Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Obama’s rating improves: poll

President Barack Obama’s fortunes are improving slightly, although he would face a tough struggle for re-election next year if Mitt Romney were the Republican nominee, a Reuters/Ipsos poll has said.

Forty-nine per cent of Americans approve of the way Obama is handling his job as president, up from 47 per cent in an October poll.

Obama’s disapproval rating held steady at 50 per cent.

While still low, the percentage of Americans who believe the country is headed in the right direction also increased, to 25 from 21 in the previous survey.

The percentage who feel it is on the wrong track slipped to 70 from 74, the survey said on Friday.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Do you know who invented wheel?


The Sumerians, who lived in the Middle East, invented the wheel in about 3450 BC.

It is a mystery as to who invented the very first wheel. It is believed to have been invented much earlier, however.

The very first wheels were used for potter's wheels. A potter's wheel seems like an unimportant invention. However, the creation of pottery was very important in the advancement of mankind. Pottery vessels allowed humans to transport food and especially water. This made them not as dependent on living right next to a water source.

Reptiles Know It Python hearts key to treating cardiac disease!


After pythons eat a meal, their organs including their hearts nearly double in size within a day. Now, researchers have learned how the snakes are able to achieve this sort of growth without heart damage, a finding that could lead to new therapies for human heart disease.

After a meal, python blood is so full of triglycerides, a form of cholesterol, that it appears milky, said study researcher Leslie Leinwand, a biologist at the University of Colorado , Boulder. In humans, these fatty compounds would be deposited in heart muscle, but the snakes escape without damage.

The fatty-acid mixture is a long way from being used in human treatments, but the researchers are now testing it in mice with heart disease to see if they can halt or reverse the damage.

Lightning Hunters Like a bolt from above


Ten thousand feet high in the New Mexico mountains, Jake Trueblood is getting ready to fire rockets into a thunderstorm.

He lines up eight rockets, straight as soldiers, then connects each to a wire bobbin once used to guide missiles for the French military. Trueblood arms the rockets and heads underground, then waits for hours in a windowless chamber on whose metal roof the rockets sit.

Trueblood, a graduate student at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro, is waiting for a good strong electric field in the atmosphere. Then he'll push a button that will send a whoosh of compressed air to a single rocket, sending it careening more than a thousand feet high. The goal is for the rapidly moving wire to trick the air into discharging its electricity in a lightning flash that will slam to the ground just above Trueblood's head.

He and other lightning hunters aren't out on the mountaintop this August day for the thrill. They're here, at New Mexico Tech's Langmuir Laboratory for Atmospheric Research, in search of knowledge. “We're here because we're trying to understand the simplest storms we know of and we can't,” says Graydon Aulich, a lightning researcher at the lab.

80,000 Muslims pray on Moscow street


Tens of thousands of Muslim men have knelt shoulder-to-shoulder in prayer on the freezing streets of Moscow to celebrate the religious holiday of Eid-ul-Azha.

Estimates of the number of Muslims living or working in the Russian capital run from 2 million to as high as 5 million, but the city has few mosques.

Police said 1,70,000 people celebrated the holiday in Moscow, including 80,000 who gathered on the street outside what was once the main mosque. The 100-year-old building was torn down in September and a new mosque being built next to it is still under construction.

Many of those who braved the freezing temperatures to pray on Sunday were migrant workers from countries in Central Asia that were once part of the Soviet Union.

HP to keep PC division


HP, one of the world's leading technology companies, recently announced that it had completed its evaluation of strategic alternatives for its Personal Systems Group (PSG) and decided to keep the unit in the company, says a press release.

Meg Whitman, HP president and CEO said HP earlier objectively evaluated the strategic, financial and operational impact of spinning off PSG. After the analysis they found that keeping PSG within HP is right for customers, shareholders and for employees.

After the review analysis the HP board of directors is also confident that PSG can drive profitable growth as part of the larger entity and accelerate solutions from other parts of HP's business.

PSG was the No 1 manufacturer of personal computers (PCs) in the world with revenues totaling $40.7 billion in 2010.

HP hopes PSG will continue to give customers and partners the advantages of product innovation and global scale across the industry's broadest portfolio of PCs, workstations and more.

Fresh bloodshed hits Syrian towns


More than 20 people have been killed in renewed attacks by Syrian security forces in the city of Homs, anti-government activists say.

The violence has continued despite the government agreeing to pull its forces off the streets and begin dialogue with the opposition.

The Arab League said the failure of its peace initiative would be catastrophic.

Separately, the authorities announced 553 detainees were being freed to mark the Eid al-Adha holiday.

Figures from the Local Co-ordination Committees on Saturday said 23 people had been killed in Homs and three in Idlib. Violence was also reported in a number of other towns and cities.

The latest deaths brought the number of civilians reportedly killed in Homs to more than 100 since Tuesday.

"Whole buildings have been gutted by tank fire," said Samer, a local activist, quoted by the Reuters news agency.

"Bread has run out and people who get hit in the streets are dying from their wounds on the spot because no one can reach them," he said.

According to the authorities, the security forces are fighting militant gangs who have been killing civilians in Homs.

Elsewhere, suspected defectors killed four pro-government militiamen near the border with Turkey, activists said.

'Catastrophic consequences'

The Secretary-General of the Arab League, Nabil al-Arabi, called for an immediate end to the bloodshed.

"The failure of the Arab solution will have catastrophic consequences for the situation in Syria and the region," he said shortly after meeting Burhan Ghalioun, the Paris-based leader of the dissident Syrian National Council.

A statement said he "called on the Syrian government to take immediate measures to implement the Arab plan, to which it committed itself".

The Arab League plan calls for an end to violence, the release of those detained, the withdrawal of the army from urban areas and free movement for observers and the media, as well as talks between the regime and opposition.

'Not stained by blood'

The Syrian government announced on Saturday that 553 people arrested during the protests would be released to mark the Eid al-Adha feast which begins on Sunday.

They would be people "whose hands are not stained by blood". The government said another 119 detainees had "recently" been freed.

On Friday, Syrian state TV announced an amnesty for anti-government fighters.

"The interior ministry invites those who carry arms, who sold them, distributed them, bought them or financed their purchase and who have not committed any murder to turn themselves in and surrender their weapons to the nearest police station," it said.

The United Nations estimates that at least 3,000 people have been killed since the uprising began in March.

The government says Islamist militants and foreign-backed armed gangs have killed 1,100 members of the security forces.

Triple blasts kill 8 in Baghdad


Three bomb blasts rocked a busy market in Iraq's capital on Sunday, killing at least eight people and wounding 26 others, police and hospital sources said.

The blasts occurred in Shurja, an important commercial district in central Baghdad, on the first day of the Muslim festival of Eid-ul-Azha.

"I can see fire and black smoke mounting and a large number of fire engines, ambulances and police patrols rushing to the market," a Reuters witness close to Shurja market said.

A source at al-Kindi hospital in Baghdad said the facility had received eight dead and 26 wounded from the attack.

Iraqi forces are preparing to take full responsibility for security by year-end when all US troops pull out of the country, nearly nine years after the US-led invasion.

Military leaders have expressed concerns that militants might ramp up attacks as the 33,000 US troops left in Iraq pack up to leave.

Although violence has dropped since the peak of sectarian fighting in 2006-7, bombings and killings occur on a daily basis and a stubborn Sunni insurgency linked to al Qaeda and Shi'ite militias remain capable of carrying out lethal attacks.

The number of civilians killed in violence in Iraq climbed sharply in October following a string of suicide and roadside bombings in Baghdad. Attacks have also increased against Iraq's army and police.

Pak court indicts 7 over Bhutto killing


A Pakistani anti-terror court yesterday indicted two police officers and five alleged Taliban militants over the 2007 assassination of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, a prosecutor said.

Nobody has been convicted or jailed for Bhutto's assassination on December 27, 2007, in Rawalpindi, a garrison city near the capital Islamabad, in a gun and suicide attack after she addressed an election rally.

The death of the charismatic, Oxford-educated Bhutto, the first woman to become prime minister of a Muslim nation, threw the country into chaos, sparking violence and months of political turmoil.

Police say that three other suspects in the high-profile case have been killed -- including the chief of the Pakistani Taliban, Baitullah Mehsud -- and two remain at large.

The police officers were Saud Aziz, who was the Rawalpindi police chief at the time of the killing, and Khurram Shahzad, another senior policeman.

The five suspected militants are Sher Zaman, Hasnain Gul, Rafaqat Hussain, Abdul Rasheed and Aitzaz Shah from the troubled northwest of the country, Azhar said.

FARC chief killed in Colombia


Alfonso Cano, the top leader of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, was killed by Colombian troops during an anti-guerrilla operation, officials announced.

"The military has thus achieved one of its most important goals," Alberto Gonzalez Mosquera, governor of Cauca department, told local radio.

Cano assumed the direction of the FARC in March 2008, after the death of Manuel Marulanda Velez. The FARC is Colombia's oldest and largest guerrilla force, believed to have some 8,000 members.