Blackberry ‘was first predicted 100 years ago’

London, May 4 (ANI): Blackberry, the leading smartphone device, had been predicted a century ago by an American physicist, it has been claimed.

Nikola Tesla made the prediction about the portable messaging service way back in 1909 in the Popular Mechanics magazine.

In the mag, he wrote that one day it would be possible to transmit wireless messages all over the world. He also predicted that the hand-held device would be simple to operate and one day, everyone in the world would communicate to friends using it.

The physicist believed that this would usher in a new era of technology.

The magazine’s technology editor, Seth Porges, unveiled Tesla’s prediction at a presentation to industry figures recently in New York. It was titled “108 years of futurism”.

The magazine, published in January 1902, has nine international editions and a readership of millions today, and has always tried to anticipate the world of technology in the future.

“Nikola Tesla was able to predict technology which is still in its nascent forms a hundred years later,” The Telegraph quoted Porges as saying.

“He talked a lot about his other great passion, which was wireless power.

“It has taken a little longer to get off the ground, but work on fascinating wireless conductive transmission is going on right now in research centres at MIT and Intel and other places,” Porges added. (ANI)

From Trinidad to Indian village, a connection lost and found

Bassi (Uttar Pradesh), March 12 (IANS) A village school in Faizabad district bears a cornerstone – ‘Built by Paltu Persad of Sorzano and Queen Street, Arima, Trinidad’. It is the story of an indentured labourer who travelled half way across the world for work and his grandchild who came back in search of her roots.

Not many in Bassi village would recall that Paltu Persad left his village to go to Trinidad in 1910 and returned 37 years later.

But a hundred years later, his granddaughter Leela Maharaj was moved to tears when she saw the plaque. Leela Maharaj and her husband Balliram Maharaj had travelled from Trinidad to attend a function to mark the centenary of her ancestor’s departure to the Caribbean island.

To the Maharajs, the trip was a ‘pilgrimage’, the result of a ‘discover your roots’ search. They not only located the ancestral village in Faizabad district but also discovered some relatives still living there, descendants of Persad’s brother.

‘It was on the invitation of Ram Jokhan, second cousin to my wife Leela, that we visited the area,’ Balliram Maharaj said.

‘This visit is the biggest highlight of my entire life because of the experience, respect and honour bestowed on my wife Leela, our son Navin and myself by the people here,’ he added.

Persad had gone as an indentured worker to work on the sugarcane plantations in the West Indian nation. He was one of the thousands of Indians who returned home from a successful stint in a foreign land with the zeal to contribute to his native village.

Independence was in the air when Persad decided to return home to India in 1947 to spend his last years in his village. On returning home, Persad decided to set up a school in the village. The school was completed in 1953.

Leela and Balliram had been keen to find out more about their ancestors who had come to Trinidad from India, but were not sure how to go about it.

Their families had lost touch with the relatives in India, and they had very little information about their ancestors. They hired a prominent genealogist, Shamshu Deen, who carried out family searches in Trinidad.

The Maharajs had a couple of old documents which gave some clues; these bits of information helped Deen locate the ancestral villages of the Maharaj couple.

Incidentally, Persad and Balliram’s grandfather, Changa Maharaj, were friends and belonged to villages in the same district in Uttar Pradesh. Changa went to Trinidad in 1911 from Channauli.

According to the Maharajs, Persad endured many hardships, like the hundreds of thousands of indentured Indians in many parts of the world. He left the security of family, friends and community, in order to develop his vision. That vision was for a better future for his family.

‘He worked hard all his life and then decided to return home to his village to live among his relatives. He did not just look after the people of his village in India but he also established several businesses for his Trinidad family – such was the vision of this simple yet great pioneer,’ Balliram said.

A prominent businessman of Trinidad and president of the Trinidad Supermarket Association, Maharaj disclosed that Persad’s family still owned the premises on Sorzano and Queen Street which had been converted into a supermarket.

While visiting the school, Leela learnt that it had 668 registered students. An estimated 30,000 children had studied there, Leela said, many of whom had gone on to become doctors, lawyers and university professors.

To mark the anniversary, Leela announced the institution of the Paltu Persad Achievement Award, an annual grant of Rs.10,000 to the top achiever of the year.

‘For a long time we were longing to visit India. But pressures of work kept us away. So when this invitation by Leela’s cousin came it was not only to celebrate her ‘ajah’s’ (grandfather’s) 100 years of departure, but to visit the school he started,’ Balliram said.

Now Balliram plans to organise a grand family reunion next year to mark the 100th anniversary of his grandfather, Changa’s departure for Trinidad.

Scientists find meteorite that came from innermost asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter

Washington, September 18 (ANI): In a very rare finding, scientists have discovered an unusual kind of meteorite in the Western Australian desert and have uncovered that it came from the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

Meteorites are the only surviving physical record of the formation of our Solar System.

However, information about where individual meteorites originated, and how they were moving around the Solar System prior to falling to Earth, is available for only a dozen of around 1100 documented meteorite falls over the past two hundred years.

According to Dr Phil Bland from the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College London, the lead author of the study, “We are incredibly excited about our new finding. Meteorites are the most analysed rocks on Earth, but it’s really rare for us to be able to tell where they came from.”

The new meteorite, which is about the size of cricket ball, is the first to be retrieved since researchers from Imperial College London, Ondrejov Observatory in the Czech Republic, and the Western Australian Museum, set up a trial network of cameras in the Nullarbor Desert in Western Australia in 2006.

The researchers aim to use these cameras to find new meteorites, and work out where in the Solar System they came from, by tracking the fireballs that they form in the sky.

The new meteorite was found on the first day of searching using the new network, by the first search expedition, within 100m of the predicted site of the fall.

The meteorite appears to have been following an unusual orbit, or path around the Sun, prior to falling to Earth in July 2007, according to the researchers’ calculations.

The team believes that it started out as part of an asteroid in the innermost main asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter.

It then gradually evolved into an orbit around the Sun that was very similar to Earth’s.

The new meteorite is also unusual because it is composed of a rare type of basaltic igneous rock.

According to the researchers, its composition, together with the data about where the meteorite comes from, fits with a recent theory about how the building blocks for the terrestrial planets were formed.

This theory suggests that the igneous parent asteroids for meteorites like today’s formed deep in the inner Solar System, before being scattered out into the main asteroid belt.

Asteroids are widely believed to be the building blocks for planets like the Earth, so the new finding provides another clue about the origins of the Solar System. (ANI)

New species of lichen named after Barack Obama

Washington, Apr 16 (ANI): President Barack Obama has received an unusual tribute from a UC Riverside researcher – he has named a new species of lichen after him.

Kerry Knudsen, the lichen curator in the UCR Herbarium, has discovered a new species of lichen – a plant-like growth that looks like moss or a dry leaf – and has named it after the president to show his appreciation for Obama’s support of science and science education.

“I discovered the new species in 2007 while doing a survey for lichen diversity on Santa Rosa Island in California,” said Knudsen.

“I named it Caloplaca obamae to show my appreciation for the president’s support of science and science education,” he added.

C. obamae grows on soil and almost became extinct during the days of cattle ranching that spanned nearly a hundred years on Santa Rosa Island.

“I made the final collections of C. obamae during the suspenseful final weeks of President Obama’s campaign for the United States presidency, and this paper was written during the international jubilation over his election,” Knudsen said.

“Indeed, the final draft was completed on the very day of President Obama’s inauguration,” he added.

Lichens, which grow slowly and live for many years, result from fungi and algae living together.

Knudsen says he’s excited about the findings.

“A new lichen validates the value of the public support for preserving public lands as ecological sanctuaries,” he said.

“C. obamae teaches us that possibly other species of lichens and plants unique to Santa Rosa Island may have disappeared, without ever being known to science, since sheep ranching began there in the 1850s,” he added.

The findings are published in journal Opuscula Philolichenum. (ANI)

Michelle Obama turns ‘Soup-er Woman’ to feed the homeless

London, Mar 6 (ANI): US first lady Michelle Obama clearly believes in the saying ‘lead by example’ as she was seen donning an apron and serving dinner to the homeless people in Washington DC.

Those who visited the soup kitchen, which was just a few streets from the White House, were stunned to see the President’s wife standing with a spoon in hand behind the counter.

“My job is here to serve you,” Sky News quoted her as telling diners as she dished up bowls of mushroom risotto and broccoli.

A fruit salad was put together with food donations from Presidential staff.

One of the visitors, George Rivera couldn’t believe his eyes when he saw Michelle.

“I never imagined this, not in a hundred years,” he said.

The first lady, who said that times are tough and plenty of people need a helping hand, described Miriam’s Kitchen as “an example of what we can do as a country and a community to help folks when they are down”.

She added that if people can’t afford to donate food or money then they should donate their time instead. (ANI)