Friday, January 22, 2010

Microsoft Student Rally Photo Competition [8 days left]

WhereOnline

OrganizerMicrosoft

Key Dates
Deadline for January contest: January 31, 2010

Eligibility
Open to individuals above 16 years from around the world.

Microsoft is orgazining the Student Rally Photo Competition. The idea behind the contest is to get students to photograph their favorite spot on campus, then get their friends to vote for their favorite photo. Students are encouraged to participate because it’s a fun way to express their creativity, show off their school, and get a little of the competitive spirit going with the voting round. Each month they will host a new challenge and a new chance to win. Check out this month's challenge to be one of the ten students to win the annual Microsoft Student Rally award.

Theme: View from Campus

Everyone has their own favorite space on campus. Show them your world and you could win one of this month’s prizes.Use Windows Live Photo Gallery to create a collage of your world and your view might be the one that puts your campus on the map (and a PC on your desk).


Prizes: Top 5 photo collages will win: Acer AspireRevo desktop PC & Asus 19” Widescreen LCD Monitor

Timelines for the monthly contest:

- January : January 1, 2010 to January 31, 2010

- February : February 1, 2010 to February 28, 2010

- March : March 1, 2010 to March 31, 2010


Website : http://tinyurl.com/yz4cdkg

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

26 Word Story : A to Z

A black Canadian deigned “Eighty five gangsters helped in juvenile killings last month near Omaha” pointedly quoting Reuters. “Shoot that usurper!” vehement white xenophobics yelled zealously.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Facebook Fellowship Program 2010 -11

Facebook has announcesd the creation of the Facebook Fellowship program to support graduate students in the 2010-2011 school year.Every day Facebook confronts the most complex technical problems and they believe that close relationships with the academy will enable them to address many of these problems at a fundamental level and solve them. The fellowships will begin in August or September, depending on the start of the award recipient’s academic year. The fellowship award includes :Tuition and fees will be paid for the academic year , $30K stipend (paid over 9 months of the academic year) , $5K per year toward conference attendance and travel, $5K toward a personal computer & Opportunity to apply for a paid summer internship.


Applications must be submitted by: February 15, 2010
Award recipients will be notified by: March 29, 2010

They are interested in a wide range of academic topics, including the following topical areas:


- Internet Economics
- Cloud Computing
- Social Computing
- Data Mining and Machine Learning
- Systems
- Information Retrieval

Eligibility Criteria:


- Full-time Ph.D. students in topical areas represented by these fellowships who are currently involved in on-going research.

- Students must be studying Computer Science, Computer Engineering, Electrical Engineering, System Architecture, or a related area.

- Students must be enrolled during the academic year that the Fellowship is awarded.

- Students must be nominated by a faculty member.

Please visit the given website for more details.


Website : http://tinyurl.com/y88fnd2

IITM Summer Fellowship Programme 2010 [28 days left]

hi ppl,

make use of this fellowship fully...

OrganizerIIT - Madras

Key Dates
The last date for receipt of filled in Application: February 17, 2010
Project begins: May 17, 2010


about the fellowship:

The IIT - Madras is accepting applications for it's Summer Fellowship Programme 2010.The IITM Summer Fellowship Programme for two months duration with fixed stipend of Rs.6,500/ is designed to enhance awareness and interest in high quality academic research among young Engineering, Management, Sciences and humanities students through a goal oriented summer miniproject to be undertaken in different departments of this Institute.

Eligibility :Candidates pursuing III year of B.E./B.Tech/B.Sc. (Engg.)/Integrated M.E./M.Tech. programme and first year of M.Sc./M.A./MBA with outstanding academic background in terms of high ranks (within three ranks) in University examinations, papers presented at seminars, projects executed, design contests participated, score/rank in Mathematics Olympiad and any other awards/distinctions obtained, are encouraged to apply.

Period of the Project: The contact period for the project will be two months normally during 17th May to 16 th July 2010. However depending on the convenience, the selected candidates can undertake the project at any time subject to the availability of faculty.

Application form and other details can be downloaded from the given website.


for more details visit,

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Large Hadron Collider Visible in Google Earth

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is a particle accelerator and collider located at CERN, near Geneva, Switzerland, and is scheduled to be open in May of 2008. Large particle accelerators are built in circles to get particles up to very high speeds (near the speed of light). The LHC is nearly 27 km in circumference and is located 50 to 175 meters underground on the border between France and Switzerland. CERN is the European Organization for Nuclear Research. This massive underground structure is difficult to visualize since it is all underground.

Google Earth 3D modeling guru Joey Wade has posted a 3D diagram and models showing the LHC and floated it directly above its actual location so you can see how it looks in Google Earth. Download the LHC model . He has roughly modeled the 3D buildings on the surface so you can get a feel for the underlying structures and how deep they are underground. Zoom in to see the buildings and tilt your view. Joey has included a folder with YouTube videos in placemarks which provide some excellent information about the project. The large deep structure is the new ATLAS particle detector system. Nice work!

Just for fun, Joey also included a little animation showing two particles in opposite directions going around the collider. After loading the file above, just click on the play button to the right of the time slider to see it in action!

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Large Hadron Collider: Best- and Worst-Case Scenarios

OMG! Have you heard that huge atom smasher in Europe powers up for the first time tomorrow?

Of course you have. You’ve also heard it repeated over and over that the Large Hadron Collider is the biggest, most expensive scientific instrument in history and that it’s going to change our fundamental understanding of the universe.

Well, great, but what does that mean?

We break down how five major physics theories — and the theorists who’ve spent their lives developing them — may be impacted by the discoveries that could emanate from the LHC. We also provide answers to all your LHC FAQ in 140 characters or less, so you can send them to your friends on Twitter.

Basically, the collider is a series of tubes intended to guide protons as superconducting magnets propel them close to the speed of light. You can think of the LHC as the Disneyland of physics experiments. A host of different detectors have been designed to test which theoretical physicists’ math fits the real world.

Over the last few decades, physics has followed a path of increasing strangeness.
Theory after theory about the fundamental nature of the universe has arisen: string theory, universes composed of multiple universes and many dimensions, and matter we can’t see and can hardly detect. Now, that generation of theoreticians will have their ideas put to the test deep underground on the border of France and Switzerland.

Here’s how the LHC could bolster or banish five of those theories:


The Big Bang Theory

Best Case: The Large Hadron Colliders’ ALICE experiment successfully creates quark-gluon plasma, a substance theorized to have existed just milliseconds after the Big Bang. By generating temperatures more than 100,000 times hotter than the sun, scientists hope to watch as this particle goo cools and expands into the particles that we know. That could help scientists answer why protons and neutrons weigh 100 times more than the quarks they’re made of.

Worst Case: Scientists inadvertently make a micro black hole, and the earth is quickly erased from existence. Just kidding: scientists at CERN and elsewhere have ruled out the possibility that the LHC will create any kind of doomsday scenario. The black holes that the LHC could theoretically create don’t even have enough energy to light up a light bulb. On the other hand, the U.K.’s Astronomer Royal put the odds of destroying the world at 1 in 50 million (which puts it in the realm of possibilities but still not as likely as hitting the lottery).

String Theory

Best Case: Scientists detect certain types of supersymmetric particles, aka sparticles, which physicist Michio Kaku calls, "signals from the
11th dimension." This would show that string theorists have been on the right path and that the universe really is made up of the four dimensions we experience and then seven others that unite the forces of nature.

Worst Case: String theory’s basic assumptions are violated. The LHC will be the first particle accelerator capable of allowing scientists to study W bosons, the elementary particle responsible for the weak force.
If they don’t scatter in certain ways, it’ll be back to the drawing board for a generation of string theorists, or as one physicist told New Scientist,
"If we see these violations, people will start working very feverishly on some sort of alternative that will produce these violations."

The "Our Universe Is Not Alone" Theory

Best Case: If scientists find a long-lived gluino, the postulated supersymmetric partner of the gluon, one group of scientists argues that it can be seen as a "messenger from the multiverse" and will lend support to the theory that our universe is just one of many. (Keep in mind though: not everyone is buying this interpretation.)

Worst Case: Our universe really is alone. Or even worse: it’s lonely.


Thursday, January 7, 2010

Pappu Ki Kavita

Pareshaan thi Pappu ki wife

Non-happening thi jo uski life

Pappu ko na milta tha aaram

Office main karta kaam hi kaam

Pappu ke boss bhi the bade cool

Promotion ko har baar jate the bhul

Par bhulte nahi the wo deadline

Kaam to karwate the roz till nine

Pappu bhi banna chata tha best

Isliye to wo nahi karta tha rest

Din raat karta wo boss ki gulami

Appraisal ke ummid main deta salami

Din guzre aur guzre fir saal

Bura hota gaya Pappu ka haal

Pappu ko ab kuch yaad na rehta tha

Galti se Biwi ko Behenji kehta tha

Aakhir ek din Pappu ko samjh aaya

Aur chod di usne Appraisal ki moh maya

Boss se bola, "Tum kyon satate ho ?"

"Appraisal ke laddu se buddu banate ho"

"Promotion do warna chala jaunga"

"Appraisal dene par bhi wapis na aunga"

Boss haans ke bola "Nahi koi baat"

"Abhi aur bhi Pappus hai mere paas"

"Yeh duniya Pappuon se bhari hai"

"Sabko bas aage badhne ki padi hai"

"Tum na karoge to kisi aur se karaunga"

"Tumhari tarah Ek aur Pappu banaunga"

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

SEHWAG'S BIG BANG THEORY

The theory talks about the initial conditions and subsequent development of the Universe that is supported by the most comprehensive and accurate explanations from current scientific observations. I have the inside information about Sehwag's BBT.

1) The better the bowler, the more I attack.
2) No matter how many runs the opposition has on the scoreboard, if I keep attacking they will weaken.
3) I will reach all major landmarks with a SIX.
4) No innings of mine can be complete without the umpires having to change the ball at least once.
5) If the ball is there to hit, I will not think twice.
6) Inner peace can only be achieved by sending the ball beyond the boundary line as often as possible.

 

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