Friday, January 30, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Web18 posts net loss of Rs 21.22 crore for 3Q 2008-09

Web18, which holds all the internet properties of TV18 Group, has reported a net loss of Rs 21.22 crore for the third quarter ending December 2008, as compared to a net loss of Rs 9.57 crore posted a year ago. Revenues went down from Rs 17.62 crore reported for the Dec 2007 ended quarter to Rs 17.49 crore reported for the third quarter of the current fiscal year.

'Pranab has appropriately discussed Tamils issue'

DMK government defends Mukherjee mission to Sri Lanka

Police shootout outside Mangalore today, 1 killed

There was a shootout outside Mangalore at around 5 am on Friday morning in a place called Gurupura.�

Maharashtra ATS to question Ram Sena chief

The Sri Ram Sena chief Pramod Muthalik who made headlines after his supporters attacked women in a Mangalore pub will be questioned by Maharashtra's Anti Terror Squad.�

Rupee depreciates against dollar

The Indian rupee depreciated by 15 paise against the US currency in early trade today.�

ATS to interrogate Sri Ram Sene chief

Purohit purportedly mentioned name of 'Muthalik'

Pakistan probe will decide next turn in ties with India

Reports about Pakistani investigators determining that the Mumbai attacks were planned elsewhere are not a good augury

Red Cross rescues 226 sick and wounded people

COLOMBO: The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) on Thursday succeeded in transporting 226 sick and wounded patients from the LTTE territory to the Vavuniya hospital, amid claims by the military that it recovered from Mullaithivu ...

Is there water-ice on the Moon?

BANGALORE: Do the permanently shadowed polar regions of the Moon contain water-ice? This is one of the many questions that a group of 70 scientists -- from the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), National Aeronautics and ...

Season Of Change

Amrita Rao is not shy anymore

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Surgeons find foot in baby's brain

A pediatric neurosurgeon says a tumour which he removed from the brain of a Colorado Springs infant contained a tiny foot and other partially formed body parts.

Chemicals 'may reduce fertility'

Chemicals commonly found in food packaging, upholstery and carpets may be damaging women's fertility, US scientists say.

Chickens could answer riddles of the human heart

The upper chambers of the heart, the atria, must contract before the lower chambers, the ventricles, to obtain a coordinated contraction that will propel the blood throughout the body.

Starbucks slashes jobs and stores

Starbucks says it will cut 6,700 jobs and shut 300 stores as it reports a 69\% plunge in quarterly profit.

Govt slashes petrol prices by Rs 5, diesel Rs 2

The government on Wednesday announced further reduction in petrol and diesel prices by Rs 5 and Re 2 a litre, respectively. The consumer price of cooking gas was also reduced by Rs 25 a cylinder.�

Dulha Hil Gaya

Is Mudassar Aziz merely a pawn in Sushmita's career pursuits?

Kinng Of Comedy

Akki is cutting down on canned laughs

Jungle Love

The Fashion Bitch is fed up of near naked girls

Well Oiled

Shyam Benegal's taste for young blood is growing

Pocket Size Paradise

The Oscars cannot wait any longer to reach Rahman

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Used MP3 player contains U.S. secrets

A man walks into a thrift store.

India appeal for Lanka civilians

The Indian government seeks assurances that civilians trapped by the fighting in Sri Lanka will be protected.

Dhruv Shenoy joins Guruji.com as President

Internet search company Guruji.com has appointed Dhruvakanth B Shenoy as president of the company. Before joining Guruji, Shenoy was country manager, Monster Middle East. In his new role, Dhruv Shenoy will oversee Gurujis overall business functions including marketing, distribution, sales and alliances.

Leaders gather for Davos summit

Global political and business leaders gather for the annual World Economic Forum, due to start in Davos, Switzerland.

Israeli jet targets Gaza tunnels

An Israeli jet pounds targets along Gaza's border with Egypt, as part of Israel's response to an attack on an Israeli patrol.

US man 'shoots wife and children'

A US man who recently lost his job shoots dead his wife and five children before killing himself, reports say.

Yahoo makes a loss as sales slip

Yahoo says it made a loss in the final three months of 2008 as the economic downturn hit sales of online ads.

Apocalypse in 2012? Date spawns theories, film

Forget "Y2K" -- here comes "Twenty-twelve." Fueled by a crop of books, Web sites with countdown clocks and claims about ancient timekeepers, interest is growing in what some see as the dawn of a new era and others as an expiration date for Earth: December 21, 2012.

Space Spotlight: The 'great dust storm'


U.N. demands safety for Sri Lankans

Mounting violence between rebel fighters and government troops along northern Sri Lanka has prompted U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to call for the safety of civilians as humanitarian groups try to provide aid to some 250,000 people trapped in the region.

Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Rediff posts net loss of $2.75 million on revenues of $5.3 million for 3Q 2008-09

Rediff.com has reported a net loss of $2.75 million for the third quarter ended December 2008, as compared to a net income of $1.00 million posted for the corresponding quarter of the previous fiscal year. Total revenues declined by 38 per cent to $5.30 million during Dec 2008 ended quarter from $8.53 million posted for the third quarter of the previous fiscal year.

Social Media is the Backbone of a Successful Integrated Marketing Campaign Online

As a medium the web provides multiple channels of promotion and marketing. Each of the internal channels seem capable of catering to different marketing goals and also seem to require individual attention of specialists. However, structured and 'have-been-successful' online campaigns have leveraged on the power of these channels as a cohesive unit, rather than separate processes within the same campaign. And this is true from the smallest of publishers to the biggest names in online publishing.

Did the Pope Heal or Deepen a Catholic Schism?

Did the Pope heal, or deepen, the Lefebvrist schism?

The Terrorist Attack That Rocked Wall St.

Remembering the 1920 attack that rocked New York.

Microsoft refocuses on mobile services

Microsoft has made some stumbles in the mobile world, but a new strategy shift -- focusing on services that help connect the phone to the PC and Web -- will soon pay dividends, the company's top Windows Mobile executive said in an interview.

Ancient marble head unearthed in Israel

Archaeologists in Israel have discovered what they believe is the bust of a Roman boxer from the second or third century.

Apple fans mark 25 years of Mac devotion

Long before fish swam in Macquariums, hipsters got Apple logo tattoos and thousands camped out for days to get into computer store openings, there was a machine. Saturday marks the 25th anniversary of the original Macintosh, the first personal computer to draw masses.

Global warming threatens forests, study says

Forests in the Pacific Northwest are dying twice as fast as they were 17 years ago, and scientists blame warming temperatures for the trend, according to a new study.

EU tightens Zimbabwe sanctions

The European Union tightened sanctions on Zimbabwe's leadership on Monday, condemning President Robert Mugabe's government for its "ongoing failure to address the most basic economic and social needs of its people."

US envoy starts Middle East push

President Obama's Middle East envoy George Mitchell is on his way to the region, heralding a new burst of diplomacy.

Monday, January 26, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Size Does Matter

Kats sizes up Aamir for a role

Touch Of Evil

Shahrukh Khan is the new Mogambo

Music And Lyrics

Rahman is bringing home an Oscar, guess who else is...

Movie Review: Raaz, The Mystery Abused

The Bitch watched this horror film alone in the theatre. Where's my p

Ghost In The Machine

Mohit Suri's computer is haunted

Clinton reaches out to U.S. allies

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has phoned a slew of leaders since taking office on Thursday, reaching out to key allies in the Middle East, Asia and Europe as the Obama administration reviews foreign policies.

Obama reverses foreign family-aid policy

President Obama will issue an executive order Friday afternoon reversing a controversial abortion-related policy from the past three Republican administrations, a senior administration official said.

Musharraf: U.S. treats Pakistan 'unequally'

Former Pakistan President Pervez Musharraf said his country is being treated "unequally" to other countries, despite being a staunch U.S. ally in its war on terror. The interview took place amid reports of U.S. drones striking militant targets in Pakistan days after the start of the Obama administration, a continuation of a Bush policy that Musharraf warned against.

Doctors amputate model's hands, feet

The family of a 20-year-old Brazilian model who is fighting for her life after having her hands and feet amputated have urged her supporters around the world to keep praying for their daughter.

Obama reverses foreign family-planning policy

President Obama will issue an executive order Friday afternoon reversing a controversial abortion-related policy from the past three Republican administrations, a senior administration official said.

Friday, January 23, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Obama's Order Ends Bush-Era Interrogation Tactics

Obama banishes Bush's interrogation tactics

Monster's Ball

The slugfest reaches the award function

The Czarina Of Trash

Ritu escapes from the fashion police

Moser Baer sues Seventymm for Rs 50 crore

Moser Baer Entertainment (MoserBaerHomeVideo.com) has filed a suit against movie rental company Seventymm Services (Seventymm.com) at the Bombay High Court, seeking Rs 50 crore compensation for ‘violating’ its ‘sole and exclusive video rental rights’, reports DNA.

Think Your Desktop Is Cluttered? Try World of Warcraft

Beware, all ye who enter World of Warcraft. For here you will find an insanely obstructive mosaic of menus, Health bars, widgets, and chat windows. Well, if you play it right, like we do. This is what you'd see without the UI overload. As Blizzard Entertainment's designers created it, WoW is set in a pretty, almost placid Tolkienesque universe. But for the hardcore gamer, that pristine landscape is begging for augmentation. There's just too much to track: At any given moment, a player might be expected to coordinate an upcoming event with scores of guildmates across four continents, juggle a massive inventory of items, and track online auctions, all while fighting wave after wave of evil trolls. Here's a look at a typical WoW desktop, with explanations for n00bs.1 Ventrilo // When dozens of players need to coordinate, text chat just won't do - voicechat app Ventrilo helps prevent anarchy. It's a party line for orcs and gnomes.2 Cartographer // The standard map in WoW is woefully inadequate. This add-on highlights important locations, like resource-rich mining nodes.3 Character Status // This little display tracks your avatar's well-being. When the green Health bar gets low, it's time to break out some healing potion.4 Bartender // These buttons represent your character's available actions, from sorcery to swordplay. High-level players who've amassed scores of abilities need Bartender to keep them all straight.5 Auctioneer Suite // Shopping for some new Leggings of Beast Mastery? This bot scans auction houses and ranks goods by price and availability.6 ItemRack // It never fails - dress in a cotton tunic and leather trousers and suddenly a wave of murlocs attacks. Changing into armor takes forever, but ItemRack lets you switch into battle gear with a single click.7 Combuctor // This search function helps sift through the hundreds of outfits, keys, potions, and weapons in your inventory.8 Group Calendar // Just because you live in your mom's basement doesn't mean you can't network like a big shot CEO. This calendar helps guilds coordinate 40- player, eight-hour raids.9 Bejeweled // Worried that 30 hours a week of WoW isn't enough gaming? Fire up this game-within-a-game version of the addictive puzzler Bejeweled to fill in the inevitable downtime.10 Twobox Toolkit // The pink chat text is being generated by TwoBox, an app that helps players control two or more characters at once. "Dual boxers" log in their extra avatar on a second computer and keep tabs on it through text chat.

Top 11 Most Anticipated Games of 2009

It's gonna be a great year for videogames, and these titles look likely to deliver maximum fun. From big winners to little-known gems, Wired.com runs down the year's most promising games.

The Web Masters

Five who are changing the face of the Internet.

6 New Web Technologies of 2008 You Need to Use Now

Every year, we see scores of innovations trickle onto the web - everything from new browser features to cool web apps to entire programming languages. Some of these concepts just make us smile, then we move on. Some completely blow our minds with their utility and ingenuity - and become must-haves.For this list, we've compiled the most truly life-altering nuggets of brilliance to hit center stage in 2008: the ideas, products and enhancements to the web experience so huge that they make us wonder how we got along without them.Nitpickers will notice that a couple of these technologies arrived two or three years ago. Others aren't even fully baked yet. But each innovation on our list reached a level of maturity, hit the point of critical mass, or stepped in to fill a burning need during 2008 that resulted in it significantly changing the landscape of the web.Here's to the technologies currently making the web a better place than it was 12 months ago.Identity ManagementFew things carry more value than your digital identity, and yet most web users have only a tenuous grasp of it. That's because on the social web, identity is no longer just who you are. It's who you know, how you know them and how much you want them to know about you. On the web, your identity is explicitly tied to your relationships, both with your friends and with the websites you visit.Three great technologies came to fruition this year to help you manage these complex interdependencies: OpenID, Google Friend Connect and Facebook Connect. These ID systems all offer a way to take control of your social capital, that cache of "friend data" you carry with you as you sign up for and use different web services. They also all offer a more tangible advantage - an easy way to log in to any website using one set of credentials. You get one virtual ID card that gives you access to hundreds of websites. As a bonus, you don't have to go through the painful process of filling out a profile and adding or approving friends on every new blog, community or social network you want to join.The end of 2008 saw a flurry of activity around identity. Facebook Connect, which currently lets you log in to a few dozen high-profile websites using your Facebook ID, went live the first week of December. Google's Friend Connect and MySpace's MySpaceID, similar systems that aren't yet as widely adopted, launched soon after it.There's a hitch, though. Facebook Connect, while elegant and easy to use, is built on proprietary code and isn't compatible with the offerings from Google and MySpace, which are built using OpenID and other open source standards.We should expect this battle for your personal data play out over the next year, maybe longer. But 2008 will be remembered as the year that identity stepped into the spotlight.HTML 5One of the most important technologies on this list doesn't fully exist yet - HTML 5 - but in 2008, key features started to trickle out.HTML 5 will eventually replace HTML 4.01, the dominant programming language currently used to build web pages. But the governing bodies in charge of the web are still drafting the details, and nobody expects HTML 5 to fully emerge as the new standard for at least a few more years.But HTML 5 is no vaporware. Many of the changes to the way the web operates as outlined in early versions of the new specification are already being implemented in the latest browsers, and some of the web's more adventurous site builders are already incorporating HTML 5's magic into their pages.HTML 5 will be great step forward, standardizing things like dragging and dropping elements on web pages, in-line editing of text and images on sites and new ways of drawing animations. There's also support for audio and video playback without plug-ins, a boon for usability and a worrisome sign for Adobe's Flash, Microsoft's Silverlight and Apple's QuickTime. The language will also give a boost to web apps, as there are new controls for storing web data offline on your local machine.Want Gmail on your desktop? HTML 5 makes it possible. Alas, the blink tag isn't invited to the party.LifestreamingA new breed of social app has arisen to help us manage the mess of information overload - the lifestream. Not long ago, keeping track of your friends on the internet was pretty easy. Everyone belonged to Friendster or MySpace and that was it. Now, the web is littered with thousands of social sites, each with its own special purpose - Flickr for photos, Last.fm for music, Twitter for tweeting. Even the most rudimentary services are tied to the social web. Renting a movie, buying a book or writing a blog post? Let all your friends on Netflix, Amazon and Blogger know about it.Keeping tabs on your friends now is all too easy and all too much, all at once. Sites like FriendFeed, Plaxo Pulse and Digsby serve as social-network-activity aggregators. They're like virtual funnels. Dump in all the notifications, feeds and updates from your various networks, and the services will bring it all into one master stream, relieving you of the responsibility of visiting a dozen or more sites to learn what your friends are up to, what they're listening to, who they're snogging and so on. Controls let you dial back the flow by sorting and filtering the flow, pruning it down to only what matters most.Many such services have emerged, but FriendFeed, an elegant and simple site designed by a crew of ex-Googlers, is our favorite.Oh, and don't expect to be able to add Facebook to your lifestream. The network lets all sorts of data in, but precious little out. Firefox 3Firefox has been around since 2004, but when version 3 of Mozilla's browser arrived in June 2008, it got everything right. Mozilla's browser is faster and more secure than ever before, and it's open source, so you get the feel-good factor, too. One of the most highly anticipated software releases of the year, more than 8 million people downloaded Firefox 3 on the first day. Third time's a charm, indeed.The genius bit of engineering was bringing search front and center - just type what you're looking for in the location bar, and FF3 searches your history, bookmarks and the web to bring you the page you want, lightning fast.Performance enhancements made it one of the web's fastest browsers - especially for surfing the recent swell of web apps - and improved security features made it one of the safest. Mozilla continues to build upon the concept with its Ubiquity add-on for Firefox, which lets you search and interact with any number of web services by typing text commands into the browser.It's still the second-most-popular browser after Microsoft Internet Explorer by a wide margin, but Firefox 3 is the feisty favorite of the web's elite.Google ChromeIts debut release in September was not expected, nor was it greeted with as much fanfare as the arrival of Firefox 3 a few months prior. But Google's browser was instantly recognized as a potential game-changer, both among browser-makers and within the world of web apps.Chrome is a browser built to empower web applications. Its killer feature is a new approach to page rendering that isolates web applications inside each of the browser's tabs - a crashing web app might cause a single tab to go south, but that won't affect anything outside that tab. The rest of the browser remains stable. When you're doing mission-critical work in a web app and the browser crashes, it isn't an annoyance, it's a deal breaker. E-mails are lost, documents have to be rewritten, web forms need to be filled out again. Chrome's ability to sidestep a full crash strengthens Google's bid to replace desktop apps with its own web-based alternatives.Chrome reached official 1.0 status in December. It's Windows-only for now, but we should expect official versions for Mac and Linux soon. It's also still very young. Future releases will have support for add-ons, offline syncing of web data through Google Desktop and - knowing Google - probably a few other bells and whistles nobody's thought of yet.Location AwarenessIn 2008, location-based information ceased being a fancy add-on and instead became a requirement of any serious, successful web service.Hit a button on your laptop or phone to tell a web service where you are, and it tells you what restaurants are close by, where the new Bond movie is playing (and when, and if there are tickets left), and which of your friends are within shouting distance if you need a date.The tipping point arguably came when a wave of GPS-equipped mobile web devices hit the market. The iPhone 3G, the T-Mobile G1 and the latest Nokia N-series devices all have GPS built in. They also all have real web browsers and the tools necessary for access to web APIs, opening the door to more-relevant search and localized mobile services.On the iPhone, you can use Yelp's app to get a list of nearby venues, restaurants and hangouts with the touch of a button. Or, in the case of Google's local-search app, you can simply speak your request and get local results. An app like Say Where queries multiple search sites.The benefits aren't limited to mobiles, either. Social networking sites and desktop search apps can take advantage of new technologies like Yahoo's FireEagle, where users can update and store their location data, or browser plug-ins like Google Gears or Firefox's Geode, which users can set up to report their location automatically.Whether they're using a desktop browser or an iPhone, users now demand the high levels of relevance and convenience on the web that location awareness affords.The World Wide Web Consortium, the web's governing body, has stepped up and formed a think tank to develop a set of standards for handling users' geodata that ensures privacy and interoperability. The W3C Geolocation Working Group hopes to have its first recommendation filed by the end of 2009.

Revamp civil services exam, says Moily panel

Besides recommending a performance-based system for bureaucrats, the Administrative Reforms Commission has also suggested revamping the UPSC.

Obama Moves to Quickly Erase Bush's Legacy

With a call for 'relentless' diplomacy, Hillary further obliterates W's legacy.

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

37\% of all internet users prefer to access the Net from cyber cafe: IAMAI

According to I-Cube 2008, a survey conducted jointly by IMRB International and Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), 37 per cent of all internet users prefer to access internet from cyber cafe, as against 27 per cent from office and 26 per cent from home. School and college were found to be the most preferred access point for 8 per cent of all internet users.

Google to stop offering Print Ads on Feb 28

Google is cancelling its print advertisement programme in which it sought to bring its auction-like ad buying system to hundreds of newspapers. According to Google, the company will stop offering Print Ads on February 28.

Online inauguration videos set records

With many workers stuck at their desks during the late-morning swearing-in of President Obama on Tuesday, more people than ever went online to watch live video of the historic inauguration.

Is Paris Hilton Already Over Her New BFF Brittany?

Paris Hilton just found her new BFF on her MTV show, but could she already be looking for a fresh replacement? While My New BFF winner Brittany Flickinger accompanied Paris to Sundance,...

Girl Swap

The theory of replacement revealed

Expectations from 2009: A Seriatim > Advertisers (Part 4/5)

by Satrajit Sen

57\% of internet users between 18-35 years of age: IAMAI

According to I-Cube 2008, a joint annual survey of internet users conducted by IMRB International and Internet and Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), more than 50 per cent of 17.9 million active internet users in urban India belong to the age group 18-25 years. This group comprised two categories: college going students (27 per cent) and young men (30 per cent).

Obama 'set to close Guantanamo'

US President Barack Obama is ready to sign an order to close the controversial Guantanamo Bay camp within a year.

Caroline Kennedy withdraws name

Caroline Kennedy says she is no longer interested in taking up the seat Hillary Clinton has vacated in the US Senate.

Cleric 'must deny' views on rape

A Muslim cleric in Australia, who reportedly said husbands may force wives into having sex, is told by PM Rudd to apologise.

Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

BrahMos missile test fails after early 'success'

The Army's endeavour to induct the BrahMos missile as "a precision-strike weapon" took a hit with the missile failing to achieve laid-down parameters in a test.

More of the latest gadgets at CES

The team take a look at some of the latest gadgets on display at this year's Consumer Electronics Show.

Economy and war on Obama's agenda

Barack Obama is to begin his first working day as US president by meeting his economic advisers and top military commanders.

Three million hit by Windows worm

A virulent Windows virus is racking up millions of victims, report computer security firms.

Cabin crew held over drug haul

Fifteen cabin crew staff are arrested after 50kg of cannabis is found on a flight from South Africa to Heathrow Airport.

AdWords Can’t Save Newspapers; Google Kills Print Ads

If newspapers were hoping that Google would be their savior, it looks like they will need to find another white knight. The company has announced that they are discontinuing their print ads product – which allowed advertisers to place ads in newspapers via AdWords – at the end of next month.The problem does not appear to be a lack of interest from the newspapers; in a blog post, Google notes that more than 800 newspapers in the US signed up for the program. Instead, it’s a lack of demand from advertisers. Google writes: “While we hoped that Print Ads would create a new revenue stream for newspapers and produce more relevant advertising for consumers, the product has not created the impact that we — or our partners — wanted.”Print ads debuted in late 2006, and have essentially faced a perfect storm of bad news. Between declining readership of printed newspapers, an economic slowdown that has hampered advertising spending, and the fact that Google was trying to sell ads side-by-side with more measurable Internet ads, the product never really had a chance. For its part, Google still wants to be involved in the newspaper business, writing “We will continue to devote a team of people to look at how we can help newspaper companies.” But for now, it looks like AdWords isn’t the be-all and end-all in advertising that Google hoped it would be. It makes us wonder of what the future of Google’s other offline ad efforts – like radio and TV – might be.---Related Articles at Mashable | All That's New on the Web:Google Opens Print Ads To MarketersThe Daily Poll: What Was Your First Web Browser?Flickr Adds Batch PrintingHP Launches Wordpress Plugin for Blog Printing OptionsHP Ramps Up Print 2.0 EffortsHP Labs Offers CloudPrint for Printing On the GoGoogle Rises in Rank as Most Improved Brand

Obama reaches out to Muslims

Washington: Barack Obama, who was on Tuesday sworn in as the 44th U.S. president, used his inaugural speech to reach out to the Muslim community across the world. 'To the Muslim world, we seek a new way forward, based on mutual ...

Argentine leader visits Cuba

Argentina President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner will meet Monday evening with Cuban leader Raul Castro during her first official visit to the island.

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

In-text ad platform Hover.in gets seed funding from Media2win

Pune-based Hover Technologies has received seed funding from interactive agency Media2Win. Hover plans to use the fund for the development of its in-text content and ad delivery platform Hover.in. As a part of the funding, Krishna Kumar, CEO of Media2win, has joined the Hover board. Hover is also in talks with leading VCs to raise Series A funding.

Spotted: A R Rahman in Los Angeles

Reader Pragati Kapoor sends us a photograph.

Sandeep scalps six

NEW DELHI: A six-wicket haul by medium pacer Sandeep Kumar powered Golden Hawks to a 27-run victory over Dynamic Sports and into the pre-quarterfinals of the 13th Sahibzada Ajit Singh cricket tournament at the Sri Guru Gobind Singh College ...

Legally Blonde

Juhi Chawla thinks men prefer blondes

South Africa to ignore racial taunt

South Africa hope that captain Graeme Smith's Sydney Test heroics will win over Aussie fans and avoid another ugly racism row.�

Laxman to captain South Zone, Kaif leads Central

VVS Laxman and Mohammad Kaif have been named captains of the South and Central Zone squads for the Duleep Trophy

Author jailed for insulting Thai king

An Australian author was sentenced Monday to three years in prison in Thailand after falling foul of a Thai law that makes it a crime to insult the country's royal family.

Gujarat reveals how it lured Tata's Nano

The Gujarat Government has made public the incentives it offered to the Tatas for luring the small car project to the state a demand the opposition parties had been making ever since the Tata Motors decided to relocate to Sanand in the state from Singur in West Bengal.�

Pakistan route closed to convoys

Pakistan says it has temporarily shut the Khyber Pass to convoys supplying troops in Afghanistan after a militant attack.

Miliband faces India media flak

India's media continue their assault on UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband after he urged a resolution to the Kashmir dispute.

Monday, January 19, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

India may give Kasab's DNA to Pakistan

India is considering handing over a second dossier of evidence on the Mumbai attacks to Pakistan, including a DNA sample of lone arrested terrorist Ajmal Kasab.

Google decides to close 3 offices across US, Norway, Sweden

Google has decided to close its offices in Austin, US; Trondheim, Norway; and Lulea, Sweden. “Our strong desire is to keep as many of these 70 engineering employees at Google as possible,” Alan Eustace, senior vice president, engineering and research, Google, has said, however, “we may not be able to keep 100\% of these exceptional employees.”

RBI unlikely to cut key rates: Bankers

With inflation declining sharply in recent weeks and slowing demand, the Reserve Bank may signal softer interest rates even though it may not tinker much with key-rates in the quarterly review of its annual monetary policy, bankers said.�

Russia and Ukraine reach gas deal

Negotiations dragged into the early hours on Sunday, but in the end the prime ministers of Russia and Ukraine announced a deal to settle the gas dispute that has drastically reduced supplies of Russian gas to Europe for nearly two weeks.�

HOW TO: Use Twitter on the Go

Matt Singley is a business process advisor that focuses on social media and UGC sociology. He authors a blog at Singley's Blog Thoughts.We've written about some very specific applications for different mobile devices, and now we want to tell you how to be a power Twitter user on any mobile device with a browser, and how to post your tweets safely and hands free while on the go.Chances are your mobile phone has a web browser, and now there are several sites that allow you to manage your Twitter account directly within the browser, no downloading of applications required!  This is certainly great news for the non-iPhone users that get tired of seeing all the great apps released for the iPhone.Browser based Twitter servicesDabr - Based in the United Kingdom, this open source project is one of the fastest and easiest to navigate on my phone.  Their about page tells us what they are built upon the users.  They value feedback and make constant improvements based upon what the community is saying. An excellent bonus feature is the use of pics as thumbnails in the timeline, not just links to Twitpic or Flickr.Slandr - Not just a browser based Twitter client, but they also offer to make back channels for conferences so you can talk about the speaker while they are doing their thing.  Slandr also has the nice feature of showing thumbnail previews of pictures in the timeline, but the navigation is challenging at times.  The links for replies and direct messages are so small I often end up clicking to a place I don't want to go.Twistat Mobile - Although it doesn't have the prettiest GUI, it certainly boasts some of the most unique features.  One click can make somebody in your line a tweetheart, hide a person's updates or open up an email message with the tweet already pasted into the body, ready to send to your contacts.Tweete - A very crisp, clean GUI, although the cleanliness does remove some features I like, such as seeing avatars in the timeline.  I didn't realize how dependent I have become on scanning the stream of tweets for a user pic until I started using this mobile version.  It has the usual buttons you would expect for full Twitter function, but nothing more.  If you want fast and clean, this is a great option.Twitter Mobile - Twitter's official mobile site.  Although I love the Twitter engine, the mobile site is pretty bare bones in what it can do.  I visit this most often when I'm clicking a link out of my email telling me that somebody new is following me; it's easy enough to click the follow button in their profile then exit out.Hands free tweeting while on the roadMany places, like my homestate of California, have enacted laws that make it illegal to text or type in any manner while driving.  Of course I'm sure it's the safest course of action, but naturally it creates a bit of a problem for people like me that need to constantly update Twitter.  Fortunately there are a few excellent, hands-free options for tweeting in the form of voice-to-text technologies.SpinVox and Ping.fm - This partnership launched at the end of 2008 and I have been using it steadily ever since. Simply sign up for a free account at Ping.fm, and you will be given a unique phone number that you can call and speak your message to.  It's quick, it's free, and it's legal.  The transcription is pretty accurate, although sometimes words do get changed.  It takes just a few minutes to post to your Twitter account, and it also optionally posts a link to the original voice message.  SpinVox and Ping.fm don't just update Twitter, you can also link to and update almost 20 other social networks like Facebook, LinkedIn and even Mashable!Jott - Similar to the SpinVox/Ping.fm service, Jott converts voice to text on the fly with many extras.  Unfortunately they recently announced that they will no longer be offering their basic free service. The starting tier is still reasonably priced at $3.95/month and offers other perks such as integration with Outlook and voice to notes.Using these services, you can keep tweeting wherever you are and whatever you're doing.  How do you update and stay in touch when on the go? Let us know in the comments.More Twitter Resources from Mashable- HOW TO: Build Community on Twitter- HOW NOT TO: Build Your Twitter Community- HOW TO: Win Friends and Twinfluence People- Tweets to Go: 35+ More Twitter Resources for Your PhoneImage courtesy of iStockPhoto, Mlenny---Related Articles at Mashable | All That's New on the Web:Twitter Mobile InterfaceQuick Fix For Twitter TroublesDon't Send Bac'n: Use TwitterSearchMosio Uses Twitter For Mobile Q and A. Twitter Adds GMail Contacts ImportHow Messed Up Is Twitter For You Right Now? [Poll]30Boxes Brings Us Power Twitter

Steve Wozniak on Steve Jobs’ Health

The other Steve - Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak - has appeared on CNBC to discuss the issue of Steve Jobs' health and his leave of absence from Apple. Says Woz:Obviously Steve's very important, but Apple has some incredible people too. That are almost, in a way, followers of the Apple mentality, followers of Steve himself he's a great individual, but there's an awful lot that are around him at Apple that obviously, you know, learned some good techniques. The culture of a company can be ongoing even when he's away.Woz, it seems, favors optimism, even suggesting that the rest may result in new product ideas from Jobs. That sounds like wishful thinking. [via MacBlogz]---Related Articles at Mashable | All That's New on the Web:Ouch: Bloomberg Mistakenly Publishes Steve Jobs' ObituaryThe Daily Poll: How Did You Follow the Steve Jobs Keynote?Breaking: Steve Jobs Taking a Leave of Absence from AppleWill the Real Steve Jobs Please Stand Up?Steve Jobs Subpoenaed For Backdated Options CaseNo, Steve Jobs Didn’t Die; Just More HackingCould Fake Steve Jobs Be About To Go Away?

Expectations from 2009: A Seriatim > Online Publishers (Part 1/5)

by Satrajit SenEarlier we took a horizontal look back at last years performance of India’s online industry with experts voicing their positive and negative experiences. But at a time when the entire industry is speaking about vertical and niche categories, AlooTechie decided to find out the expectations of different verticals of the countrys online industry from the year 2009.

5 Bangladeshis arrested in J and K along Indo-Pak border

BSF on Monday foiled an exfiltration bid along the Indo-Pak border in Samba district of Jammu and Kashmir and arrested five Bangladeshi nationals.

Sepoy stole AK-47 to rob bank, arrested

A soldier serving with the Army was apprehended by the police along with an AK-47 and ammo on Saturday. He was on leave since December 23 and was to resume duty in Lucknow.

No sister gets along with her brother's wife: Dutt

Sending some harsh messages to his sisters for the first time, Sanjay Dutt says, "There's only one Mrs and Mr Dutt in Pali Hill, and that's Manyata and I."

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Vamooz News Buzz

Whats hot on Vamooz today ...

Top news stories users are following on Vamooz.

Microsoft provides 25 GB free online storage through Windows Live SkyDrive

by Satrajit SenMicrosoft India has increased the storage capacity of its Windows Live SkyDrive application from 5 GB to 25 GB. The service was launched in beta in February 2008 and is provided as an add-on service to Windows Live consumers with a Hotmail id.

Jet Airways ties up with Shoogloo Network to launch its affiliate programme

Jet Airways has partnered with Shoogloo Network, which is powered by OMG, to launch its affiliate programme that allows online publishers to earn additional revenues by generating sales leads for the airlines.

Jivox launches Free4Green Sweepstakes to support eco-friendly companies

Online video advertising company Jivox has launched Free4Green Sweepstakes, an initiative that allows eco-friendly companies to win 100,000 video ad impressions on the Jivox Publisher Network, which includes BigAdda, BigFlix, MyPopkorn, Rajshri, Sulekha, CNN-IBN, MoneyControl and SifyMax.

Countries line up for nuclear business with India

While France has already walked away with a contract, teams from Britain and Canada will be here this week to explore possibilities for nuclear cooperation.

France wants 'fair competition' in 126 IAF deal

Eyeing the mega deal for 126 multi-role combat aircraft with India, France said it expected "fair competition" and equal treatment by New Delhi to all the bidders in the selection process

Slumdog Millionaire isn't poverty porn, says author

Diplomat Vikas Swarup, whose novel was used as the basic story of the film Slumdog Millionaire, said there is nothing negative about the slums as depicted in the film.

Major diversion of funds from Satyam: Govt

"It appears that the facts and figures in the balance sheet of Satyam are not based on correct information," corporate affairs minister Prem Chand Gupta said.

Movie Review: Chandni Chowk To China

Go take a leak at the Great Wall of China

Total Eclipse

Ekta is back to being a royal pain in the...

Mr Gimmick

Akki bores The Bitch with his stunts