Thursday 11 April 2013

Polaris Launches FT 8012 - the World‘s First Design Center for Financial Technology




Polaris Financial Technology Ltd, a leader in products, solutions and services that enable unprecedented operational productivity for the global Financial Services industry, launched its 8012 FT Design Center - the world's first Center dedicated to Financial Technology. The Center was inaugurated by Michael Harte, Group Executive, Enterprise Services and Chief Information Officer, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, in Chennai recently.

He also delivered the first FT Thought Leadership series lecture as part of the inaugural program. The event was attended by banking and technology experts from across the globe.

8012 FT Design Center is spread over 30,000 sq. ft and is located in the 22 acre Polaris campus on the IT Highway in Chennai. The Center is the culmination of over two decades of the company's singular focus on the Banking and Financial Services vertical and stands testimony to Collaborative Design emerging as the next big game changer for Financial Technology and Financial Institutions.

Financial Technology is arguably the most complex business globally, replete with changing paradigms in Customer Experience, Operational Efficiency, Performance, Analytics, Risk Mitigation, Integration and Security domains. Aggressive globalisation, sharper customer orientation, multiple product lines and generations of technologies have resulted in the serious need to understand and reduce complexities arising out of the above. With the rich experience and expertise developed over decades working with global Financial Institutions, Polaris has invested in creating 8012 - a Center for Collaborative Design, dedicated to developing Financial Technology and reducing complexity.


Michael Harte, a global champion for leveraging Design Philosophy to create unmatched customer experience and value, stated in his keynote, 'Design thinking is a discipline using a designer's sensibility and methods to match people's needs with what is technologically feasible and what a viable business strategy can convert into customer value and market opportunity. It is an opportunity to re-frame a problem, redefine constraints and open the field to a more innovative answer. Design Thinking is probably the greatest game changer, given the complexities and conflicts that we deal with in the Banking world. People we talked to about Design Thinking immediately found similarities to Agile. When we drilled a bit deeper, it became apparent that while there was overlap, Design Thinking was strong at defining the problem upfront whereas Agile tends to leave that thinking to the product owner. When deployed right, Design Thinking has huge potential to enable banks to successfully evolve and become innovative'.

Arun Jain, CEO and Chief Architect, Polaris Financial Technology, said, 'The role of the CIO in the Bank is the most challenging and complex in today's world as it is this role that straddles the world views and perspectives of Business, Operations and the Technology function in Banks and Financial Institutions. Besides this, today's Global CIO has the supremely tough imperative to balance the bank's Acceleration agenda, Rationalization agenda and Transformational agenda. We believe Design Thinking is the most powerful bridge to balance multiple and often conflicting imperatives. FT 8012, our Design Center, has been thoughtfully created to bring the two powerful forces of Design and Collaboration together”.

The Center is equipped with a holistic array of product offerings, domain-rich solutions, proprietary frameworks and methodologies to craft impactful solutions. The entire physical space is designed uniquely to stimulate the collective genius of diverse teams, expand their thinking and explore possibilities. The Center launched five major technologies that can enable banks deliver superior customer experience and unprecedented operational productivity. These include:

1. Canvas technology that is envisaged to drive front-office efficiencies
2. Hub technology that will drive back-office efficiencies
3. Workplace technology that will bring out the collective genius of diverse teams
4. Master Process Exchange (MPX) technology to connect business and technology
5. FT Grid technology for inclusive and exclusive banking

The Design Center, 8012, is interestingly named after the coordinates of its location, 80° longitude 12° latitude in Chennai, India, and brings together Collaborative Design spaces, Research labs and Strategic Design rooms along with Intellectual Property assets in a comprehensive and engaging manner. The Center aims to provide a holistic ambience to bring business, operational and technology agenda together, unearth the white spaces and connect the dots seamlessly.

Please click http://www.polarisft.com/media/media-release/2013-April-FT-8012-Launch.asp to download the FT8012 Inauguration pictures and Logo.

About Polaris Financial Technology Ltd

Polaris Financial Technology Limited is a global leader in Financial Technology for Banking, Insurance and other Financial Services. With over 25 years of expertise in building a comprehensive portfolio of products, smart legacy modernization services and consulting, Polaris owns the largest set of Intellectual Properties for a comprehensive product suite, Intellect® Global Universal Banking (GUB) M180. Intellect® is the world's first pure play Service Oriented Architecture (SOA) based application suite for Retail, Corporate, Investment banking and Insurance. Its acclaimed products, solutions and services enable unprecedented operational productivity for the global Financial Services Industry by Building, Maintaining, Expanding and Extending highly complex and Integrated Financial Technology Infrastructure.

This makes Polaris the chosen partner for 9 of the top 10 global banks and 7 of the top 10 global insurance companies. The company has a global presence through its 40 relationship offices across 30 countries, 6 international development centers and 8 fully owned Business Solution centers. Polaris has a talent strength of over 13,000 solution architects, domain and technology experts. For more information, please visit http://www.polarisFT.com/ and http://www.ft8012.com/



Meet the ‘dark‘ version of Google



The 'scariest search engine' on the internet has been revealed for peering in the darkest corners of the web and finding servers, webcams and traffic lights.

Shodan, dubbed the 'search engine for hackers', collects information on 500 million devices every month, CNN reports.

According to news.com.au, the search engine was named after the villain in the cyberpunk role-playing games System Shock and System Shock 2.

Traffic lights, security cameras and home automation systems are all hooked up to the internet and easy for the 'dark Google' to find.

One cybersecurity expert even used it to find a hockey rink that could be defrosted, traffic lights for an entire city, and the controls for a hydroelectric plant in France.

Rapid 7 chief security officer told CNN that one can log into just about half of the internet with a default password, adding which is a massive security failure."

Searching for 'default password' on Shodan brings up numerous servers, system controls and printers that use 'admin' as '1234' as username and password.

Independent security tester Dan Tentler, at a Defcon cybersecurity talk, said tens of thousands of webcams, hydrogen fuel cells used in military instillations, power meters, theatre lighting, heat pumps are all online, the report added.

Soon, replace your passwords with thoughts




 You may be spared from typing pesky passwords in the future!

Instead of typing your password, you may only have to think about it, thanks to a new wireless headset device developed by researchers.

Remembering passwords for all your sites can get annoying. There are only so many punctuation, number substitutes and uppercase variations you can recall, and writing them down for all to find is hardly an option.

Researchers at the University of California Berkeley School of Information developed the device that explores the feasibility of brainwave-based computer authentication as a substitute for passwords.

By measuring brain-waves with bio-sensor technology, researchers are able to replace passwords with "passthoughts" for computer authentication, website 'Mashable' reported.

A USD 100 headset wirelessly connects to a computer via Bluetooth, and the device's sensor rests against the user's forehead, providing a electroencephalogram (EEG) signal from the brain.

The NeuroSky Mindset looks just like any other Bluetooth set and is more user-friendly, researchers said.

Brainwaves are also unique to each individual, so even if someone knew your passthought, their emitted EEG signals would be different.

"Other than the EEG sensor, the headset is indistinguishable from a conventional Bluetooth headset for use with mobile phones, music players, and other computing devices," according to the researchers.

Participants, in a series of tests, completed seven different mental tasks with the device, including imagining their finger moving up and down and choosing a personalised secret, the report said.

Simple actions like focusing on breathing or on a thought for ten seconds resulted in successful authentication.

"We find that brainwave signals, even those collected using low-cost non-intrusive EEG sensors in everyday settings, can be used to authenticate users with high degrees of accuracy," the researchers concluded. 

Moonshot 1500: A small server, but a big step for HP




Hewlett-Packard just had its most innovative moment in years. How do we know this? Well, the company has ushered forth a new creation under the Project Moonshoot banner, created a scripted webcast to accompany the product, and even had guys who would normally wear suits dress down in sports coats and jeans to model the product, thus underscoring its hipness.

What HP has built is a new server — the HP Moonshot 1500. It's special because it runs on Intel's lowpower Atom chips, which usually go into mobile devices. As a result, HP has been able to design an entire computer server that's about the size of an envelope and then pack hundreds of these together into a single system that basically functions as an ultracompact supercomputer. According to HP's stats, the new server uses 89% less energy, takes up 80% less space, and costs 77% less than more traditional server designs.

The HP Moonshot 1500 both is and isn't revolutionary. To its credit, HP has pushed compact server designs to the extreme and crammed an awful lot of computing power in a small amount of space. This type of system has been designed for web and cloud computing companies that tend to buy thousands upon thousands of servers and need them to run as efficiently as possible. By using smartphone instead of beefier server chips, HP has provided a product that can handle the lightweight task of feeding up Web pages without consuming a lot of electricity. (Such a server would not be as well suited to, say, processing millions of transactions or large calculations.)

The problem is that most web giants such as Amazon, Facebook, Microsoft and Google already design their own servers and have an Asian contract manufacturer produce them. HP, though, might have a strong play if you look longer term. It's basically betting that more traditional companies will come to want and need similar computing systems as the web giants. Overall, HP wants to convey that it's an innovator again.

H-1B workers‘ shortage exaggerated




As the wrangling over immigration reform intensifies in the US Congress, the tech industry is lobbying hard to raise the limit on H-1B visas, which allow non-US citizens with advanced skills and degrees in "specialty occupations" to work in the country for up to six years.

Demand is so great that the annual cap of 65,000 was hit last week, just days after the application period opened. Technology companies support raising the H-1B quota almost five-fold, to 3,00,000, arguing universities are just not turning out enough American math and science graduates and they need to cast their net abroad to stay competitive.

Yet some US tech workers and academics say that the shortage of talent is exaggerated, that many of the jobs could go to out-of-work computer professionals in the United States, and that the programme serves mainly as a source of cheap labour.

The 2,00,000-member US chapter of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers rejects the claim of a broad shortage of tech workers and opposes more H-1Bs.

"What these companies are doing is to replace Americans with lower-cost foreign workers," says Russ Harrison, senior legislative representative at the IEEE.

Rather than more H-1B visas, the group favours giving foreign workers permanent residency, which Harrison said would help boost wages and increase job mobility for newcomers.

In Silicon Valley, stories of ferocious competition for engineering workers and a lack of qualified job-seekers abound.

Tech companies point to an unemployment rate of around 3.5 percent for those with advanced computer and math experience, less than half the national rate, though in line with other professional occupations.

But wages in the tech industry are rising more slowly than those in the economy as a whole. For example, pay for applications software developers, a specialty in high demand, have risen just 8.9 percent in the five years through mid-2012, compared with a 12.5 percent increase for all occupations in the US economy.

"It is extraordinarily unlikely for a severe shortage to happen in a way that doesn't result in very large wage increases," said Kirk Doran, an economist at the University of Notre Dame who studies immigration and labour.

"We know what a labour shortage looks like: there should be both much lower unemployment than other professions and much higher wage growth. If either of these are not present, then I don't buy the shortage hypothesis."

Others say that when industries grow fast, wage growth can be stifled because of an influx of relatively inexperienced and lower-paid workers.

"Even if you look at data from one year to the next, it may not tell you what you think," said Stuart Anderson, executive director of the National Foundation for American Policy, a think tank backed by the pro-entrepreneurship Kauffman Foundation and others. He says sub-industries sometimes move from one category to another one, and that industries are growing more specialised, complicating the data.

IT hiring to fall in 2013: Nasscom




The additional personnel requirement in the IT sector of the country may come down by nearly 50,000 in the current fiscal as there is a large scale backlog of recruitments last year, IT-BPO industry bodyNasscom said.


"Last year we added 1.8 lakh jobs net. This year it will be 1.3 to 1.5 lakh jobs. Last year there was filling up back logs because we had shrunk our pipeline. We are still the largest employers ofwhite collar sectors of the country which has 3 million young people at the age of 27," Nasscom President Som Mittal told reporters here.

"Secondly, our business is not linear any more. There was time where for every dollar you added so many hours. But today it is IP-led and innovation, which we don't repeat (the job) which is good for the country," he added.

Replying to a query, he said the IT industry is expected to grow at 12 to 14 per cent in dollar terms in the current fiscal.

"This year we will probably add $13 to 15 billion new business in both domestic and exports," Mittal said.

According to him, the IT industry witnessed $76 billion exports and $32 billion domestic business which includes hardware last year. In 2012-13, the industry has grown 10.2 per cent in pure dollar terms and 10.9 per cent in constant currencies and 21 to 22 per cent in rupee term.

On attrition rate of the industry, Mittal said it has come down as demand and supply adjusts.

Currently, it hovers in 13-15 per cent on the higher side. Meanwhile, as a next step to its recently launched '10,000 startups' programme, the Nasscom signed a MoU with Hyderabad Angels, TiE Incubator and IIIT Hyderabad Incubator to collaborate and support the creation of a vibrantecosystem to foster technology entrepreneurship in India.

Mittal said that they are inviting of applications from innovative technology startups across the country for an insightful engagement with its accelerator and funding partners.

The Association has already received over 1,000 applications from various budding startups since the launch of the program and is expected to cross over 5,000 startup applications in the next eight weeks.

Thursday 24 January 2013

Why Indian animation is still a distant dream





It's sad but true that the $2 billion Indian film industry, touted as one of the largest in the world, still treats animation as an orphaned child.

The Indian animation industry is pegged at $350 million and yet remains in the dark because of the size of our companies and the lack of creative storytellers, market intelligence and writers, feels Rudra Masta, CEO RME, a company, known for making Indian animation television series "Little Pandavas", "Baba" and "Garuda".

"At $350 million, this is a good number to settle with for Indian animation industry. I don't see scope for fancy forecasting of the industry becoming $1 billion in 2014, when the turnover of most successful Indian animation companies with different business models is as low as Rs300 crore (over $55,000,000)," Rudra told IANS.

"The lack of good storytellers like John Lasseter, producers with market intelligence and taste like Walt Disney and writers with good hold over animation storytelling techniques are further making Indian animation a distant dream," he added.

The state of animation films is obvious from the fact that Nikhil Advani's "Delhi Safari" was the only known title from the genre that came out last year.

Rishi Wadhwa, associate director, writer and creative head of Hindi animated film "The Green Chic -Finding Dad", feels apart from improving quality of animated films, filmmakers need to create characters that is loved by the Indian audiences.

"We should make animation films that are as good as films made by Disney or Pixon because Indian kids watch movies like 'My Friend Ganesha' on TV because of its quality, but prefer watching foreign animated film only in cinemas. This is the very reason why we need our own superheroes and characters instead of bringing foreign superheroes to India," Wadhwa told IANS.

According to FICCI Deloitte 2012 report, the Indian VFX and animation industry faces structural challenges such as weak pre-production cycle, shortage of skilled manpower and high resource costs.

Shankar Mohan, director, International Film Festival of India (IFFI), feels there's a need for a platform to showcase and contemplate about animation movies and its future in the country.

"We need a good platform to showcase the best animated films which are based on the emerging trends in the animation industry, and thus we introduced a new segment at the 42nd IFFI on animation and 3D cinema, which aims to promote and appreciate the form of animation as a narrative medium for mature cinematic storytelling and review and celebrate animated films", Shankar said.

Summing it up, Bollywood director Nikhil Advani, pointed out that unless studios and distributors don't have faith in animation, the dream will never be reality.

"Unless big studios and distributors don't believe in animation we'll be stuck in this dream phase. Although we're technologically advanced and have a bevy of very creative art directors and storytellers, but we're still stuck to mythological characters and it's time to move away from mediocre animation", he added.

Quite true. Toonz Animation, Crest Communications, Maya Entertainment and Silvertoon are the Indian companies that have dedicated themselves to the outsourced world of animation.

Do you see the change happening soon?

"Last one year has been really good for Indian cinema in terms of better narrative and presentation of our films. Lately, we've had so many animation festivals in the country and the films that are screened here are very good so hopefully, we can see the change happening soon", said Advani.

Microsoft Surface Pro coming in Feb, price revealed




Microsoft on Tuesday announced that its business-oriented Surface Windows 8 Pro tablet computer will debut in the United States and Canada in February with a lofty starting price of $899.

Microsoft also said that the consumer-focused version of Surface released late last year here will soon be available in 13 new markets around the world.

The Surface Pro will be available on February 9 at Microsoft stores in the United States and Canada, at the online Microsoft store and at Staples and Best Buy and other retailers.

"The response to Surface has been exciting to see," said Microsoft Surface general manager Panos Panay. "We're thrilled to continue growing the Surface family."

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft described Surface Pro as providing "the power and performance of a laptop in a tablet package."

Pro tablets, which Microsoft originally said would be released in January, will be available in 64-gigabyte and 128-gigabyte models.

Microsoft introduced the Surface tablet in the middle of last year and began sales in time for the holiday shopping season.

Although Microsoft has provided no sales data, analysts have said Surface is getting only a small segment of the tablet market led by Apple's iPad, Amazon's Kindle and several others powered by the Google Android system.

The lower-cost version of Surface, with a starting price of $499, is now sold at Microsoft retail stores in the United States and Canada and online in the US, Australia, Britain Canada, China, France and Germany.

Last month, Microsoft said it would begin selling the tablet in third-party retail outlets.

Microsoft Surface Pro coming in Feb, price revealed




Microsoft on Tuesday announced that its business-oriented Surface Windows 8 Pro tablet computer will debut in the United States and Canada in February with a lofty starting price of $899.

Microsoft also said that the consumer-focused version of Surface released late last year here will soon be available in 13 new markets around the world.

The Surface Pro will be available on February 9 at Microsoft stores in the United States and Canada, at the online Microsoft store and at Staples and Best Buy and other retailers.

"The response to Surface has been exciting to see," said Microsoft Surface general manager Panos Panay. "We're thrilled to continue growing the Surface family."

Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft described Surface Pro as providing "the power and performance of a laptop in a tablet package."

Pro tablets, which Microsoft originally said would be released in January, will be available in 64-gigabyte and 128-gigabyte models.

Microsoft introduced the Surface tablet in the middle of last year and began sales in time for the holiday shopping season.

Although Microsoft has provided no sales data, analysts have said Surface is getting only a small segment of the tablet market led by Apple's iPad, Amazon's Kindle and several others powered by the Google Android system.

The lower-cost version of Surface, with a starting price of $499, is now sold at Microsoft retail stores in the United States and Canada and online in the US, Australia, Britain Canada, China, France and Germany.

Last month, Microsoft said it would begin selling the tablet in third-party retail outlets.

My son will never become CEO of Wipro: Azim Premji




IT czar Azim Premji has said his son Rishad will never be the chief executive of his company Wipro, but will represent promoter ownership on the company's board.

Rishad, 35, joined Wipro in 2007 as business head for special projects in the banking and financial services vertical and rose to become chief strategy officer three years later.

Premji, who founded Wipro, said becoming CEO was not the career path for the eldest of his two sons.

"He (Rishad) is not going to be the chief executive officer, that's not the career plan for him but, he would be representing ownership obviously," Premji, chairman of Wipro, said in television interviews on sidelines of World Economic Forum here.

Azim Premji directly owns 3.7 per cent in the company, while entities related to him own over another 74 per cent. Rishad has a direct ownership of 0.03 per cent shares in Wipro.

Rishad has for long been speculated to be a natural choice for taking over the company's operations.

Prior to joining Wipro, Rishad, a management graduate from Harvard Business School, worked with Bain & Co, working across segments like consumer products, automobiles, telecom and insurance.

There have been speculations of him being appointed as the CEO of the now demerged entity of Wipro, which will include the non-IT business.

The non-IT businesses of Wipro, which includes lighting, furniture, consumer care products and infrastructure engineering services, was hived off last year to focus on the core information technology business. It contributes about 10 per cent of the company's revenues.

There have also been discussions around succession plans at Wipro after the retirement of Azim Premji, who is 67 now.

Asked about succession plans, Premji said, "We are always working with succession planning. It was right from the top to senior management level and that is the key responsibility of the board."

Hinting at a bigger role for CEO TK Kurien, Premji said Kurien "certainly" could become the managing director.

"We have TK Kurien now in charge. So, very obviously he has taken over from me the mantel of the chief executive officer's role ... He certainly stands a chance of becoming the managing director. Our restructuring is going to make some changes," he said.

Samsung pips Apple in semiconductor demand in 2012: Gartner




Samsung Electronics has overtaken Apple as the biggest consumer of semiconductors across the world for 2012, according to a report by research house Gartner. As per the report, the total available market (TAM) for semiconductors is valued at $297.6 billion, wherein the top two buyers account for $45.3 billion or 15% of total demand.

While the semiconductor market contracted by 3% in 2012, Samsung's demand for the product increased by 28.9%. Likewise, Apple bought 13.6% more semiconductors last year than the one before it. Apart from Samsung and Apple, Sony and Lenovo were only two semiconductor customers in Gartner's report of top 10 buyers who saw purchases increase in 2012 over the preceding year.

Gartner's report says HP, Dell, Toshiba, LG Electronics, Cisco and Nokia also figured among the top 10 consumers of semiconductors, but all of them witnessed a fall in demand for the product. Finnish manufacturer Nokia saw the steepest fall in semiconductor consumption as it spent $5 billion on it in 2012, as compared to $8.6 billion in the year before, a fall of 42.6%.

Yahoo! buys scrapbook website Snip.it

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Yahoo! confirmed Tuesday that it bought Snip.it, a young San Francisco startup that lets people create scrapbooks with pictures, articles, videos and other content found online.
"The Snip.it team created an innovative technology that lets people share content in a social and fun way," Yahoo! vice president of product Mike Kerns said in a statement emailed to AFP.

"Reading and sharing content is a core daily habit for most of the world, and we can't wait to work with the Snip.it team to make that experience even more entertaining for our users."

A message posted at Snip.it told users it was "joining forces" with Yahoo! and that the service was no longer available. A link was provided to a hall of fame honoring top Snip.it contributors.

"For the past year and a half, we've worked tirelessly as a team to build the best social news platform on the Web," Snip.it said in the message.

"We are thrilled at the opportunity to bring Snip.it's vision to a larger scale at Yahoo!"

Snip.it launched in late 2011 as a place where people could share digital "scrapbooks" based on topics or themes of their choosing.

Financial terms of the acquisition were not disclosed but unconfirmed online reports estimated the figure to be in the vicinity of $15 million.

Google's most lucrative business, search on desktop PCs, slows down; still struggling with mobile




Although Google is scrambling to meet consumers as they flock to mobile devices, the question is whether it is moving fast enough.

When Google announced its fourth-quarter earnings on Tuesday, investors were watching closely for positive signals of Google's progress in the evolution to a mobile world.

They received a disappointing sign: The price that advertisers paid Google each time someone clicked on an ad, known as cost per click, decreased 6 per cent from the year-ago quarter, falling for the fifth consecutive quarter, year over year. It has been declining in large part because mobile ads cost advertisers less, and more people are using Google on their mobile devices and fewer on their desktop computer.

Still, there was some evidence that Google was making progress in solving the mobile challenge. The price for clicks on ads rose 2 per cent from last quarter.

Analysts had mixed reactions to Google's financial report. The company exceeded their expectations on profit, but disappointed on revenue. That was at least in part because analysts are still figuring out how to account for Motorola Mobility, the struggling cellphone maker that Google acquired last year.

Larry Page, Google's chief executive and co-founder, was optimistic in a statement.

"In today's multi-screen world we face tremendous opportunities as a technology company focused on user benefit," he said. "It's an incredibly exciting time to be at Google."

The company reported fourth-quarter revenue of $14.42 billion, an increase of 36 per cent over the year-ago quarter. Net revenue, which excludes payments to the company's advertising partners, was $11.34 billion, up from $8.13 billion.

Net income rose 13 per cent to $10.65 a share.

The fourth quarter is generally Google's brightest because it makes much of its money on retail ads that run during the holiday shopping season. Analysts had expected revenue of $10.47 a share, on revenue of $12.3 billion. Google warned last week that analysts' expectations were off target because Google sold Motorola's set-top box division during the quarter so it did not include it in the quarterly results. Still, even including that division of Motorola, Google's revenue would have missed expectations.
Shares of Google, which fell slightly during the day, were up 4 per cent in after-hours trading. "This is supposed to be Google's quarter to shine, the December quarter, and we're going to have it all mucked up by Motorola,"

said ColinBSE -3.41 % Gillis, an analyst at BGC Partners.

This holiday season was the first that Google charged e-commerce companies to be included in its comparison shopping engine, and these so-called product listing ads contributed to its bottom line.

"Q4 retail is absolutely crucial for Google's earnings," said Sid Shah, director of business analytics at Adobe, which handles $2 billion in annual advertising spending. "Despite talk about retail having a weak season, Google's product listing ad program has taken off quite successfully."

Nonetheless, Google's mobile challenge overhung even its usual holiday shopping sparkle. Consumers are increasingly shopping on phones and tablets, yet Google and other companies have not yet figured out how best to profit from mobile users.

"You would expect Google to be a key player benefiting from mobile, but that hasn't played out in the last year," said Jordan Rohan, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus.

One problem is that advertisers pay about half as much for an ad on a mobile device, in part because they are not yet sure how effective mobile ads can be.

Another challenge for Google is that consumers increasingly use apps, like Yelp or Kayak, to search onmobile devices instead of using Google. Even when consumers use Google for mobile searches, they are often doing so on Apple devices like iPhones, for which Google has to pay Apple a fee.

This shift is happening as Google's biggest, most lucrative business - desktop search - is slowing. The share of clicks on Google results that happen on desktop computers has fallen to 73 per cent from 77 per cent in the last six months, while the share of clicks on tablets and smartphones has increased to 27 per cent from 23 per cent, according to data from Adobe.

Meanwhile, Google has a new competitor in search: Facebook, which last week introduced a new form of personalized social search on the site.

Google has also recently become a maker of mobile devices, both by acquiring Motorola and by producing the line of Nexus devices with manufacturer partners. In the fourth quarter, Google sold about 1.5 million Nexus phones and tablets, not including those sold by other retailers, according to estimates from JPMorgan.

In the fourth quarter, a weight was lifted from Google when the Federal Trade Commission closed its antitrust investigation of Google's search practices. But it remains under investigation in Europe, where the outcome is expected to be harsher.

Global Internet hit 2012 speed bump: Study

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Global Internet connection speeds around the world slowed in late 2012, according to a survey released Thursday that suggested a temporary stall in broadband gains.

Akamai Technologies' third quarter "State of the Internet" report also showed China remained the biggest source of computer attacks, and that Brazil and China appear to have the biggest surge in Web use.

The global average connection speed decreased by some seven percent between the second and third quarters of 2012 to 2.8 megabytes per second (Mbps).

But that appeared to be a temporary decline, since average connection speeds were up 11 percent year over year.

South Korea continued to have the highest average connection speed at 14.7 Mbps, followed by Japan (10.7 Mbps) and Hong Kong (8.9 Mbps).

Globally, adoption of "high" broadband (speeds above 10 Mbps) grew 8.8 percent in the third quarter and overall global broadband adoption grew 4.8 percent, the report said.

For the second quarter in a row, Brazil experienced the greatest year-over-year growth of 39 percent within the group of top 10 countries. China showed the largest quarter-over-quarter increase of 5.7 percent.

In analyzing Web attacks from 180 countries or regions, Akamai said China remained the single largest source, with 33 percent of all attacks originating within its borders. The United States accounted for 13 percent, followed by Russia at 4.7 percent.

For the mobile Internet, Akamai said Apple's Mobile Safari accounted for 60.1 percent of data requests on all networks, with Google's Android browsers responsible for 23.1 percent.

Technology, recession kill middle-class jobs




Five years after the start of the Great Recession, the toll is terrifyingly clear: Millions of middle-class jobs have been lost in developed countries the world over.

And the situation is even worse than it appears.

Most of the jobs will never return, and millions more are likely to vanish as well, say experts who study the labor market. What's more, these jobs aren't just being lost to China and other developing countries, and they aren't just factory work. Increasingly, jobs are disappearing in the service sector, home to two-thirds of all workers.

They're being obliterated by technology.

Year after year, the software that runs computers and an array of other machines and devices becomes more sophisticated and powerful and capable of doing more efficiently tasks that humans have always done. For decades, science fiction warned of a future when we would be architects of our own obsolescence, replaced by our machines; an Associated Press analysis finds that the future has arrived.

"he jobs that are going away aren't coming back," says Andrew McAfee, principal research scientist at the Center for Digital Business at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and co-author of "Race Against the Machine." "I have never seen a period where computers demonstrated as many skills and abilities as they have over the past seven years."

The global economy is being reshaped by machines that generate and analyze vast amounts of data; by devices such as smartphones and tablet computers that let people work just about anywhere, even when they're on the move; by smarter, nimbler robots; and by services that let businesses rent computing power when they need it, instead of installing expensive equipment and hiring IT staffs to run it. Whole employment categories, from secretaries to travel agents, are starting to disappear.

"There's no sector of the economy that's going to get a pass," says Martin Ford, who runs a software company and wrote "The Lights in the Tunnel," a book predicting widespread job losses. "It's everywhere."

The numbers startle even labor economists. In the United States, half of the 7.5 million jobs lost during the Great Recession paid middle-class wages, ranging from $38,000 to $68,000. But only 2 per cent of the 3.5 million jobs gained since the recession ended in June 2009 are midpay. Nearly 70 per cent are low-paying jobs; 29 per cent pay well.

In the 17 European countries that use the euro as their currency, the numbers are even worse. Almost 4.3 million low-pay jobs have been gained since mid-2009, but the loss of midpay jobs has never stopped. A total of 7.6 million disappeared from January 2008 through last June.

Experts warn that this "hollowing out" of the middle-class workforce is far from over. They predict the loss of millions more jobs as technology becomes even more sophisticated and reaches deeper into our lives. Maarten Goos, an economist at the University of Leuven in Belgium, says Europe could double its middle-class job losses.

Some occupations are beneficiaries of the march of technology, such as software engineers and app designers for smartphones and tablet computers. Overall, though, technology is eliminating far more jobs than it is creating.

To understand the impact technology is having on middle-class jobs in developed countries, the AP analyzed employment data from 20 countries; tracked changes in hiring by industry, pay and task; compared job losses and gains during recessions and expansions over the past four decades; and interviewed economists, technology experts, robot manufacturers, software developers, entrepreneurs and people in the labor force who ranged from CEOs to the unemployed.

The key findings:

For more than three decades, technology has drastically reduced the number of jobs in manufacturing. Robots and other machines controlled by computer programs work faster and make fewer mistakes than humans. Now, that same efficiency is being unleashed in the service economy, which employs more than two-thirds of the workforce in developed countries. Technology is eliminating jobs in office buildings, retail establishments and other businesses consumers deal with every day.

Technology is being adopted by every kind of organization that employs people. It's replacing workers in large corporations and small businesses, established companies and start-ups. It's being used by schools, colleges and universities; hospitals and other medical facilities; nonprofit organizations and the military.

The most vulnerable workers are doing repetitive tasks that programmers can write software for - an accountant checking a list of numbers, an office manager filing forms, a paralegal reviewing documents for key words to help in a case. As software becomes even more sophisticated, victims are expected to include those who juggle tasks, such as supervisors and managers - workers who thought they were protected by a college degree.

Thanks to technology, companies in the Standard & Poor's 500 stock index reported one-third more profit the past year than they earned the year before the Great Recession. They've also expanded their businesses, but total employment, at 21.1 million, has declined by a half-million.

Start-ups account for much of the job growth in developed economies, but software is allowing entrepreneurs to launch businesses with a third fewer employees than in the 1990s. There is less need for administrative support and back-office jobs that handle accounting, payroll and benefits.

It's becoming a self-serve world. Instead of relying on someone else in the workplace or our personal lives, we use technology to do tasks ourselves. Some find this frustrating; others like the feeling of control. Either way, this trend will only grow as software permeates our lives.

Technology is replacing workers in developed countries regardless of their politics, policies and laws. Union rules and labor laws may slow the dismissal of employees, but no country is attempting to prohibit organizations from using technology that allows them to operate more efficiently - and with fewer employees.

Some analysts reject the idea that technology has been a big job killer. They note that the collapse of the housing market in the US, Ireland, Spain and other countries and the ensuing global recession wiped out millions of middle-class construction and factory jobs. In their view, governments could bring many of the jobs back if they would put aside worries about their heavy debts and spend more. Others note that jobs continue to be lost to China, India and other countries in the developing world.

But to the extent technology has played a role, it raises the specter of high unemployment even after economic growth accelerates. Some economists say millions of middle-class workers must be retrained to do other jobs if they hope to get work again. Others are more hopeful. They note that technological change over the centuries eventually has created more jobs than it destroyed, though the wait can be long and painful.

A common refrain: The developed world may face years of high middle-class unemployment, social discord, divisive politics, falling living standards and dashed hopes.

In the US, the economic recovery that started in June 2009 has been called the third straight "jobless recovery."

But that's a misnomer. The jobs came back after the first two.

Most recessions since World War II were followed by a surge in new jobs as consumers started spending again and companies hired to meet the new demand. In the months after recessions ended in 1991 and 2001, there was no familiar snap-back, but all the jobs had returned in less than three years.

But 42 months after the Great Recession ended, the US has gained only 3.5 million, or 47 per cent, of the 7.5 million jobs that were lost. The 17 countries that use the euro had 3.5 million fewer jobs last June than in December 2007.

This has truly been a jobless recovery, and the lack of midpay jobs is almost entirely to blame.

Fifty percent of the US jobs lost were in midpay industries, but Moody's Analytics, a research firm, says just 2 per cent of the 3.5 million jobs gained are in that category. After the four previous recessions, at least 30 per cent of jobs created - and as many as 46 per cent - were in midpay industries.

Other studies that group jobs differently show a similar drop in middle-class work.

Some of the most startling studies have focused on midskill, midpay jobs that require tasks that follow well-defined procedures and are repeated throughout the day. Think travel agents, salespeople in stores, office assistants and back-office workers like benefits managers and payroll clerks, as well as machine operators and other factory jobs. An August 2012 paper by economists Henry Siu of the University of British Columbia and Nir Jaimovich of Duke University found these kinds of jobs comprise fewer than half of all jobs, yet accounted for nine of 10 of all losses in the Great Recession. And they have kept disappearing in the economic recovery.

Webb Wheel Products makes parts for truck brakes, which involves plenty of repetitive work. Its newest employee is the Doosan V550M, and it's a marvel. It can spin a 130-pound brake drum like a child's top, smooth its metal surface, then drill holes - all without missing a beat. And it doesn't take vacations or "complain about anything," says Dwayne Ricketts, president of the Cullman, Alabama, company.

Thanks to computerized machines, Webb Wheel hasn't added a factory worker in three years, though it's making 300,000 more drums annually, a 25 per cent increase.

"Everyone is waiting for the unemployment rate to drop, but I don't know if it will much," Ricketts says. "Companies in the recession learned to be more efficient, and they're not going to go back."

In Europe, companies couldn't go back even if they wanted to. The 17 countries that use the euro slipped into another recession 14 months ago, in November 2011. The current unemployment rate is a record 11.8 per cent.

European companies had been using technology to replace midpay workers for years, and now that has accelerated.

"The recessions have amplified the trend," says Goos, the Belgian economist. "New jobs are being created, but not the middle-pay ones."

In Canada, a 2011 study by economists at the University of British Columbia and York University in Toronto found a similar pattern of middle-class losses, though they were working with older data. In the 15 years through 2006, the share of total jobs held by many midpay, midskill occupations shrank. The share held by foremen fell 37 per cent, workers in administrative and senior clerical roles fell 18 per cent and those in sales and service fell 12 per cent.

In Japan, a 2009 report from Hitotsubashi University in Tokyo documented a "substantial" drop in midpay, midskill jobs in the five years through 2005, and linked it to technology.

Developing economies have been spared the technological onslaught - for now. Countries like Brazil and China are still growing middle-class jobs because they're shifting from export-driven to consumer-based economies. But even they are beginning to use more machines in manufacturing. The cheap labor they relied on to make goods from apparel to electronics is no longer so cheap as their living standards rise.

One example is Sunbird Engineering, a Hong Kong firm that makes mirror frames for heavy trucks at a factory in southern China. Salaries at its plant in Dongguan have nearly tripled from $80 a month in 2005 to $225 today. "Automation is the obvious next step," CEO Bill Pike says.

Sunbird is installing robotic arms that drill screws into a mirror assembly, work now done by hand. The machinery will allow the company to eliminate two positions on a 13-person assembly line. Pike hopes that additional automation will allow the company to reduce another five or six jobs from the line.

"By automating, we can outlive the labor cost increases inevitable in China," Pike says. "Those who automate in China will win the battle of increased costs."

Foxconn Technology Group, which assembles iPhones at factories in China, unveiled plans in 2011 to install one million robots over three years.

A recent headline in the China Daily newspaper: "Chinese robot wars set to erupt."

Candidates for US president last year never tired of telling Americans how jobs were being shipped overseas. China, with its vast army of cheaper labor and low-value currency, was easy to blame.

But most jobs cut in the US and Europe weren't moved. No one got them. They vanished. And the villain in this story - a clever software engineer working in Silicon Valley or the high-tech hub around Heidelberg, Germany - isn't so easy to hate.

"It doesn't have political appeal to say the reason we have a problem is we're so successful in technology," says Joseph Stiglitz, a Nobel Prize-winning economist at Columbia University. "There's no enemy there."

Unless you count family and friends and the person staring at you in the mirror. The uncomfortable truth is technology is killing jobs with the help of ordinary consumers by enabling them to quickly do tasks that workers used to do full time, for salaries.

Check out your groceries or drugstore purchases using a kiosk? A worker behind a cash register used to do that.

Buy clothes without visiting a store? You've taken work from a salesman.

Click "accept" in an email invitation to attend a meeting? You've pushed an office assistant closer to unemployment.

Book your vacation using an online program? You've helped lay off a travel agent. Perhaps at American Express, which announced this month that it plans to cut 5,400 jobs, mainly in its travel business, as more of its customers shift to online portals to plan trips.

Software is picking out worrisome blots in medical scans, running trains without conductors, driving cars without drivers, spotting profits in stocks trades in milliseconds, analyzing Twittertraffic to tell where to sell certain snacks, sifting through documents for evidence in court cases, recording power usage beamed from digital utility meters at millions of homes, and sorting returned library books.

Technology gives rise to "cheaper products and cool services," says David Autor, an economist at MIT, one of the first to document tech's role in cutting jobs. "But if you lose your job, that is slim compensation."

Even the most commonplace technologies - take, say, email - are making it tough for workers to get jobs, including ones with MBAs, like Roshanne Redmond, a former project manager at a commercial real estate developer.

"I used to get on the phone, talk to a secretary and coordinate calendars," Redmond says. "Now, things are done by computer."

Technology is used by companies to run leaner and smarter in good times and bad, but never more than in bad. In a recession, sales fall and companies cut jobs to save money. Then they turn to technology to do tasks people used to do. And that's when it hits them: They realize they don't have to re-hire the humans when business improves, or at least not as many.

The Hackett Group, a consultant on back-office jobs, estimates 2 million of them in finance, human resources, information technology and procurement have disappeared in the US and Europe since the Great Recession. It pins the blame for more than half of the losses on technology. These are jobs that used to fill cubicles at almost every company - clerks paying bills and ordering supplies, benefits managers filing health-care forms and IT experts helping with computer crashes.

"The effect of (technology) on white-collar jobs is huge, but it's not obvious," says MIT's McAfee. Companies "don't put out a press release saying we're not hiring again because of machines."

What hope is there for the future?

Historically, new companies and new industries have been the incubator of new jobs. Start-up companies no more than five years old are big sources of new jobs in developed economies. In the US, they accounted for 99 percent of new private sector jobs in 2005, according to a study by the University of Maryland's John Haltiwanger and two other economists.

But even these companies are hiring fewer people. The average new business employed 4.7 workers when it opened its doors in 2011, down from 7.6 in the 1990s, according to a Labor Department study released last March.

Technology is probably to blame, wrote the report's authors, Eleanor Choi and James Spletzer. Entrepreneurs no longer need people to do clerical and administrative tasks to help them get their businesses off the ground.

In the old days - say, 10 years ago - "you'd need an assistant pretty early to coordinate everything - or you'd pay a huge opportunity cost for the entrepreneur or the president to set up a meeting," says Jeff Connally, CEO of CMIT Solutions, a technology consultancy to small businesses.

Now technology means "you can look at your calendar and everybody else's calendar and - bing! - you've set up a meeting." So no assistant gets hired.

Entrepreneur Andrew Schrage started the financial advice website Money Crashers in 2009 with a partner and one freelance writer. The bare-bones start-up was only possible, Schrage says, because of technology that allowed the company to get online help with accounting and payroll and other support functions without hiring staff.

"Had I not had access to cloud computing and outsourcing, I estimate that I would have needed 5-10 employees to begin this venture," Schrage says. "I doubt I would have been able to launch my business."

Technological innovations have been throwing people out of jobs for centuries. But they eventually created more work, and greater wealth, than they destroyed. Ford, the author and software engineer, thinks there is reason to believe that this time will be different. He sees virtually no end to the inroads of computers into the workplace. Eventually, he says, software will threaten the livelihoods of doctors, lawyers and other highly skilled professionals.

Many economists are encouraged by history and think the gains eventually will outweigh the losses. But even they have doubts.

"What's different this time is that digital technologies show up in every corner of the economy," says McAfee, a self-described "digital optimist." "Your tablet (computer) is just two or three years ago, and it's already taken over our lives."

Peter Lindert, an economist at the University of California, Davis, says the computer is more destructive than innovations in the Industrial Revolution because the pace at which it is upending industries makes it hard for people to adapt.

Occupations that provided middle-class lifestyles for generations can disappear in a few years. Utility meter readers are just one example. As power companies began installing so-called smart readers outside homes, the number of meter readers in the US plunged from 56,000 in 2001 to 36,000 in 2010, according to the Labor Department.

In 10 years? That number is expected to be zero.

HP bags UP govt order for 15 lakh laptops




The Uttar Pradesh government approved the purchase of 15 lakh laptops fromHP India at a unit cost of Rs.19,058, an official said.

The council of ministers approved the decision in a cabinet meeting here attended by Chief Minister Akhilesh Yadav after the recommendations made by the evaluation and technical committee of UP Electronics Corporation were reviewed by it.

A government spokesperson told IANS that the cost per unit will include all taxes and duty cost. The purchase cost of the 15 lakh laptops would total about Rs.2,858 crore.

The state government also authorised the UP Electronics Corporation to issue a letter of intent (LOI) to HP India Sales Private Limited for the purchase of laptops.

The distribution of free laptops to all students passing Class 12 was a major promise of the ruling Samajwadi Party (SP) in the run-up to the state assembly polls.

The party had also promised that free computer tablets would be given to students clearing their Class 10 exams. The process of purchasing computer tablets is underway, an official said.

Earlier, the purchase of laptops was delayed thrice owing to the mammoth scale of the tender

Best online services for free music streaming

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With high-quality music available for free though these cool services, there's no need for piracy at all. ET compares some of your best options available on the web & mobile


DHINGANA

Dhingana offers a large selection of music in regional languages including Marathi, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Punjabi, Bhojpuri and in genres like bhajans, ghazals, remixes, meditation and so. If you sign-up for an account, you can create and share playlists as well as discover what your friends are listening to.

PROS: User-controlled audio quality, no sign up required, genre-specific songs easily sorted from main screen, controls on lock screen

CONS: Buffering a song takes time, visible advertisements in the music player, user cannot switch between accounts

GAANA

With music in over 21 languages and a database of more than a million songs, the revamped Gaana is making a big splash. Once you log-in to your account you can sync your playlists across the web and all connected devices. The feature-rich interface makes it easy to discover and search for songs of your choice. (Listen to free online music at Gaana.com)

PROS: International music collection, instant song playback, multiple ways to discover and search for music, share songs using third party apps

CONS: No buffer progress bar, user cannot select audio quality, no lock screen controls, iffy search sometimes shows irrelevant results


HUNGAMA MYPLAY

Hungama offers over 4,50,000 songs, videos, ringtones and wallpapers but the cluttered interface makes it difficult to find updated content. Search is accessible only though the options interface and thankfully, shows relevant results. However, there is no option to get detailed artist or album information.

PROS: Immediate playback and super fast buffer, offers audio as well as video content, excellent search functionality, high quality video stream

CONS: Advertisements play each time the app opens or exits, in app advertisements, no selectable audio quality, cannot skip ahead or back in a song

RAAGA

Raaga offers music in 18 languages but no international content. You also need to go through a time-consuming signup & activation process after which you can have playlists synced between your device and web portal. The interface is easy-to-use but slow when navigating between menus.

PROS: Easy-to-use interface, fast search, on-screen volume controls, 'shake to skip' feature lets you skip songs using the device's accelerometer

CONS: Compulsory sign-up required, no login via Facebook, slow interface, cannot adjust streaming audio quality, not much new content

Great online services for free music streaming


SAAVN

With Saavn, you need to first select a language to see songs. You can view either new releases or weekly top 15-songs from the main window. The app automatically adds all the songs you select into a playlist visible under the music player — making it easier to keep a track of your library.

PROS: User controlled audio quality (highest quality is 128 kbps), playlist synced between app and web portal, song buffer indicator

CONS: In-app advertisements, no way to browse through different genres, no international content, no social network discovery or sharing
IF YOU WANT to purchase songs for offline listening, you can buy whole albums or individual songs from places like Flyte, iTunes, Nokia Music, Raaga and Hungama. Prices per song usually range from Rs 6 to 15.

AUDIO STREAMING doesn't completely do away with piracy. In-line audio recorders like SmartRecorder or MooO can record any music stream that you're playing on your computer.

THE BITRATE of a song is directly related to audio quality: higher the bitrate, higher the quality. The problem arises because a high bitrate song also leads to higher data usage. A balance between the two is hard to find.

CREATING PLAYLISTS is the easiest way to keep track of the music you want. So, pick one of the services, sign in, create your playlists and your music will be the same on all your devices.

3 charged over Gozi global computer virus




Three men from Russia, Romania and Latvia were in custody Wednesday in the U.S. on charges that they spread a computer virus to more than a million computers worldwide, including almost 200 of the U.S. space agency, siphoning off passwords andonline banking information that allowed hackers to steal tens of millions of dollars.

Their arrests were announced as federal authorities unsealed court documents accusing the men of participating in a conspiracy that began in 2005. NASA computers were among those infected by what was called the Gozi virus.

The NASA breach occurred from December 14, 2007, to August 9, 2012, when about 190 agency computers were infected, according to court documents. Between May and August last year, they said, the infected computers sent data without the user's authorization, including the contents of Google chat messages.

The Gozi virus was designed in 2005 and distributed beginning in 2007, when it was secretly installed onto each victim's computer in a manner that left it virtually undetectable by antivirus software, the complaint said.

According to court papers, Romanian national Mihai Ionut Paunescu set up online infrastructure that allowed others to distribute the damaging programs, causing tens of millions of dollars in losses and affecting well over a million computers worldwide.

Paunescu was arrested in Romania. Deniss Calovskis was arrested in Latvia, where he is a citizen and resident, on charges including bank fraud conspiracy. Nikita Kuzmin, a Russian national, was arrested in New York on various charges, including bank fraud and bank fraud conspiracy.

It was not immediately clear who would represent the defendants in court.

A charging document against Kuzmin accused him of designing the Gozi virus as a way to steal the personal bank account information of individuals and businesses in a widespread way.

It said he hired a programmer to write it and began in 2006 to rent the virus to others for a weekly fee, advertising it on Internet forums devoted to cybercrime and other criminal activities. In 2009, according to the document, Kuzmin was approached by others who wanted to acquire the source code so they could attack computers and steal money from bank accounts in the United States and, in particular, European countries. The document said Kuzmin offered the code to other groups of people for $50,000 plus a guaranteed share of future profits.

According to court documents, Calovskis had training and expertise in computer programming when he was hired by a co-conspirator to upgrade the virus with new code that would deceive victims into divulging additional personal information, such as mother's maiden names. Federal authorities sought at least $50 million from Calovskis, an amount of money they said was obtained through the conspiracy.

Why Indian IT companies are going slow on hiring




The software services industry whose frenetic hiring helped create a large slice of India's middle class in less than two decades may be nearing the end of a phase as the most prolific employer of college graduates, industry professionals and analysts said.

Hiring by India's top software exporters has been trending downwards in the past few quarters, a development which has been attributed to unfavourable market conditions. But alongside the crimped demand, experts believe there is a structural shift in the offshore outsourcing business which will mean that companies such as Infosys and HCL Technologies will no longer add software engineers in the numbers we are used to witnessing.

"What you saw in terms of productivity gains in manufacturing is finding its way to services," said TK Kurien, the chief executive officer of Wipro, India's third-largest software company which employs 1.4 lakh professionals.

Some of the sluggishness in hiring may be explained by the slowdown in the $100 billion (Rs5.4 lakh crore) IT services sector, to about 11% anticipated in the year to March 2013 from 17% in the last financial year. The main reason that moderation in hiring is a sign of things to come is that more will be done by fewer people as the grunt work is left to machines.

Kurien compared it to the efficiency improvements that defined the manufacturing industry in the United States. From supporting about 85 million manufacturing jobs in the 1970s, the sector has just about 17 million employees now. While part of it was because of work being outsourced to lower-cost destinations such as China, a lot of it was jobs eliminated because of productivity gains.

In India, the information technology sector supports nearly three million people directly and another nine million indirectly. While software services companies like TCS and Infosys may slow the pace of hiring, other technology companies, many of them startups, are likely to pick up the slack and provide employment opportunities for the more than one million engineers who graduate each year.

IT services firms have started automating routine and repeatable processes that does not necessarily need human effort. Initially, this is happening in areas such as software testing, where software code is tested for accuracy and error.

"Software testing, which was traditionally done manually, has moved to automated processes," said Vijay Sivaram, director for recruitment and staffing at Ikya Human Capital Solutions, which helps IT firms with hiring services. "Even in coding some firms are using software that takes care of the basic work."

Sanchit Vir Gogia, principal analyst at IDC, said that IT services firms are increasingly creating what he called solution accelerators.

"This is nothing but templatising and packaging the basic functions that go into a larger project implementation," Vir Gogia said. "Automation usually impacts the bottom of the pyramid in the service delivery, making it leaner." Companies such as TCS, Infosys, Wipro and Cognizant are going one step further to create intellectual property around such reusable components to give themselves a competitive edge.

The need for greater efficiency is driven by the changes in outsourcing market and intense competition for basic technology contracts for managing applications and IT infrastructure.

There have been instances in the recent past where companies have offered more than 10% discounts on existing contracts to win the deal - that means committing to deliver for $900 million a set of services on which the client used to spend $1 billion earlier.

"As more and more technology contracts are given out on outcome-based and fixed price models, service providers would be forced to adopt greater degree of automation in routine, repetitive tasks," said Sid Pai, president for the Asia-Pacific region at ISG Information Services Group.

Wednesday 23 January 2013

Videogame-maker Atari files for bankruptcy




Video game maker Atari's US operations have filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in an effort to separate from their French parent company, which is filing a similar motion separately in France.

In a statement, Atari says the move is necessary to secure investments it needs to grow in mobile and downloadable video games.

Atari's US operations have shifted to focus on digital games and licensing, including developing mobile games, and have become a growth engine for its owner. France's Infogrames Entertainment first took a stake in Atari in 2000. It acquired the remaining stake in 2008 and changed its name to Atari S.A.

But the US operations have been better performing than the rest of the company. In fiscal 2012 digital and licensing revenue both grew significantly and contributed 70 percent of revenue, while sales in bricks-and-mortar stores declined.

In December, Atari SA said a credit agreement it entered into with investor BlueBay - its main shareholder and only lender - would lapse at the end of the year and the company was seeking other ways to raise money. It added that it expects to report a "significant loss" for fiscal 2012.

Atari SA said it and its European operations would file related bankruptcy procedures in France at the same time as the US bankruptcy filing.

CEO Jim Wilson said the moves were the "best decision to protect the company and its shareholders." The auction process in US bankruptcy proceedings will "maximize the proceeds" going to shareholders, he added.

Creditors include accounting firm Deloitte & Touche, and retail stores Kmart and Wal-Mart Stores, although none are owed more than $250,000. Blue Bay is not listed as one of the US operations' creditors.

Atari, which turned 40 last year, was a videogame pioneer with games like "Pong" and "Centipede," but has changed ownership several times amid financial problems. In its filing with the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in the Southern District of New York, Atari said it had $1 million to $10 million in assets and $10 million to $50 million in debt. It is seeking approval for $5.25 million in debtor-in-possession financing from investment firm Tenor Capital Management.

Atari said it expects to sell its assets or confirm a restructuring plan within the next three to six months.

Atari SA, which trades on the Euronext Paris market of NYSE Euronext, has requested trading of its shares be suspended.

Facebook may make you envious, dissatisfied: Study




Social networking site Facebook can make you feel envious of your "successful" friends, leading to frustration and dissatisfaction, a new German study has found.

Researchers led by Dr Hanna Krasnova of the Humboldt-Universitat zu Berlin surveyed Facebook members regarding their feelings after using the platform.

More than one-third of respondents reported predominantly negative feelings, such as frustration. The researchers identified that envying their "Facebook friends" is the major reason for this result.

Krasnova, explained that, "Although respondents were reluctant to admit feeling envious while on Facebook, they often presumed that envy can be the cause behind the frustration of 'others' on this platform - a clear indication that envy is a salient phenomenon in the Facebook context".

"Indeed, access to copious positive news and the profiles of seemingly successful 'friends' fosters social comparison that can readily provoke envy. By and large, on-line social networks allow users unprecedented access to information on relevant others -- insights that would be much more difficult to obtain offline," Krasnova said in a statement.

Those who do not engage in any active, interpersonal communications on social networks and primarily utilise them as sources of information, eg reading friends' postings, checking news feeds, or browsing through photos, are particularly subject to these painful experiences.

The study also found that about one-fifth of all recent on-line/offline events that had provoked envy among the respondents took place within a Facebook context. This reveals a colossal role of this platform in users' emotional life.

Paradoxically, envy can frequently lead to users embellishing their Facebook profiles, which, in turn, provokes envy among other users, a phenomenon that the researchers have termed "envy spiral".

The researchers were also able to establish a negative link between the envy that arises while on Facebook and users' general life satisfaction. Indeed, passive use of Facebook heightens invidious emotions that, in turn, adversely affect users' satisfaction with their lives.

"Considering the fact that Facebook use is a worldwide phenomenon and envy is a universal feeling, a lot of people are subject to these painful consequences," study co-author Helena Wenninger of the TU-Darmstadt said.

‘Google co-founder tests Google glasses in subway‘





Billionaire co-founder of Google, Sergey Brin, was spotted travelling on a downtown train in New York late on Sunday night wearing the company's yet to be released Google Glasses, which is worth 1,500 dollars a pair.

Straphanger Noah Zerkin spotted Brin riding a downtown train on Sunday evening, holding a plastic bag and sporting a winter hat.

In a Twitter message, Serkin said he couldn't believe his eyes after seeing Brin in the train.

But Zerkin, 32, said it looked as if the other passengers on the train did not appear to recognize the tech genius, or the cutting edge eyewear, the New York Daily News reports.

The 20 billion dollars man's famed specs allow wearers to surf the Internet, make calls, and much more only through voice commands or pressing a button on the frame.

In a video released by the company last year, a goggle-wearer effortlessly gets directions, sends messages and takes photos while strolling Lower Manhattan.

Google Glasses made their appearance on the runways at the Diane Von Furstenberg Spring 2013 collection during Fashion Week in New York.

The goggles are being tested by a select few, and have been spotted on occasion around the city. Models for Diane von Furstenberg sported them while walking the runway at New York Fashion Week in September, the report said.

Zerkin, who also develops 'augmented reality' headwear, said it was possible the gear would be widespread within just a few years, it added.

Airtel launches mobile data security solution




With the concept of bring your own device (BYOD) gaining momentum, Bharti Airtel launched a mobile data security solution for corporates that allows employees to access enterprise data on device of their choice in a secure manner.

"Airtel Dynamic Mobile Exchange (DME) allows workforce to access enterprise data from anywhere on a device of their choice, in a secure manner- thus enhancing the business productivity while meeting mobile data security requirements of the enterprise," the company said in a statement.

The solution allows employees to segregate official and personal data on the same device by containerising the information such as emails, data applications, documents among others.

Tech start-ups becoming new face of Indian IT?




It is unlikely that Gramener, Anaxee and Stelling are companies that most people would have even heard about, but these and others like them could represent the new frontiers of India's software industry.

Over more than two decades, India earned a reputation as the global leader in software outsourcing, but product companies - perceived as the mark of a true technology powerhouse - have been few and far between. With Gramener and technology product companies of its ilk coming up in large numbers across India, that anomaly is on its way to being set right.

While India is still a long way from showcasing a Microsoft or a Google, unobtrusively, technology companies have sprung up across the country to create products and solutions that meet the demands of local businesses. Quite unlike an Infosys or a Wipro, which are the creatures of global demand, product companies are coming up with innovations made in India, by Indians and for Indians.

From helping capture fingerprint and iris data for the Aadhaar card to crunching numbers so that chicken live healthier and longer, these companies are using cutting-edge technology to provide tailor-made solutions for Indian needs.

"We have reached an inflection point," said Sangeeta Gupta, senior vice-president of the National Association of Software and Services Companies ( Nasscom). The ecosystem is just about right for product innovation in the country and India is about to emerge as a leader in software products, she predicted.

Selling innovative solutions for specific problems
The company that helps enhance longevity for chickens is Gramener, founded by former executives for IBM, Deloitte and Accenture, and based in Hyderabad. It does so by analysing data provided by Suguna Foods, its client and one of the biggest in the poultry business. Gramener finds disease patterns to let Suguna know what precautions to take and even makes recommendations about how much sunlight the birds must be exposed to, the type of feed, and even the structure of the shed in which they are housed.

Suguna, whose sales top 4,200 crore, has deployed an enterprise information technology system from one of the world's largest software makers but it turned to the two-year-old Gramener to find answers to specific problems.

"Gramener's business intelligence helps us take the right decisions at right time and we also get value for money," said GB Sundararajan, the managing director of Coimbatore-based Suguna.

Zinnov, a management consultancy which closely tracks the technology sector, has estimated that since 1990, fewer than 3,400 product companies were seeded in India. But between now and 2015, up to 600 will be created every year, its director Praveen Bhadada said.

"Startups are able to crack this market by selling niche innovations to solve specific problems. The global products brought in by big firms may not be relevant to the unique needs of the domestic market," he said. Solving these specific problems is what Indore-based Anaxee Technologies is doing for the Nandan Nilekani-led unique identification project.

Anaxee was founded after getting an incubation opportunity and seed funding of 20 lakh from NirmaLabs, a technology incubator promoted by detergent maker Nirma. It recently won a contract to sell biometric systems to the Jabalpur Municipal Corporation in Madhya Pradesh for monitoring attendance of sanitation workers, a solution that has led to the discovery of many ghost employees.

Zinnov estimates that more than 5,000 large enterprises and over 10 million small and medium businesses in the country are ready to adopt technology. This will mean that product companies will have a big role to play in pushing the expansion of the $30-billion ( 1.6-lakh-crore) technology market by some 18% this year.

Even the Indian Railways, which has an annual plan outlay of over 60,100 crore, has recognised the need to embrace the innovation developed by local product firms. Noida-based Stelling Technologies has developed a technology platform - trainenquiry.com - which provides personalised, real-time information services to passengers about their journey and the location of the train on mobile phones and the Web. Started in 2011, Stelling has developed the platform in collaboration with the Centre for Railway Information Systems.

Like Stelling, Bangalore-based Vyoma Technologies found a business opportunity in tapping the millions of people who buy tickets at railway reservation counters with advertisements for their clients. Vyoma has integrated its software with the railway booking system and installed dual display infotainment systems at reservation counters for clients such as Canara Bank, ITC and the tourism departments of Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.

Founded by former tennis player Shriranga K Sudhakara and orthopaedic surgeon Madan Mohan Ballal, the company received angel funding from Indavest. Vyoma aims to install its systems across all railways stations in India and clock 100 crore in revenue in the next three years.

"Working with a startup is more economical, innovative and flexible compared to multinational companies," said Anwar Hussain, a railway official based in Bangalore.

Nasscom's Gupta said an important reason for the blooming of technology product companies is that professionals with experience of working with global corporations are becoming entrepreneurs and creating intellectual property. Besides, inexpensive technology, angel investors and mentor networks are supporting entrepreneurs to build products.

Even Germany's SAP, the world's largest maker of business software, believes that entrepreneurs and small- to mid-sized businesses make up the backbone of the economy. "They have the ability and power to drive innovation, create jobs and enhance economic stability," said Priyadarshi Mohapatra, vice-president for emerging business at SAP India. "They are helping to run lean and efficient operations."

Indian IT concerned over property tax hike proposal




Concerned over the proposed steep upward revision of property tax on them, IT companies here are expected to meet senior state government officials within a couple of days over the issue.

The Chennai Corporation Council passed a resolution yesterday seeking to increase theproperty tax for IT companies ranging between 50 to 200 per cent hike.

"We have been getting calls from several IT firms and agencies since morning. We are planning to meet the Government and discuss the matter during the next two days..", a senior official of an IT industry body told PTI.

Expressing apprehensions that the move would affect the industry, the official said small companies and start up firms should be spared from such steep hike.

"The government by way of encouraging start up IT companies may relax the norms to companies whose turnover is less than Rs 5 crore..," he said.

He also said the government should ensure proper infrastructure facilities for IT companies. "It cannot be a one way process. It should be two way. If they are increasing the property tax they should ensure provision of infrastructure facilities (to IT companies)", he said.

After Bangalore, considered the country's IT capital, Chennai has a number of IT firms with several of them setting up base on the Old Mahabalipuram Road also known as the IT corridor.

According to Software Technology Parks of India, IT exports from Tamil Nadu and Puducherry reached Rs 46,791 crore in 2011-12, up 10.8 per cent from Rs 42,210 crore registered during the previous fiscal.

Top calendar apps for iOS, Android, Windows





There's a software category, an important one, where there's no standard design or set of features: calendar. Each one seems to have evolved on its own Galapagos island.

Take the new calendar app in Windows 8. So much of Windows 8's touchscreen mode is modern, updated and fresh — colour, gestures, typography — that you'd expect an equally modernized calendar app at its heart. Wow, would you be wrong.

You can't drag vertically through the Day-view column to create an appointment. You can't drag an appointment to reschedule it. You can't record an autorepeating appointment like "Monday, Wednesday, Friday" or "first Tuesday of the month."

If you could mix and match the best of all the motley calendar apps, here's what you might come up with.

Give us an alternative to tabbing from Start Time to End Time and typing numbers into a New Event box. Let us drag to indicate a meeting's length. Or give us speech — intelligent speech, like Siri on the iPhone. ( Google, Apple's Calendar for the Mac, BusyCal and, in particular, the iPhone app Fantastical can all do this.) Here again, you're not fiddling with a dialogue box to enter a new event.

Microsoft's greatest calendaring effort remains Outlook, the e-mail program that comes with some versions of Microsoft Office. Outlook has its detractors, but one thing it got right is integration with your e-mail and address book. Some calendars, like Apple's Calendar and BusyCal, offer a "heat map." It's a year view in which deepening colours in the yellow-orange-red scale indicate increasingly busy times of your life.

Why are we limited to words when our gadgets are digital? We should be able to put pictures, voice recordings, videos and documents on our calendars, too.

Any decent calendar program lets you put appointments into categories like Home, Work and Social. The really good ones, like BusyCal and VueMinder Lite (free for Windows), also let you put those categories into groups.

What else should be there? Reminders — via text message , e-mail or pop-up bubble. Invitations to meetings and events, and RSVP's. Duplicate removal. Smart timezone adjustment.

Finally, it goes without saying that all modern calendars should sync. To our other computers. To our phones. To the Web. We should never, ever have to enter an appointment on more than one machine.

The world's software makers have made great strides helping us manage our money, our phone numbers and our files. Now how about equal time for time?

How to convert your Windows 8 PC into a touch device




There is a common gripe with Windows 8. Though it's really good on touch devices, it's not so good on devices where you use the good old mouse. For example, to close an application on Windows 8, you have to swipe down the screen from the top. While the gesture works fine on a tablet, it feels a bit counter-intuitive on a desktop or a laptop.

"Normally, as a Windows user, you would still look for a close button," says Moorthy DS, managing director of Hi-Tech Solutions. The company has developed a handy little device that can transform your non-touch Windows 8 desktops and laptops into a touch device via a stylus called the e-Touch Pen.

Though you cannot use your fingers as the direct interface on the screen, the stylus is far more intuitive than using the mouse. And when tested with the swipe-based game Fruit Ninja, the device was fluid and very responsive.

The device consists of two parts and works on a combination of ultrasonic and infrared technology. It has a receiver that can be clipped onto a screen and a stylus pen which acts as a transmitter. A small magnetic strip is stuck onto the side of a screen.

The receiver is clipped onto the magnetic strip and connected to the computer via a USB port. The clipped-on receiver is an infrared device which helps in positioning the stylus. The stylus transmitter is a battery-operated, ultrasonic device which has a few brushes at the end which can pick up vibrations when the pen is moved on the screen.

The signals are then transmitted to the receiver which knows where the pen is being placed on the screen. Since the gestures for touch interface are already a part of Windows 8, the device just ports into it and there is no need to install additional software.

"Windows 8 is a touch-based operating system and it's great for a tablet. But for desktops, there is a difference of about Rs 8,000 to Rs 9,000 between touch and non-touch screens," says Moorthy.

He says the device can be used on screens as big as 22-inch and costs about Rs 5,000.

Hi-Tech Solutions was started in 2007, and has a slew of products and accessories like portable document scanners and paper-to-digital devices.

How to boost your PC‘s memory






If your computer seems to be running slowly and acting as if it does not have enough memory installed, you can use software that comes with the operating system to see what is going on under the hood.

On a Windows system, open the Task Manager program by right-clicking on the Windows task bar and choosing Start Task Manager. (You can also use the keyboard shortcuts of Control-Alt-Delete or Control-Shift-Escape to summon the Task Manager.)

In the Task Manager window, you can see all the programs, services and processes currently running on the computer. You can also use the Task Manager to close an application that is not responding.

On a Mac, open the Activity Monitor program. Go to the Applications folder, then to the Utilities folder and double-click on the Activity Monitor icon. On Macs with the Launchpad feature, just click the Launchpad icon in the Dock, click the Other icon and open Activity Monitor.

Here, you can see the amount of system memory being used, what programs and processes are currently running and other system information. Apple has more information about using the Activity Monitor and steps for quitting a frozen or memoryhogging program on its site.

Google may soon replace passwords with physical keys




Search giant Google is set to kill off passwords and is experimenting with USB keys, mobile phones and even jewelry that can act as a physical 'key' to give users access to their account.

The firm's security experts including an Indian are set to publish their findings next month, the 'Daily Mail' reported.

In the upcoming issue of IEEE Security & Privacy Magazine, Google Vice President of Security Eric Grosse and engineer Mayank Upadhyay will detail what is basically a physical key with a 'smart chip' embedded inside it.

"Along with many in the industry, we feel passwords and simple bearer tokens such as cookies are no longer sufficient to keep users safe," the pair write in their paper, according to Wired.

To log, users simply place the tiny Universal Serial Bus (USB) drive into their computer.

The firm is also believed to be experimenting with wireless chips that are already built into some mobile phones, and can even be built in jewelry.

"We'd like your smartphone or smartcard-embedded finger ring to authorise a new computer via a tap on the computer, even in situations in which your phone might be without cellular connectivity," the team writes.

"One option uses a tiny USB key called a YubiKey. When the user plugs the key into a latop, they are automatically logged into all of their Google accounts - without ever having to type in a password," they explain.

"Another option uses a 'smartcard-embedded finger ring to authorise a new computer via a tap on the computer," they said.

The firm is also believed to be addressing the obvious problem with the system users losing their 'key' and is thought to be developing a simple system to replace them.

However, the pair admit that they will have to rely on websites to support the scheme.

"Others have tried similar approaches but achieved little success in the consumer world," they write.

"Although we recognise that our initiative will likewise remain speculative until we've proven large scale acceptance, we're eager to test it with other websites," they say.

Samsung launches Galaxy Grand phablet at Rs 21k




Samsung India has launched Galaxy Grand Duos with dual-sim functionality, bringing another phablet to the market just a day after Micromax announced its Canvas HD with 5-inch screen. The company said it will retail the device with a flip cover in the box and price it at Rs 21,500.

The all-new Galaxy Grand Duos has a 5-inch WVGA TFT screen and is powered by Android4.1 (Jelly Bean). This smartphone runs on a dual-core processor clocked at 1.2GHz and has 1GB RAM. Samsung has continued with the design language it introduced in the Galaxy S III in this smartphone as well.

At the back, the smartphone has an 8MP camera with LED flash, while there is a 2MP snapper on the front. Available only in an 8GB variant, the device's memory capacity can be raised up to 64GB via microSD card. Running on a 2,100mAh battery, the Galaxy Grand Duos has connectivity features like 3G, 2G, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, S Voice and microUSB. Other features of the device include Direct Call, Smart Alert, Popup Video and AllShare Play. Galaxy Grand will also have multi-app functionality, allowing users to access two apps simultaneously.

A Samsung India executive said that if a user is taking a call on one sim, Galaxy Grand Duos' auto-forwarding feature will automatically redirect an incoming call on the other sim to the first connection.

Micromax recently claimed that it has shipped more phablets than Samsung in the country. At the unveiling of Canvas HD, the indigenous manufacturer said it shipped 1.98 lakh phablets, while Samsung imported 1.89 lakh units of its Galaxy Note and Note II tablets.

Saturday 12 January 2013

Infosys market cap jumps by $4 billion, more than Fiji‘s GDP




Shares in Infosys closed up 16.8 per cent on Friday after stellar third-quarter results and an unexpected rise in its fiscal year revenue estimate, adding $4.07 billion to its market capitalization, more than the GDP of Fiji.

Infosys' 16.8 percent jump almost single-handedly kept the Sensex in the black, with 26 of its 30 components closing lower, including index heavyweights Reliance Industries and tobacco major ITC.

Fiji's gross domestic product stood at $3.81 billion in 2011, according to the most recent data available from the World Bank.

India's No.2 software services provider Infosys Ltd raised its revenue forecast after posting stronger-than-expected quarterly profit, triggering a 15 percent surge in its shares, set for their biggest gain in more than a decade.

Many investors had dumped shares in the company after a string of disappointing quarters eroded Infosys' reputation as the sector bellwether, putting pressure on CEO SD Shibulal to win more deals and make the firm more profitable.

"We continue to gain confidence from a strong pipeline of large deals," Shibulal said in a statement. "We remain cautiously optimistic about the January-March quarter."

The Bangalore-based company unexpectedly raised its sales forecast for the year ending March 31 to at least $7.45 billion, including $104 million in additional revenue following its acquisition of Switzerland-based consultancy Lodestone Holdings.

That would be a rise of 6.6 percent from a year earlier, compared with a previous forecast for a 5 percent increase.

New deals, including 13 in Europe, helped boost Infosys' revenue. Spending on IT services by capital markets clients such as investment banks and brokerages has also improved, Ashok Vemury, head of Americas and manufacturing, told reporters in Bangalore after the earnings announcement.

Clients that have signed big contracts with Infosys, including Harley-Davidson, also accelerated spending during the quarter, he said.

However, some analysts said it was still too early to predict a recovery for the company.

"We are positively surprised by Infosys' performance, and need to study the durability of Infosys' comeback," JPMorgan said in a research note.

Analysts had expected Infosys to trim its annual sales growth to as low as 3.3 per cent after the company warned last month that US clients had cut back on projects and delayed signing big deals.

"The market was slightly predatory, given that the last two times the company has disappointed, but this time the organic guidance is better ... which I think will be taken positively," said Rikesh Parikh, vice president for markets strategy and equities at Motilal Oswal Securities in Mumbai.