Saturday, November 17, 2012

Entangled, Twisted Entanglement gets extra twist

Quantum physics is the science of the very small. But physicists are making it bigger, setting records for the size and energies of objects they can get to exhibit quantum effects.
Now physicists at the University of Vienna in Austria have "virtually intertwined" or entangled two particles spinning faster than ever in opposite directions. Entanglement occurs when two particles remain connected so that actions performed on one affect the other, despite the distance between them. (Einstein referred to this eerie connection as "spooky action at a distance.")
In the new study, Anton Fickler and his colleagues entangled two photons that had a high orbital angular momentum, a property that measures the twisting of a wave of light. In quantum physics, particles such as photons can behave as particles and waves.
"It's a stepping stone on the development of new technologies," said Anton Zeilinger, director of the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information and a co-author of the study, which is detailed in the Nov. 5 issue of the journal Science.
Such entanglement experiments have been carried out for decades. In this case, though, the researchers did something a bit different. They created entangled photons and gave them lots of angular momentum, more than in any experiment before.
Usually the energy contained in a photon is very small: its quantum number is low. At higher energies, this changes. Quantum physics and "normal" or classical physics start to look similar when quantum numbers get high; this is called the correspondence principle, and it applies to many areas of physics.
To create entangled photons, Fickler and his team sent a laser through a beam splitter, dividing the laser beam into two. Two photons were sent down separate optical fibers and their waves were twisted, and twisted, and twisted some more, ramping up their angular momentum imagine a wave shaped like a spiral, spinning faster and faster. [Twisted Physics: 7 Mind-Blowing Findings]
Eventually, there was enough angular momentum in the photons that their quantum numbers the units their momentum is measured in differed by a factor of 600, a higher value than any seen previously. The photons spinning rapidly in opposite directions, meanwhile, were still entangled.
They knew this because when particles are entangled, measuring the quantum state (in this case the angular momentum and orientation) of one particle immediately tells you the quantum state of the other, no matter where it is. Since they had the ability to measure both the researchers could confirm entanglement.
(Though this transfer of information between the particles is instantaneous, entanglement can't be used for faster-than-light communication because it is impossible to set the quantum state beforehand, as you would in a message).
This shows that entanglement effects can be seen at high energies, meaning closer to the macroscopic world we all know and interact with. "It means we have to take the correspondence principle with a large grain of salt," Zeilinger said.
Just as importantly, the experiment shows that the only barrier to applying certain kinds of quantum effects ins technical there is no physical reason that one shouldn't be able to see quantum phenomena at high enough energies that they would bleed into the visible world, though that will take some time to do.

Entangled, Twisted Entanglement gets extra twist

Quantum physics is the science of the very small. But physicists are making it bigger, setting records for the size and energies of objects they can get to exhibit quantum effects.
Now physicists at the University of Vienna in Austria have "virtually intertwined" or entangled two particles spinning faster than ever in opposite directions. Entanglement occurs when two particles remain connected so that actions performed on one affect the other, despite the distance between them. (Einstein referred to this eerie connection as "spooky action at a distance.")
In the new study, Anton Fickler and his colleagues entangled two photons that had a high orbital angular momentum, a property that measures the twisting of a wave of light. In quantum physics, particles such as photons can behave as particles and waves.
"It's a stepping stone on the development of new technologies," said Anton Zeilinger, director of the Institute for Quantum Optics and Quantum Information and a co-author of the study, which is detailed in the Nov. 5 issue of the journal Science.
Such entanglement experiments have been carried out for decades. In this case, though, the researchers did something a bit different. They created entangled photons and gave them lots of angular momentum, more than in any experiment before.
Usually the energy contained in a photon is very small: its quantum number is low. At higher energies, this changes. Quantum physics and "normal" or classical physics start to look similar when quantum numbers get high; this is called the correspondence principle, and it applies to many areas of physics.
To create entangled photons, Fickler and his team sent a laser through a beam splitter, dividing the laser beam into two. Two photons were sent down separate optical fibers and their waves were twisted, and twisted, and twisted some more, ramping up their angular momentum imagine a wave shaped like a spiral, spinning faster and faster. [Twisted Physics: 7 Mind-Blowing Findings]
Eventually, there was enough angular momentum in the photons that their quantum numbers the units their momentum is measured in differed by a factor of 600, a higher value than any seen previously. The photons spinning rapidly in opposite directions, meanwhile, were still entangled.
They knew this because when particles are entangled, measuring the quantum state (in this case the angular momentum and orientation) of one particle immediately tells you the quantum state of the other, no matter where it is. Since they had the ability to measure both the researchers could confirm entanglement.
(Though this transfer of information between the particles is instantaneous, entanglement can't be used for faster-than-light communication because it is impossible to set the quantum state beforehand, as you would in a message).
This shows that entanglement effects can be seen at high energies, meaning closer to the macroscopic world we all know and interact with. "It means we have to take the correspondence principle with a large grain of salt," Zeilinger said.
Just as importantly, the experiment shows that the only barrier to applying certain kinds of quantum effects ins technical there is no physical reason that one shouldn't be able to see quantum phenomena at high enough energies that they would bleed into the visible world, though that will take some time to do.

Split Empire New emperor penguin colonies

Researchers have finally found a long-sought colony of emperor penguins in eastern Antarctica, but they say it's been split in two due to a glacier break. Moreover, a tally of the 6,000 chicks among these two populations suggests there are more emperor penguin parents in this part of the frozen continent than previously thought.
French scientists spied the waddling, flightless birds on winter sea ice near the Mertz Glacier while on their way to Dumont d'Urville Station. (The documentary "March of the Penguins" was filmed near this research base.)

Now Na Lada El Niño may say adios

Adios, El Niño. Forecasters have called off predictions for a wet winter in the West, finally acceding that ocean temperatures in the Pacific show no signs of the infamous El Niño phenomenon.
Weather experts at the Climate Prediction Center (CPC) first warned of developing El Niño conditions in June. An El Niño is the warming of the equatorial Pacific Ocean, which results in major droughts in Southeast Asia and wet winters for the southwestern United States. In a boon for the battered Northeast, an El Niño would have meant less wintry weather there.
But in the following months, sea-surface temperatures failed to warm enough to shift global weather patterns. In early October, the CPC dropped the odds of an El Niño from 70 percent to 55 percent.
Finally, the CPC, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), called off the El Niño forecast Thursday (Nov. 9). "The previous El Niño watch has been discontinued as the chance of El Niño has decreased," the CPC said yesterday in its monthly report.
While the chances of El Niño seem nil, the CPC said tropical ocean temperatures may still remain above average.
Instead of El Niño, NOAA predicts that the neutral phase of the El Niño/ La Niña Southern Oscillation (ENSO) index will prevail. Jokingly called "La Nada," it is the neutral middle ground between El Niño and La Niña (associated with cool water in the equatorial Pacific).
El Niño expert Bill Patzert first pegged the La Nada back in June. "The equatorial Pacific is neutral, with no El Niño developing... not even a hint," said Patzert, of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., in June. Even as ocean temperatures warmed slightly, Patzert said he maintained the call.
Source: Live Science

Death Spiral Corals send chemical SOS

When a killer seaweed touches a kind of spiky coral, the coral pushes a chemical panic button that brings small resident fish to the rescue.
Unchecked, seaweed algae can overrun a coral reef, as the community dwindles in “a descent into slime,” says marine ecologist Mark Hay of the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta. But within 15 minutes of contact with a toxin-making seaweed, an Acropora nasuta coral releases compounds that prompt goby fish to seek out and trim back the seaweed, Hay and colleague Danielle Dixson report in the Nov. 9 Science.
“We've lost about 80 percent of the living coral in the Caribbean and 50 percent in the western Pacific,” says coral biologist Nancy Knowlton of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. “So a better understanding of what keeps corals healthy is essential.”
In reefs, corals and the seaweed algae that form lawns or shrubby thickets compete for light and space. As coral reefs decline from pollution, overfishing, climate change and other insults, biologists have seen swaths of seaweed take over. Lush seaweed intrusions repel or smother larval corals, accelerating what Hay calls the reef “death spiral.”
Source: Science News

Green agriculture with plastic

Plastic is usually considered to be a big threat to the environment as it is not usually degradable. But a lot of improvement has been made in recent years in the plastic sector and its use in agriculture is increasing very rapidly throughout the world. Bangladesh is no exception in this regard. Its use in agriculture, called plasticulture, in the form of polyvinyl chloride (PVC) pipes for deep tubewell (DTW) and shallow tubewell (STW), buried pipe for underground water distribution system for irrigation, flexible PVC pipes for conveyance of water of STWs and DTWs, and polybags for raising seedlings became very common in Bangladesh. In protected agriculture, vegetables and small fruit are grown giving some kind of protection from adverse weather like rainfall, temperature, wind, diseases, insects, water logging, etc. all of which seriously affect crop yield. In this system, crops are shaded by plastic sheets put on top of structure made of bamboo or galvanized iron pipes. Summer tomato is grown commercially in this system. All these uses have made agricultural operations easier and cost effective.
The first use of plastics in agriculture was in 1948 to make cheaper version of glasshouse. By 1999 almost 12 million hectares worldwide were covered in plastic mulch. The majority of the growth of plasticulture has happened in China, Japan and Korea. In Middle East and Africa, areas are increasing at 15-20 per cent per year compared to 30 per cent in China. In southern Spain around Almeria, the driest area of Europe, plasticulture is growing very rapidly to grow different crops. The area, previously non-cultivable due to shortage of water, became green due to plasticulture.
Technologies developed for other uses of plastics are:
Drip irrigation: In research fields, drip irrigation method has been used in Bangladesh for increasing the water and fertilizer use efficiencies of high value crops like aubergine, papaya, banana, guava, lemon, orange, etc., for more than a decade. It is a technically suitable and economically viable technology. It saves 60 per cent urea and 46 per cent water. Tubes, drippers and water tanks for drip irrigation are made of plastics.
Row covers: For vegetable production, row covers are used as a protective covering to shield plants primarily from the undesirable effects of cold and wind, and also from insect damage. Polyethylene and polypropylene are commonly used, which are very lightweight, often placed on wire loops to form low tunnels. It is left in place for several weeks until crops are well established. Sunlight, rain and air can penetrate through the shading material.
High tunnels: It is a tunnel made of polyethylene and iron or bamboo structure, usually semicircular, square or elongated in shape. Its height is lower than greenhouse and higher than row covers. The interior heats up because incoming solar radiation from the sun warms plants, soil and others inside the tunnel faster than heat can escape. This heating aspect made high tunnels popular in temperate region. In Bangladesh, India and many Asian countries, it is used to grow tomato during rainy season.
Plastic mulches: It is used in similar fashion to other mulches, to reduce evaporation from soil surface and to suppress weeds and insects. Besides, use of drip irrigation in conjunction with plastic mulch allows one to reduce leaching of fertilizers. It keeps ripening fruit and vegetables out of soil that ultimately decreases rotting and keeps them clean. Also it reduces soil compaction and root damage, increases crop yield, and ensures early harvest.
More uses of plasticulture are waiting for Bangladesh. Research and pilot-scale study have recently been started on new types of use.
The writer is former DG, BARI

Friday, November 16, 2012

Nokia continues its downward slide, now at No 7

According to the Gartner's report, "Nokia, which is still the No 1 mobile phone manufacturer in India, is struggling in the worldwide Smartphone market. The Finnish handset company has now slipped to No 7 position from its earlier No 3 ranking in last quarter itself, i.e. in just three months".
This is regardless of a better than expected sales of Asha series of phones which in fact helped the company lessen the market share loss which otherwise would have pushed Nokia out of number 10 rankings.
As per the report, "Globally sales of mobile phones declined 3 per cent in third quarter of 2012. At the same time, Smartphone sales increased 47 per cent compared to last year. Smartphone sales accounted for 39.6 per cent of total mobile phone sales; however the growth could be hampered by the rise of tablets in the subsequent quarters ".
For Nokia, this change in choice of phones means that the segment in which it is best-selling - i.e. feature phones with its Asha series of full touch phone, is actually fast decreasing. Smartphone’s segment, where Nokia holds very small market share is actually increasing very fast. Presently Nokia has 19.2 per cent market share as compared to 23.9 per cent last year.
On the other hand, Samsung has increased its lead further in Smartphone’s and has overtaken Nokia in overall sales in last couple of quarters. Overall it has 22.9 per cent market share while in Smartphone space Apple contributes 46.5 per cent sales.
As stated by the analyst in Gartner, "Smartphone’s continued to fuel sales of mobile phones worldwide with sales rising to 169.2 million units in the third quarter of 2012. The Smartphone market was dominated by Apple and Samsung. "Both vendors together controlled 46.5 per cent of Smartphone market leaving a handful of vendors fighting over a distant third spot".
He further added, "RIM moved to the No 3 spot with HTC not far behind, at No 4. "Both HTC and RIM have seen their sales declining in past few quarters, and the challenges might prevent them from holding on to their current rankings in coming quarters.”
As per the Gartner analysts, “There will be a lower-than-usual boost from the holiday season. Consumers are either cautious with their spending or finding new gadgets like tablets, as more attractive presents.”
Samsung's mobile phones sales continued to pick up the pace, adding up almost 98 million units in the third quarter of 2012, up 18.6 per cent year-on-year. Samsung saw strong demand for Galaxy Smartphone’s across different price points, and it further widened the gap with Apple in the Smartphone market, which sold 55 million Smartphone’s in the third quarter of 2012. Samsung commanded 32.5 per cent of the global Smartphone market in the third quarter of 2012.
In the third quarter of 2012, Nokia's mobile phone sales declined 21.9 per cent, but overall sales at 82.3 million were far better than Gartner's early estimate, largely driven by increased sales of the Asha full touch range.
This as bad quarter for the Nokia with Smartphone sales as they went on the No 7 position worldwide with 7.2 million Smartphone’s sold in the third quarter. The arrival of the new Lumia devices on Windows 8 should help to stop the decline in share in the fourth quarter of 2012, although it won't be until 2013 to see a noteworthy improvement in Nokia's position.
Apple's sales to end users added to 23.6 million units in the third quarter of 2012, up 36.2 per cent year-on-year. As per the Gartner analysts, “With iPhone 5 launching in more territories in the fourth quarter of 2012, including China, and the upcoming holiday season, it is expected that Apple will have its traditionally strongest quarter.” Gartner report also mentioned that Android continued to increase its market share, up 19.9 per cent points in the third quarter of 2012. Although RIM lost market share, it climbed to the No 3 position as Symbian is nearing the end of its lifecycle.
Gartner analysts expect that with the launch of iPhone 5 iOS’s share will grow strongly in the fourth quarter of 2012 because users held on to their replacements in many markets ahead of the iPhone 5 wider roll out. Windows Phone's share weakened quarter-on-quarter as the Windows Phone 8 launch dampened demand of Windows Phone 7 devices.

Nexus S & Motorola Xoom not getting Android 4.2 JB, to remain on Android 4.1.2 November 15 by kashyap 15. November 2012 16:11 Google’s Nexus devices have a great future when it comes to upgrade to any new OS that is introduced by Google. But this is not forever and the same is now being experienced with the launch of the Android 4.2 Jelly Bean OS. The Samsung Nexus S and Motorola Xoom were the two device which firstly got the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean upgrade and now it appears that it is the end of road for these devices. Although Motorola Xoom is not Nexus branded, it is now owned by Google as the search engine giant bought Motorola and was thus provided with the Android 4.1 upgrade making it the first tablet to receive the upgrade. The confirmation about the Nexus S and Xoom that it will not be upgraded to the latest iteration of Android OS comes to light straight from Google’s AOSP lead Jean-Baptiste Queru who stated "There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should continue using 4.1.2. I can’t comment about the future of Nexus S and Xoom, sorry". While it might seems as Android 4.2 Jelly Bean is just “dot” upgrade from Android 4.1 Jelly Bean this decision might have been taken considering the hardware compatibility of the devices with the new OS. There might be lots of new codings inside the OS which is not permitting Google to take the new OS to the older devices and it is also to be spotted that the devices have got a much longer support from Google than they deserved and now the Nexus 4 and Nexus 10 are out, it was time for Google to pull the switch. Now, if users own the Nexus S or Motorola Xoom, Android 4.1.2 is all that Google has got for them. Source : Mobigyaan More Sharing ServicesShare on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on printShare on gmail Share Be the first to rate this post Currently .0/5 Stars. 1 2 3 4 5 Tags: E-mail | Kick it! | DZone it! | del.icio.us Permalink | Comments (0) | Post RSSRSS comment feed Leaked Nokia presentation slide confirms Windows Phone 7.8 features November 15 by Munish 15. November 2012 15:11 Now the Windows Phone 8 OS has gone formal, the focus has shifted to the Windows Phone 7.8 upgrade for the older devices. For now, users only know that the Windows Phone 7.8 upgrade will carry a few new features from the Windows Phone 8 to the older devices which include the new start screen. But now an alleged slide has leaked which was used in a Windows Phone 7.8 presentation unveils the features that are coming with the new upgrade. The leaked slides include features such as new Start Screen that will come with three Live Tile sizes which users can customize. Users will be able to use twenty themes and they can also customize them with their Windows Phone Smartphone’s. With the help of this new upgrade, users can edit MP3 files and can use those files as a ringtone, while the Internet Explorer has security updates and fixes. Yet we have no idea that when the Windows Phone 7.8 upgrade will roll out for users previously it has been heard that the upgrade will roll-out, once the marketing for the first batch of Windows Phone 8 Smartphone ends along with other Windows Phone 8 features such as Rooms and Xbox Music. Source : Mobigyaan More Sharing ServicesShare on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on printShare on gmail Share Be the first to rate this post Currently .0/5 Stars. 1 2 3 4 5 Tags: Nokia E-mail | Kick it! | DZone it! | del.icio.us Permalink | Comments (0) | Post RSSRSS comment feed Nokia continues its downward slide, now at No 7 November 15 by kashyap 15. November 2012 14:11 According to the Gartner's report, "Nokia, which is still the No 1 mobile phone manufacturer in India, is struggling in the worldwide Smartphone market. The Finnish handset company has now slipped to No 7 position from its earlier No 3 ranking in last quarter itself, i.e. in just three months". This is regardless of a better than expected sales of Asha series of phones which in fact helped the company lessen the market share loss which otherwise would have pushed Nokia out of number 10 rankings. As per the report, "Globally sales of mobile phones declined 3 per cent in third quarter of 2012. At the same time, Smartphone sales increased 47 per cent compared to last year. Smartphone sales accounted for 39.6 per cent of total mobile phone sales; however the growth could be hampered by the rise of tablets in the subsequent quarters ". For Nokia, this change in choice of phones means that the segment in which it is best-selling - i.e. feature phones with its Asha series of full touch phone, is actually fast decreasing. Smartphone’s segment, where Nokia holds very small market share is actually increasing very fast. Presently Nokia has 19.2 per cent market share as compared to 23.9 per cent last year. On the other hand, Samsung has increased its lead further in Smartphone’s and has overtaken Nokia in overall sales in last couple of quarters. Overall it has 22.9 per cent market share while in Smartphone space Apple contributes 46.5 per cent sales. As stated by the analyst in Gartner, "Smartphone’s continued to fuel sales of mobile phones worldwide with sales rising to 169.2 million units in the third quarter of 2012. The Smartphone market was dominated by Apple and Samsung. "Both vendors together controlled 46.5 per cent of Smartphone market leaving a handful of vendors fighting over a distant third spot". He further added, "RIM moved to the No 3 spot with HTC not far behind, at No 4. "Both HTC and RIM have seen their sales declining in past few quarters, and the challenges might prevent them from holding on to their current rankings in coming quarters.” As per the Gartner analysts, “There will be a lower-than-usual boost from the holiday season. Consumers are either cautious with their spending or finding new gadgets like tablets, as more attractive presents.” Samsung's mobile phones sales continued to pick up the pace, adding up almost 98 million units in the third quarter of 2012, up 18.6 per cent year-on-year. Samsung saw strong demand for Galaxy Smartphone’s across different price points, and it further widened the gap with Apple in the Smartphone market, which sold 55 million Smartphone’s in the third quarter of 2012. Samsung commanded 32.5 per cent of the global Smartphone market in the third quarter of 2012. In the third quarter of 2012, Nokia's mobile phone sales declined 21.9 per cent, but overall sales at 82.3 million were far better than Gartner's early estimate, largely driven by increased sales of the Asha full touch range. This as bad quarter for the Nokia with Smartphone sales as they went on the No 7 position worldwide with 7.2 million Smartphone’s sold in the third quarter. The arrival of the new Lumia devices on Windows 8 should help to stop the decline in share in the fourth quarter of 2012, although it won't be until 2013 to see a noteworthy improvement in Nokia's position. Apple's sales to end users added to 23.6 million units in the third quarter of 2012, up 36.2 per cent year-on-year. As per the Gartner analysts, “With iPhone 5 launching in more territories in the fourth quarter of 2012, including China, and the upcoming holiday season, it is expected that Apple will have its traditionally strongest quarter.” Gartner report also mentioned that Android continued to increase its market share, up 19.9 per cent points in the third quarter of 2012. Although RIM lost market share, it climbed to the No 3 position as Symbian is nearing the end of its lifecycle. Gartner analysts expect that with the launch of iPhone 5 iOS’s share will grow strongly in the fourth quarter of 2012 because users held on to their replacements in many markets ahead of the iPhone 5 wider roll out. Windows Phone's share weakened quarter-on-quarter as the Windows Phone 8 launch dampened demand of Windows Phone 7 devices. Source : Themobileindian More Sharing ServicesShare on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on printShare on gmail Share Be the first to rate this post Currently .0/5 Stars. 1 2 3 4 5 Tags: SMARTPHONES SALES, NOKIA, IPHONE, APPLE, RIM, MARKET SHARE, HTC Nokia E-mail | Kick it! | DZone it! | del.icio.us Permalink | Comments (0) | Post RSSRSS comment feed << Previous posts Share direct download links of Android app with Google plusRating: 0 / 0 Govt. receives bids worth just Rs.9407 crore as 2G auction endsRating: 0 / 0 Nexus S & Motorola Xoom not getting Android 4.2 JB, to remain on Android 4.1.2Rating: 0 / 0 Leaked Nokia presentation slide confirms Windows Phone 7.8 featuresRating: 0 / 0 Nokia continues its downward slide, now at No 7Rating: 0 / 0 RSS feed for androidandroid RSS feed for AppleApple RSS feed for ApplicationApplication RSS feed for BlackBerryBlackBerry RSS feed for Download WhizzyDownload Whizzy RSS feed for Handset OSHandset OS RSS feed for HTCHTC RSS feed for Indian MobilesIndian Mobiles RSS feed for JJ SpeaksJJ Speaks RSS feed for LGLG RSS feed for MotorolaMotorola RSS feed for NokiaNokia RSS feed for OthersOthers RSS feed for QuizQuiz RSS feed for SamsungSamsung RSS feed for SonySony Calendar << November 2012 >> Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa Su 29 30 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 View posts in large calendar

Google’s Nexus devices have a great future when it comes to upgrade to any new OS that is introduced by Google. But this is not forever and the same is now being experienced with the launch of the Android 4.2 Jelly Bean OS. The Samsung Nexus S and Motorola Xoom were the two device which  firstly got the Android 4.1 Jelly Bean upgrade and now it appears that it is the end of road for these devices.
Although Motorola Xoom is not Nexus branded, it is now owned by Google as the search engine giant bought Motorola and was thus provided with the Android 4.1 upgrade making it the first tablet to receive the upgrade.
The confirmation about the Nexus S and Xoom that it will not be upgraded to the latest iteration of Android OS comes to light straight from Google’s AOSP lead Jean-Baptiste Queru who stated "There is no support for 4.2 on Nexus S and Xoom. Those devices should continue using 4.1.2. I can’t comment about the future of Nexus S and Xoom, sorry".
While it might seems as Android 4.2 Jelly Bean is just “dot” upgrade from Android 4.1 Jelly Bean this decision might have been taken considering the hardware compatibility of the devices with the new OS.
There might be lots of new codings inside the OS which is not permitting Google to take the new OS to the older devices and it is also to be spotted that the devices have got a much longer support from Google than they deserved and now the Nexus 4 and Nexus 10 are out, it was time for Google to pull the switch. Now, if users own the Nexus S or Motorola Xoom, Android 4.1.2 is all that Google has got for them.

Govt. receives bids worth just Rs.9407 crore as 2G auction ends

In February, Supreme Court of India cancelled 122 licenses which were granted to nine carriers by the telecom minister A Raja in 2008. At that time the Government was ordered to conduct fresh auctions at the present price which has been going on for the last couple of days and the results are out.
The fresh 2G spectrum auction has fetched the government just Rs.9,407 Crore whereas it was expected by the government that they might earn Rs.40,000 Crore from it. Unfortunetly this amount is a little less than the Rs.9,500 Crore that was fetched by the previous auction conducted by A.Raja.
All the 22 telecom circles ry have been put by the Govt. on auction but the response was lukewarm. Important circles such as Delhi and Mumbai did not get any bids as the operators felt that the base price for the spectrum in these circles were too high. Also circles such as Karnataka and Rajasthan also did not see any bidders. The Government had decreased the approximation earning from Rs.40,000 Crore to Rs.20,000 Crore when it cancelled the CDMA auctions as the only two bidders move back from the auctions.

Share direct download links of Android app with Google plus

A new functionality has been added by the Google into its Google Plus service. This new feature permits users to share installation links of all available applications of Play Store on the social network. By just clicking on the shared links of the apps users can install those apps without having to follow the link and go to the Google Play store manually.
Still the applications will be governed by geographical limitations and their usability would not be affected by this new inclusion. With the help of this new feature, users can simply share any application with their circles on Google plus right form within the Google Play store on both the Android as well as through the internet browsers.
The application link will come out as a ready download and when user selects the download button  for this application he/she would directly be redirected to the permissions page following which the application will be made available on the linked device.
However the addition is not a very large but certainly in terms of utility and accessibility it goes a long way helping users share useful apps with other users will get easier access. This new feature has already been enabled for all the users and anyone can access this new feature with the help of  a Google account.