine will take place at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research in Maryland, US, from early 2010 and millions around the world will be hoping they prove successful.