Dial auto service launched in Chandigarh

Chandigarh, Sept 17 (ANI): In a bid to provide quick, hassle free and reasonably charged mode of transportation, a dial-an-auto service equipped with GPS navigation system has been launched for the first time in Chandigarh.

The neat and clean pink coloured motor rickshaws, known as Tuk Tuk, are changing the way people travel in the city.

The fleet of 10 dial-an-auto-rickshaw, which is only a phone call away, also boasts of two lady drivers, the first in Chandigarh.

Women passengers, who feel safer traveling with lady drivers, are appreciating their services.

“Chandigarh is one city where people are safe anyway. We have been told we are safe with the service,” said Alka Thapar, a lady auto driver.

One has to just dial 4242424 for calling an auto rickshaw to get it at your doorstep.

The autos are equipped with tamper proof fare meters to assure passengers of not being overcharged.

“We maintain our call center. Whenever any individual requires an auto he rings up and the call centre picks up the call. They record the call and then convey to the driver by selecting the vehicle nearby to pick up the customer. That’s the procedure and customer has to pay from the pick up point to the drive point only,” said VS Dhillon, Managing Director of the Tuk Tuk Auto Rickshaw Company.

The service aims at providing a quick, reliable and safe journey to people who can relax and sit back without the fear of getting fleeced by drivers.

“I’m using it for the first time It’s reasonably priced and I’m really liking it,” says Charanjit, a customer.

The new service is a welcome change for commuters. With the new service in place, passengers can hope for a change in the attitude of traditional auto drivers who are often accused of fleecing customers. By Sunil Sharma (ANI)

Chris Brown to wash cars, pick up trash as assault punishment

Washington, Sept 4 (ANI): R and B singer Chris Brown will be washing cars, picking up trash and removing graffiti as a part of the community service ordered by court for assaulting Rihanna.

The 20-year-old star has been given five years probation and ordered to serve six months hard labour in his home state of Virginia after pleading guilty to assaulting the ‘Umbrella’ hitmaker in February (09), reports Contactmusic.

Brown’s punishment has been revealed in a letter from Richmond, Virginia Police chief Bryan Norwood to the court in Los Angeles where Brown was sentenced.

The letter reads, “It is my understanding that the Court desires the imposed community service to be labour intensive. Along those lines, we are prepared to put Mr Brown to work in the community performing manual labour tasks, such as graffiti removal, trash pick up, washing cars, cleaning, maintaining grounds, etc.”

Brown has also been asked to pick up the bill for extra security during his punishment in case members of the public find out his location.

The letter adds, “He will be responsible for paying any costs incurred regarding the facilitation of this arrangement to include adequate security from the public (in the event they become aware of his presence) and one-on-one supervision where special projects are instituted.” (ANI)

Recession-hit Brits’ new delicacy – cat food!

London, Sept 1 (ANI): Britons struggling to cope with the ongoing recession are munching on a new delicacy – cat food.

Pollack, once popular as a food for cats, has stormed up the “seafood charts”.

The popularity of the white fish – traditionally a cheap alternative to cod or haddock – has soared over the past year, reports the Daily Express.

According to fish experts, over 13,000 tons have been sold.

Salmon is a hot pick with Britons who ate away 600million pounds worth of it last year, followed by tuna, cod, haddock, and warm and cold water prawns.

Mackerel, Scampi and trout have also become popular. (ANI)

Flexible high-resolution home theatre displays come closer to reality

Washington, August 21 (ANI): You may soon get to enjoy facilities like flexible high-resolution home theatre displays, wearable health monitors, and biomedical imaging devices because scientists are working on a novel process for creating new classes of lighting and display systems.

John Rogers, the Flory-Founder Chair Professor of Materials Science and Engineering at the University of Illinois, has revealed that the new process is all about creating and assembling ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic light-emitting diodes (LEDs) into large arrays offers new classes of lighting and display systems with interesting properties, such as see-through construction and mechanical flexibility.

He said that such properties would be impossible to achieve with existing technologies.

“Our goal is to marry some of the advantages of inorganic LED technology with the scalability, ease of processing and resolution of organic LEDs,” said Rogers.

Compared to their organic counterparts, inorganic LEDs are brighter, more robust and longer-lived.

Organic LEDs, however, are attractive because they can be formed on flexible substrates, in dense, interconnected arrays.

Rogers and his colleagues-including collaborators from Northwestern University, the Institute of High Performance Computing in Singapore, and Tsinghua University in Beijing-say that the new technology combines features of both.

“By printing large arrays of ultrathin, ultrasmall inorganic LEDs and interconnecting them using thin-film processing, we can create general lighting and high-resolution display systems that otherwise could not be built with the conventional ways that inorganic LEDs are made, manipulated and assembled,” Rogers said.

To overcome requirements on device size and thickness associated with conventional wafer dicing, packaging and wire bonding methods, the researchers have developed epitaxial growth techniques for creating LEDs with sizes up to 100 times smaller than usual.

They have also developed printing processes for assembling these devices into arrays on stiff, flexible, and stretchable substrates.

To create an array, a rubber stamp contacts the wafer surface at selected points, lifts off the LEDs at those points, and transfers them to the desired substrate.

“The stamping process provides a much faster alternative to the standard robotic ‘pick and place’ process that manipulates inorganic LEDs one at a time. The new approach can lift large numbers of small, thin LEDs from the wafer in one step, and then print them onto a substrate in another step,” Rogers said.

The researcher says that shifting position and repeating the stamping process can transfer LEDs to other locations on the same substrate, and, in this fashion, large light panels and displays can be crafted from small LEDs made in dense arrays on a single, comparatively small wafer.

Given that the LEDs can be placed far apart and still provide sufficient light output, Rogers says that the panels and displays can be nearly transparent.

He even envisions the creation of flexible and even stretchable sheets of printed LEDs, which can have potential use in the health-care industry.

“Wrapping a stretchable sheet of tiny LEDs around the human body offers interesting opportunities in biomedicine and biotechnology, including applications in health monitoring, diagnostics and imaging,” Rogers said.

A research article describing the researchers’ work has been published in the journal Science. (ANI)

Now, take your pick with baby sex selection method in Malaysia

Kuala Lumpur, August 9 (ANI): Companies in Malaysia are openly offering couples with baby sex selection methods, saying the procedures to have the desired gender are entirely “natural”.

“Choice Baby” offers to prepare a conception chart based on the analysis of data taken from selective parents like their blood type, date of birth and other personal information.

Jennifer Chin, the company ‘s sales manager, said the demand for gender selection had shot up over the years and her company enrolled more than 30 clients per month

“The gender chart will show the favourable days to attempt conception,” the New Straits Times Online quoted her as saying.

She added: “For those with two or three boys and want a girl or viceversa, this is an opportunity to get what they desire.”

However, certain religious groups and spiritual leaders have raised objections over the practice saying it interferes with the working of God.

Hindu Sangam president Datuk A. Vaithilingam said: “Whether it is using technology or natural methods, early identification and elimination are against nature. It’s not in line with the way of life. Gender selection can lead to unnecessary calamities, like gender problems.”

Harcharan Singh, vicepresident of the Malaysian Consultative Council of Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism and Sikhism, said: “It is God who creates, so this practice is clearly against the order of nature”. (ANI)

Quiet guys in the corner, not flashy ones, score more with females

Washington, June 19 (ANI): Being heavily focused on keeping up appearance might serve as a successful “advertisement” for attracting mates, however, in some species, like stickleback fish, it’s the caring ones who score.

Yale scientists theorize that when males must provide care for the survival of their offspring, the males’ signals will consistently be honest – and they may devote more of their energy to caring for their offspring than to being attractive.

The idea that males showcase their best qualities to attract females for mating isn’t a new one, nor is the idea that they might be deceptive in what they are promoting.
nstead, the new findings better predict the requirement for honesty in advertising as a function of the male’s suitability for parenting, according to Natasha Kelly, a graduate student in ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale and lead author of the study.

When a male’s energy is heavily focused on keeping up his appearance, he may have little energy to devote to caring for offspring. But that may be okay, say the researchers – in species where he does not really need to tend to the kids.

However, the new model, now appearing in the online version of the Proceedings of the Royal Society B, examines the reliability of males’ mating signals when they must care for offspring.

There are many species in which males could, but do not have to, provide parental care – because females will pick up the slack. The Yale researchers focused on those species, like stickleback fish, where females cannot pick up the slack and males who do not provide care risk the survival of their offspring.

“This new work shows that when males can not escape the cost of failing to provide care, their advertisements will tend to tend to reliably indicate how much care they will provide,” said senior author Suzanne Alonzo, assistant professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Yale.

“The qualifier in this case is where males are obligated to provide care,” said Kelly.

“In that case, the quiet guy in the corner might be giving the more reliable advertisement for fatherhood,” the expert added. (ANI)

Gruelling Arctic mission to study impacts of global warming ends

London, May 14 (ANI): The Catlin Arctic Survey, a gruelling 10-week expedition to measure the thickness of sea-ice that will help study the impacts of global warming in the region, has ended.

According to a report by BBC News, two planes landed safely on May 13 on the floating Arctic ice to collect researchers Pen Hadow, Ann Daniels and Martin Hartley.

Their data will help study the impacts of global warming in the region.

It also reinforces a new forecast, by a leading UK scientist, who says that the Arctic sea-ice could vanish in summertime far sooner than predicted.

The Catlin survey ended slightly ahead of schedule to ensure a safe pick up.

Speaking on a live link from the Arctic landing strip, Hadow said that it had been a difficult but successful expedition.

“In our time here, we have captured around 16,000 observations and (taken) 1,500 measurements of the thickness of the ice and snow as well as its density,” he said.

He added that his team was now handing its valuable data, collected primarily through drilling following the failure of a mobile radar unit, over to the scientists.

“The data seems to suggest it was almost all first-year ice,” Hadow said. He revealed that over the length of the survey, the average thickness of the sea ice was 1.774m.

The Arctic ice could soon be a seasonal feature.

“Our science advisors had told us to expect thicker, older ice on at least part of the route, so it is something of a mystery where that older ice has gone. It’ll be interesting to see what scientists think about this,” Said Hadow.

The Catlin Arctic Survey has directly measured thickness of the ice

An ice service analyst, Dr Trudi Wohlleben, said that the ice was likely to retreat as much as it had in the past two years.

Typically, about 40 percent of the Arctic Ocean is covered with older, thicker ice, but that has been greatly reduced.

Referring to the direct measurements taken by the Catlin team, Dr Wohlleben said, “It is very nice to have ‘ground-truthing’ of what you’re interpreting from the satellite data.”

“So, when we look at the imagery, we’re expecting the first year ice to be between 1m and 2m thick and it’s nice to have those numbers confirmed,” Dr Wohlleben added. (ANI)

A-Rod took steroids as teen, and while with Yankees, claims new book

New York, Apr 30 (ANI): An upcoming book about Alex Rodriguez claims that he might have bulked up with steroids as early as high school – and was suspected of juicing while playing for the Yankees.

The explosive tome, A-Rod, strongly suggests he didn’t give up performance enhancers when he came to New York – a point which defies the slugger’s claims that he dabbled in steroids only while with the Texas Rangers.

Sports Illustrated writer Selena Roberts, who broke the story that A-Rod flunked a steroid screening in 2003, reveals fellow Bombers nicknamed the third baseman “B—h T-s” in 2005, reports The New York Daily News.

Also an unnamed major-leaguer is quoted as saying Rodriguez and steroid-tainted pitcher Kevin Brown were seen together with human growth hormone – HGH – in 2004.

The book is published by HarperCollins, and set to be released May 12.

Roberts was also told by a former high school teammate that the future No.1 MLB draft pick was on steroids and his coach knew it.

Another student said the son of coach Rich Hofman admitted he saw Rodriguez use steroids.

Hofman said it was news to him.

“Whatever he was doing, he was doing it somewhere else,” he said.

The 255-page book also chronicles A-Rod’s off-the-field escapades: his poker habit; his divorce from his wife, Cynthia and the relationship with Madonna. (ANI)

UK’s Labour Government has spent 7 million pounds on wine since coming to power

London, Apr.24 (ANI): Since Labour came to power in Britain in 1997, it has spent an astonishing seven million pounds on wine through the Government Hospitality Unit.

According to the Daily Mail, the incredible tab emerged a day after Chancellor of Exchequer Alistair Darling’s Budget revealed Government borrowing of 175 billion pounds this year and a national debt of 1.4 trillion pounds within four years. It was also a budget that slapped an extra two per cent on the cost of beer, wine and spirits.

Last night, the excess was labelled as the final insult to recession-hit households dealt by a political elite out of touch with reality.

The figures were unearthed by front bench Conservative MP Grant Shapps. Schapps also found that there is a Whitehall committee charged with picking the finest vintages.

Favourite tipples downed in Whitehall include vintage champagne, wines from Burgundy, Bordeaux and the Loire Valley. It also has the pick of New World wines from Australia, New Zealand, Argentina and Chile. (ANI)

Authorities in Nainital install CCTV cameras as a security measure

Nainital, Apr 20 (ANI): Authorities in Nainital have decided to install Closed-Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras at several crowded places as precautionary measure and to prevent untoward incidents.bout five CCTV cameras have been installed across the hill resort for keeping a watch on the everyday incidents and also to solve problems like traffic jams and pick-pocketing.These cameras have been really beneficial for us. We have placed the cameras in the crowded place to avoid any incident like pick pocketing or scuffle. These cameras have been very beneficial in finding out if people are facing any problem especially in crowded places,” said K S Hayanki, inspector in charge, Nainital.

Residents are also happy with the security measure taken as they believe any incident can happen anytime.Nainital, is a tourist town and lakhs of tourist come here, so there was requirement of such cameras. With the help of these cameras, police can keep a watch on the movement happening. We have to be vigilant always because any untoward incident can take place anytime,” said Rajesh Shah, a resident.

Deriving its name from the Naini lake around which the town is located, Nainital is a major tourist destination in the Kumaon Himalayan region of Uttarakhand. (ANI)

The three answers that secured Palin’s GOP VP nomination

Washington, Apr. 18 (ANI): John McCain’s lead vice presidential vetter said Friday that Alaska Governor Sarah Palin was very impressive during her interview, knocking the senator’s most important questions “out of the park.”

A.B. Culvahouse, a powerful Washington lawyer and former counsel to President Reagan, told an audience of Republican lawyers that for McCain, selecting a vice president came down to three questions: Why do you want to be vice president? Are you prepared to use nuclear weapons? And the CIA has identified Osama bin Laden, but if you take the shot there will be multiple civilian casualties. Do you take the shot?

“She knocked those questions out of the park,” he said at an event held at the National Press Club by the Republican National Lawyers Association.

“We came away impressed.”

Culvahouse said that McCain “had 26 people on the long list,” though not all of them seemed like vice presidential material.

Culvahouse conceded that Palin was by no means a safe pick, but added that no member stood out with qualifications comparable to Dick Cheney. (ANI)

New York Islanders secure top pick in NHL draft

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The New York Islanders won the NHL draft lottery on Tuesday, securing the number one overall pick in the June 26 draft.

The Islanders finished the regular season with the NHL’s worst record (26-47-9) and beat the Tampa Bay Lightning, Atlanta Thrashers, Colorado Avalanche and Los Angeles Kings in the lottery for the top pick in Montreal in June.

They are expected to choose either high-scoring Canadian forward John Tavares or Swedish defenseman Victor Hedman.

Tavares, the NHL Central Scouting Bureau’s top-ranked North American player, is the Ontario Hockey League’s all-time leading scorer with 215 goals and 218 assists and helped Canada to gold medals at the 2008 and 2009 junior world championships.

Hedman, who plays for Modo in the Swedish Elite league, is the top ranked European skater.

(Writing by Steve Keating in Detroit; Editing by Greg Stutchbury)

Madonna blasts ‘Malawian adoption’ critics

Washington, Mar 30 (ANI): Queen of Pop Madonna has blasted critics who have slammed her second Malawian adoption bid, insisting it is “none of their business.”

The 50-year-old is currently in Malawi to make 4-year-old Mercy James legally hers. James’ 18-year-old mother had died five days after giving birth to her.

However, the singer’s adoption plans have been hit by opposition from officials – as well as the girl’s family, reports Contactmusic.

Mercy’s grandmother, Lucy Chekechiwa, 61, says, “Why doesn’t this singer pick other children? It is stealing. I want to go to court, I won’t let her go.”

Also, British charity Save The Children has claimed that it is best for a child to remain in their homeland surrounded by their extended family.

Now, while Madonna and her 12-year-old daughter were strolling a plot of land in Chinkhota Village, the singer declared it felt “amazing” to be visiting the village where she would be helping so many youngsters in the future.

But when asked by a journalist for Britain’s ITV News if she could understand the reservations held by some over her adoption bid, she retorted, “No. It’s none of their business.” (ANI)

Despite mauling, McGain hopeful for Ashes berth

Melbourne, Mar 26 (ANI): Australian leg spinner Bryce McGain, despite suffering harsh treatment at the hands of South African batsman in his debut Test, is hopeful about his Ashes selection chances.

The Proteas treated the leg spinner with contempt in the third and final Test of the series a few days ago, belting him for 0-149 off only 18 overs.

McGain, always an upbeat character, said he was confident about his bowling when he fronted the media on Wednesday evening upon his return to Melbourne.

“It certainly doesn’t knock around my confidence too much in that sometimes this happens in cricket,” FOX Sports quoted McGain, as saying.

“Maybe not quite as expensive as that, but there are times you are bowling and it doesn’t matter what you try, it seems the batsmen are a page ahead,” he added.

McGain said he had spoken to national selector Merv Hughes after the third Test and had received plenty of encouragement from him, but they had not discussed the Ashes.

The problem for McGain is he is unlikely to play any cricket before the Ashes squad is named. His plan is to keep training in Melbourne and if possible pick up some sort of contract with an English county side.

“The way it works is you wait for the selectors to make their decisions … hopefully I am a part of that but it’s out of my hands. I am sure it comes into consideration … I am still pretty upbeat and positive about what I can do and still believe I can bowl well,” McGain said.

McGain added he had reviewed his bowling performance within a couple of days and felt there were only a few things that he could have done differently. (ANI)

Indian Eves beat Aussies in World Cup play-off for third place

Sydney, Mar,21 (ANI): It was double joy for India on Saturday when after men’s team sealed victory in the first Test in Hamilton, the Indian eves beat Australia by three wickets in the Women’s World Cup to be ranked third in the tournament.

The match was played at the Bankstown Oval.

India clinched the win with 13 balls to spare in a match that was reduced to 46 overs after a 104-minute morning rain delay.

It was the first time in nine tournaments Australia has finished lower than third and also the first time they had lost three times in the one tournament, Fox Sports reports.

Australia were dismissed for 142, with veteran skipper Karen Rolton top scoring with 52 in possibly her final World Cup innings. India’s new ball bowlers Jhulan Goswami (2-21) and Rumeli Dhar (2-24) caused the early damage.

Player of the match Dhar (24 not out) and captain Goswami (18 not out), who was playing her 100th one-day international, took their side to a winning total of 7-145.

Spinners Sthalekar (3-27) and Erin Osborne (2-21) and quick Ellyse Perry (2-26) were the pick of the bowlers for the home side. (ANI)

Black emerges as designer’s favourite at Delhi Fashion Week

New Delhi, Mar 20 (ANI): Black emerged as hot pick of the designers for Autumn/Winter season at the ongoing Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week.

Drawing inspiration from the world of sports, Bollywood stylist Manish Malhotra showcased a collection in black and gold merging sports and evening wear to come up with an assortment of dresses for both men and women.

Saris with kegs and racer backs, kurtas with zipper hood tops and guys wearing bandhgala (jackets) with track pants formed a part of this unique collection.

“The theme is black and gold. Sporty wear is going into evening wear and evening wear is going into sporty wear,” said Manish.oing minimalist, designer Rajesh Pratap Singh showcased his basic wearable collection all in black.

Using fabrics such as wool, silk and cashmere, Singh put together a collection of dresses, which stood out for their simplicity and fitted silhouettes.

This gala event will conclude on March 23. (ANI)

Dungeon dad pleaded guilty for the fear of being eaten by jail cannibal

London, Mar 19 (ANI): Dungeon dad Josef Fritzl pleaded guilty to all the charges filed against him because he feared being eaten by a notorious cannibal, and not because he realised his “sick behaviour” after watching his abused daughter’s video testimony.
After initially denying charges of murder and slavery, the 73-year-old engineer confessed to all the charges because he had made a deal with prosecutors to slip away to a cushy prison cell.

The real reason behind Fritzl’s unexpected change of heart was that he feared being turned into a “Fritzl Schnitzel” by the infamous cannibal Robert Ackermann.

Lawyers had warned him that he would be sent to Austria’s Goellersdorf asylum, where Hannibal Lecter-style killer Ackermann has openly bragged about slicing him up.

Fritzl had read in newspapers how Ackermann, who detests paedophiles and rapists, vowed to cook him alive.

After seeing that the jurors were so repulsed by 42-year-old Elisabeth’s graphic evidence of her 24 years ordeal in the underground cellar, he realised that his defence was of no use.

Thus, he altered his plea to dodge being sent to the mental unit and instead live in a cushy prison.

In fact, he has even chosen the jail he prefers because it offers inmates meditation, tennis, football, darts, singing lessons and cookery classes.

“People jailed for anything involving abusing children always get a hard time from the other inmates,” the Daily Star quoted a warder at the prison where Fritzl has been held on remand as saying.

The warder added: “They used to bang on his cell and shout: ‘Satan – come out and play.’ Now they bang on his cell and shout that the cannibal is going to eat him.”

Fritzl’s lawyer Rudolf Mayer swung the secret deal to give Fritzl his pick of prisons if he pleaded guilty.

Mayer and prosecution officials agreed that Fritzl would serve his time in a single cell.

Lawyers announced his dramatic U-turn on day three of his trial in the Austrian town of St Poelten.

He had previously pleaded guilty to incest and the false imprisonment of Elisabeth, but has now made a full confession to offences, including the murder of one of the children he fathered on Elisabeth. (ANI)

Sanjay Gupta pulls out of US Surgeon General race

Washington, Mar 6 (ANI): President Barack Obama’s most favoured pick for Surgeon General, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, has withdrawn from being considered for the post.

Dr. Gupta, CNN’s chief medical correspondent and a practicing neurosurgeon, had been approached by the Obama transition team and discussed the job with President-elect Barack Obama late last year in Chicago, the New York Times reported.

An Obama Administration official said that Dr. Gupta had been under “serious consideration,” and added: “We know he will continue to serve and educate the public.”

Several other candidates are now under serious consideration, including Dr. Irwin Redlener, the director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, according to people who have been briefed on the situation.

Dr. Gupta’s wife, Rebecca Olson Gupta, is expecting a child, and he wants to spend more time with his family and continue practicing medicine and serving as a CNN correspondent.

Dr. Gupta presides over a small media empire that includes appearances on the “CBS Evening News” and columns in Time magazine.

He published a book about the search for immortality in 2007. He is paid for speaking engagements, a controversial practice for a journalist.

The status and authority of the surgeon general, the titular chief of the United States Public Health Service Commissioned Corps, has been waning for decades. (ANI)

Jayawardene, Samaraweera hit double tons against Pakistan

Karachi, Feb 22 (IANS) Mahela Jayawardene and Thilan Samaraweera hit double centuries each en route a record partnership as Sri Lanka consolidated their grip on the first cricket Test against Pakistan at the National Stadium here Sunday.

Jayawardene smashed 240, his fifth double-hundred, while Samaraweera scored a career-best 231 as Sri Lanka declared their first innings at 644-7 in 155.2 overs.

The tourists then got rid of the left-handed opener Salman Butt in the second last over of the day to leave Pakistan at 44-1 in 22 overs, still needing 401 more runs to avoid follow-on.

Veteran spinner Muttiah Muralitharan got rid of Butt when he was caught by Jayawerdene for 23 off 70 balls. Debutant opener Khurram Manzoor was unbeaten at 18 while captain Younis Khan was at the crease without opening his account. Pakistan, playing their first Test in 14 months, trail Sri Lanka by 600 runs.

The highlight of the day was a superb 437-run partnership between Jayawardene and Samaraweera that broke the previous highest stand for the fourth wicket (411) established by England’s Colin Cowdrey and Peter May against West Indies in 1957.

They also took Sri Lanka past the 600-run mark which is now the highest total in an innings at the National Stadium in Karachi. The previous highest (599-7) was scored by Pakistan against India in 2006.

They also broke the record for the highest partnership for any wicket at the National Stadium, the 298-run stand between Aamer Sohail and Ijaz Ahmed against the West Indies in 1998.

Pakistan struck back with three wickets in quick succession just before tea.

Malik removed Jayawardene and then scalped Tillekaratne Dilshan for a duck while Danish Kaneria got rid of Samaraweera.

The three wickets fell in the space of ten balls, which is in contrast to what happened earlier in the day when Pakistan were unable to pick a single wicket in almost 56 overs.

Jayawardene was the first to go when he gloved one to wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal while going for a sweep. Seven balls later, Samaraweera was bowled by Kaneria googly.

Malik then removed Dilshan, who edged one straight into the gloves of Akmal. Sri Lanka added 109 in the second session for the loss of three wickets.

Kaneria was the pick of Pakistani bowlers with 3-170 while Malik finished with 2-140.

Fujifilm comes out with its latest 10-megapixel FinePix Z30

Fujifilm comes out with its latest 10-megapixel FinePix Z30 Fujifilm has announced its new 10-megapixel FinePix Z30. The exclusive features include fairly basic ultracompact camera with a 3X optical zoom and 2.7-inch LCD.

There are some other features too which makes it quite different from other youth-oriented models.

Apart from having face detection and automatic scene recognition to help with fast shooting, the camera also has a Blog Mode (a carryover from the Z20fd) that apparently preps shots and video so they can go right online for sharing.

The users don’t even need to switch to a different mode, since there are separate buttons for the still photo shutter release and movie record. Furthermore, they can also stitch small movie clips together in camera to create a single, 60-second clip.

The device is available in three colors of pink, orange, and black and the users would be able to pick one for $179.95 in March.