Monday, 24 December 2012

emerging markets investor opportunities 2013

emerging markets offer higher returns on stocks to investors but prospects of each are differing, here are they regionwise for 2013.

http://crestvideos.com/emerging-markets-prospects-and-opportunities/

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

how to successfuly trade using technical analysis tools

A successful trader uses more of technical analysis tools in judicious combination with fundamental trading analysis tools

http://crestvideos.com/how-to-do-an-effective-trading-using-fundamental-and-technical-analysis/

Delivering the Novel Nano-Therapeutic Drugs

A Biomimicking method had been found for the delivering of nano-therapeutic drugs directly to the obstructive blood vessels that dissolves the blood clots formed, by the researchers of Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University.

http://wp.me/p2mDVq-4N2

gold and silver prices

the tech analysis of volatility comforts that they are within historical averages

http://crestvideos.com/gold-and-silver-prices-tech-analysis-of-volatility/

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Can Mosquitoes spread HIV

We all know that syringe needles (which were used to take out the blood samples) which are not properly sterilized is one of the means of HIV spread from person to person. The doubt here arises "if syringe needle can spread HIV, why can't the mosquito does, which feeds on human blood?"

http://wp.me/p2mDVq-4NP

Sunday, 2 December 2012

how not to deal in real estate till 2016

Alan Kendall advises us not to sell real estate till 2016 and wait for the golden period for prospective sellers that starts from 2027.

http://crestvideos.com/how-not-to-run-real-estate-portfolio/

Friday, 9 March 2012

signifier scintillates you


Drifting planets out in the galaxy opening new cosmic vistas in research for earthlike planets..Read more.


Genetic material found on earth has origin from outerspace, what is the inference? read more....


Commonality of earth like planets

Nearly one in four stars similar to the sun may host earth like planets confirming life in space being very common. Most extensive and sensitive planetary census of its kind by NASA and University of California.  Read more....

News about science -

Kepler 22b planet discovery

An earthlike planet with same time for orbit around its star and having seas is found.  But at a unfathomable distance of 600 light years away from us.

world ending 2012
does a solar storm scorch the earth
World ending 2012
Solar storms role was much maligned in floating on world ending 2012.  Worst possible flares with intense CMEs have "scorched" the earth in January 2012 without even any damage to the artificial satellites.

leading to 22nd Century
technologies of future
5 emerging technologies hold the key to innovations having revolutionary implications for the current and next centuries.  For example, while walking, you generate power to run your home computer.

hybrid technology
Have you ever seen a photo move?
Cinemagraphers have taken stills to the next level.



more neibors than thought

new planets -- as common as stars in the milky way?

Using six years of data from planet-finding surveys, an international team of researchers concludes that, on average, every star in the Milky Way is accompanied by 1.6 planets. That’s at least 100 billion planets, the scientists report January 12 in Nature.  
Channel of discovery from home?

How to discover new planets?
There are billions of planets in our galaxy, and a hot, Neptune-sized new planet orbiting an ordinary star called SPH10066540 might not seem unusual, but there's a catch.     The  new planet  was discovered by an amateur, with only "a passing interest in where things are in sky."

The Golden Eye
God's own Golden Eye?
News about Science:
A nearby planetary nebula shines like a huge golden eye in a new photo snapped by a telescope in Chile, reveals latest news about Science.


alien city in the night?
Proof of Aliens:
Whitehouse keeps on declining any evidences on aliens even as NASA through Kepler mission reveals many earthlike planets in the Universe.  Is Whitehouse right?


downpour from skies with love
Holy of Water:
Earth formed as a very hot planet like Venus or Mercury.  The periodic rains/snowfall  can only partially explain presence of water.  And the religions were  saying that it is the almighty who has given us this spectacular downpour of water from skies.  Now, scientific studies also support this belief.


"Kepler 21 b"
locate it yourself

a new planet

A research team led by Steve Howell, NASA Ames Research Center, has announced the discovery of a new planet, an exoplanet orbiting one of the brightest stars in the Kepler field of view.  You can find out the location of this planet easily..

world ending 2012
does a solar storm scorch the earth
2012 world ends?
Crazy! say NASA Scientists!  They have scientific basis to laugh over it, let us too..



Home away from home?
Science revelation -  Gliese 581 series planets discovered
In a revelation that may change our understanding of space forever, the American Astronomical Society announced that five new planets have been discovered orbiting close to their stars, in our own galaxy, gliese 581 series.

Sunday, 29 January 2012

will world end


Impending solar storms in 2012 have been touted to be one of the probable reasons for world ending in 2012.  I presume that some debt burdened guy wanted to despair out his wishes by floating  these doomsday predictions.
Reality check: Solar storms 2012
The worst solar storms of the decade since 2003 have been unleashed on earth in January 22nd and 27th respectively in 2012.  One website which claims earth may not see through these storms also claims millions  of hits every hour!  But reality check states that even the artificial satellites which came directly in the solar scorch or CME (the scientific word) were not affected by the solar storms.    On the other hand, beautiful aurorae in the form of greenish lights are visible all over Northern hemisphere.  The website may have to close down after 2012!  Anyway,  I have an interesting video!

Wednesday, 25 January 2012

The Golden Eye Nebula


A nearby planetary nebula shines like a huge golden eye in a new photo snapped by a telescope in Chile.
The image shows the Helix Nebula, which lies about 700 light-years from Earth in the constellation Aquarius (The Water Bearer). The picture was taken in infrared light by the European Southern Observatory's Vista telescope, one of the instruments at ESO's Paranal Observatory.
Helix is a planetary nebula, a strange object that forms when a star like our sun exhausts its hydrogen fuel. The star's outer layers expand and cool, creating a huge envelope of dust and gas. Radiation flowing from the dying star ionizes this envelope, causing it to glow.
Despite their name, planetary nebulas have nothing to do with planets. Rather, the term refers to their superficial resemblance to giant planets, when observed through early telescopes. [Photos: Nebulas in Deep Space]
The dying star at the heart of the Helix Nebula is evolving to become a white dwarf, a shrunken, super-dense object that can pack a sun's worth of material into a sphere the size of Earth. The star is visible as a tiny blue dot at the center of the picture, researchers said.
The Helix Nebula is a complex object composed of dust, ionized material and molecular gas, arrayed in an intricate, flower-like pattern.
The main ring of the Helix is about 2 light-years across, roughly equivalent to half the distance between our sun and its closest star. However, wispy material from the nebula spreads out at least 4 light-years into space from the central star, researchers said.
These thin clouds of molecular gas are difficult to see in visible light, but Vista's infrared detectors can pick them out, and they show up in the new image as a dark red haze.
Vista's keen eye also reveals fine structure in the planetary nebula's rings, showing how cooler molecular gas is organized. The material clumps into filaments that radiate out from the center.
While they may look tiny, these strands of molecular hydrogen -- known as cometary knots -- are each about the size of our solar system. The molecules that compose them can survive the powerful radiation emanating from the dying star precisely because they clump into these knots, which in turn are shielded by dust and molecular gas.
It is currently unclear how the cometary knots may have formed, researchers said.
The new Vista image also shows a wide array of stars and galaxies in the background, farther away than the Helix Nebula.


2011 top songs


As a true connoisseur rank the top 3 songs from chartbuster English Songs 2011 yourself!
Chartbusters 2011
Comment  as per you, which should be top 3

The new planets


New Planets as common as stars in Milky Way

Analysis suggests a galaxy riddled with worlds

access
An artist’s conception of the Milky Way, at greatly exaggerated scale, illustrates the findings of a new survey that finds evidence for an average of more than one planet per star in the galaxy.
When you turn an eye to the evening sky, there’s a good chance that many of the stars above have at least one planet.
Using six years of data from planet-finding surveys, an international team of researchers concludes that, on average, every star in the Milky Way is accompanied by 1.6 planets. That’s at least 100 billion planets, the scientists report January 12 in Nature.  Just like our  sportstars?
The figure might seem enormous, but it doesn’t shock planet hunters. “I’m not surprised by this result,” says astrophysicist Wesley Traub of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., who was not involved in the study. “This sounds reasonable. This sounds good.”
To make their estimate, the scientists used data that had been gathered from 2002 to 2007 by surveys looking for the temporary brightening in a distant star’s light caused by the gravity of a body passing in front of it. If that passing body is a star with planets, the system causes a predictable boost in the distant star’s light, revealing the presence of the closer planet.
Unlike other types of planet searches, this technique, called gravitational microlensing, works well for stars both near to Earth and far away. “If we want go out of our little box and see into the infinite universe, or in the galactic bulge, or far outside the galaxy — are there planets even there? — then microlensing is the way,” says Kailash Sahu, an astronomer and study coauthor from the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore. And microlensing can more easily detect small planets in orbits far from their stars — though the new study considered only planets circling from half the distance of Earth to the sun out to the equivalent of Saturn’s orbit.
Both the eclipse method used by NASA’s Kepler team and radial velocity searches that measure stellar wobbles are more sensitive to planets tucked in close to their hosts. And those methods more easily find larger planets. Microlensing is the best way to estimate planet frequencies for a range of masses, from planets 10 times the mass of Jupiter to those more like Earth, says astronomer and study coauthor Arnaud Cassan of the Astrophysical Institute of Paris.
Some scientists note that the team based its estimate on a small number of planet detections, but say the small sample size was accurately accounted for. “Non-detections are just as important as detections to constrain the planet frequency,” Cassan says.
Along with identifying the galactic abundance of planets, Cassan and his colleagues also predicted the distribution of planets by mass. The team found that smaller planets are much more common than larger ones, a conclusion that matches the data pouring in from other planet searches.
“Low-mass planets are common as dirt,” says Scott Gaudi, an astronomer at Ohio State University in Columbus who is not a part of the study team. “That doesn’t mean that there aren’t stars that have no planets. There probably are. But on average, planets are pretty common.”

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

technologies of future


The gap between science fiction and science fact is narrowing daily. Here’s a look at fiveemerging technologies and market and society trends that scientists at IBM’s research lab think have the potential to change the way people work, live and interact during the next five years.
Power from the people
Anything that moves or produces heat has the potential to create energy that can be captured, Big Blue’s scientists said in their sixth annual “IBM 5 in 5″ look at what’s in store for mankind in the near term. Walking, jogging, bicycling. The heat from your computer or the water flowing through plumbing.
Scientists believe that advances in renewable energy technology will allow individuals to collect thiskinetic energy, which now goes to waste, and use it to help power homes, offices and cities.
On a personal level, while you’re riding your bicycle to work, devices on the spokes of your wheels could be recharging batteries you could later use to power some of the lights in your home. On a larger scale, IBM researchers in Ireland are looking at ways to understand and minimize the environmental impact of converting ocean wave energy into electricity.
You are your password
Each person has a unique biological identity. Your biometric data—facial definitions, retina scans and voice files—will be composited through software to build an individual’s unique online password, IBM researchers said.
Referred to as multi-factor biometrics, smarter systems will be able to use this information in real-time to safeguard your identity.  You will no longer need to create, track or remember multiple passwords.
In the future, IBM scientists said, you will be able to walk up to an ATM and securely withdraw money by simply speaking your name or looking into a tiny sensor that can recognize the unique patterns in the retina of your eye.
Mind reading gets real
Mind reading may make the leap from science fiction to real life sooner than expected, the researchers in Armonk, N.Y., said. IBM scientists are among those researching how to link your brain to devices such as a computer or smartphone and be able to control inanimate objects by just thinking about it. If you think about calling someone, for example, the smartphone would then dial that number.
Scientists in the field of bioinformatics have designed headsets with advanced sensors to read electrical brain activity that can recognize facial expressions, and the thoughts of a person. IBM researchers believe that within five years we will begin early applications of this technology in the gaming and entertainment industry.
Digital divide closes
In five years, IBM said, the gap between information haves and have-nots will narrow considerably due to advances in mobile technology; by then 80 percent of the current global population will have a mobile device.
This will empower people without a lot of spending power, they believe. In India, IBM used speech technology and mobile devices to enable rural villagers who were illiterate to pass along information through recorded messages on their phones. With access to information that was not there before, villagers could check weather reports to help them decide when to fertilize crops, to know when doctors were coming to town, and to find the best prices fortheir crops or merchandise.
Junk becomes gems
In five years, unsolicited advertisements may feel so personalized and relevant that you’ll think spam is dead. At the same time, spam filters will be so precise that you’ll never be bothered by unwanted sales pitches again.
IBM said it is developing technology that uses real-time analytics to make sense and integrate data from across all the facets of your life such as your social networks and online preferences to present and recommend information that is useful only to you.  Fromnews to sports to politics, you’ll trust the technology will know what you want, so you can decide what to do with it.
Source:
LiveScience.comBy Ned Smith | LiveScience.com – Mon, Dec 19, 2011