Tight security at Vaishno Devi shrine ahead of “Navratri”

Katra, Sept 18 (ANI): Security has been beefed up at the famous Vaishno Devi Temple near Jammu ahead of the nine-day “Navratri” festival.

Paramilitary and police personnel are patrolling and frisking people at important points in Katra, which is thronged by thousands of devotees every year, especially during Navratri.

The nine-day Navratri festival will begin from Saturday and the authorities claim to be in full control of the situation.

“There is much fanfare in Katra during Navratra festival and the inflow of tourists also rises manifold during those days. We have made proper security arrangements. We have taken the help of the CRPF. This time, we also have one contingent of Haryana police,” said Ashok Sharma, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP).

The devotees making their way to the shrine were also put through rigorous checking, a routine, exercised with extra care, considering the sensitive nature of the shrine and keeping recent threats in mind.

The devotees complied without complaining.

“There was not much trouble during the security check. We were checked several times but we did not face any problem. It was all done very safely,” said Vijay Kumar, a devotee.

‘Navratri’, which literally means nine nights, is observed twice a year.

The festival lasts for nine days in honour of nine manifestations of Durga, goddess of power ,and fall in the months of April-May and September-October.

It is believed that during the Navratri, Goddess Durga descends on earth to rid it of the demons and blesses her devotees with happiness and prosperity. (ANI)

Charles Dickens ‘displayed mild OCD symptoms’

London, Sept 13 (ANI): Charles Dickens developed a ritualistic routine in his domestic life, together with an obsessive approach to work, which is consistent with obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), and can be seen reflected in some of his characters, claims a new biography.

Dickens had a habit of rearranging furniture whenever he stayed in a hotel room and inspecting his children’s bedrooms every morning, leaving behind notes when he was not satisfied with their tidiness.

According to Michael Slater, emeritus professor of Victorian literature at Birkbeck college, London, and author of the book, Charles Dickens, the genius’ behaviour could be traced to his childhood when poverty forced his family to move home repeatedly, reports The Times.

Slater said: “The disorder of his upbringing may have had the effect on him of wanting to be in control.”

He reckons that Little Dorrit, the main character in Dickens’s novel of the same name, reflected his character.

“There she is, the epitome of neatness, in the squalid atmosphere of the Marshalsea prison making order and making her father comfortable and sweeping and cleaning and tidying all the time,” said Slater.

Slater said there were also signs of OCD in the semi-autobiographical David Copperfield.

Also, when it came to women, the author’s attitude was governed by neatness. (ANI)

475 MJ fans attempt world record dancing together to ‘Thriller’ in Leicester

London, August 30 (ANI): A group of Michael Jackson fans in Leicester attempted a world record for the most number of people dancing to the singer’s ‘Thriller’ in one place on his 51st birthday.

Some 475 people dressed as zombies packed into Orton Square participate in the event.

The current record is held by 242 dancers, who performed in Virginia in April this year.

“We wanted to celebrate his life and show people what an inspiration he is,” Sky News quoted Anand Bhatt, 29, the organiser of the attempt, as saying.

The mass dance was planned in April, two months before Michael Jackson died on June 25.

“His death just made us more determined to do this properly. With it being his birthday, it’s a fitting tribute,” said a woman participant.

Her sister added: “The mood has been vibrant throughout. I think it’s nicer today to do something positive, rather that dwelling on the circumstances surrounding his death.”

Adam, 10, said: “Michael Jackson’s my hero. I wish I could dance like him.”

While most dancers learnt the routine during free lessons at dance studios around Leicester, others practised the moves using tutorial videos posted online.

Although the even ran smoothly, its organisers are still waiting an official declaration from a Guinness World Record representative that the new record has been made. (ANI)

New technique to help Parkinson’s patients speak louder

Washington, Aug 26 (ANI): Scientists from Purdue University’s Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences have come up with a novel technique that would help Parkinson’s patients speak louder.

“People with Parkinson’s disease commonly have voice and speech problems,” said Jessica Huber, an associate professor in Purdue’s Department of Speech, Language and Hearing Sciences.

“At some point in their disease they will have some form of voice or speech disorder that generally occurs a little later in the disease,” she added.

The most common therapy, the Lee Silverman voice treatment program, trains patients to speak louder in one-hour sessions four days a week for a month.

“Some Parkinson’s patients do great with this approach, but others do not. They forget to keep speaking louder the minute they have left the therapy room,” said Huber.

Lee Silverman tends to work less for people with later stages of disease or those who have some cognitive decline.

Huber used a new approach: The patients were asked to speak louder while a recording of background “multitalker babble noise” was played. The noise is essentially the sound of a restaurant full of patrons, but without the clattering silverware and clinking glasses.

“They had an easier time getting louder when I had the noise in the room,” she said.

“Ordinarily, when I asked them to be twice as loud they would say they couldn’t. They couldn’t speak 10 decibels louder, but when I turned on the babble noise, they spoke over 10 decibels louder,” she added.

In the device built by engineering resources manager Jim Jones and senior research engineer Kirk Foster, both in the Weldon School, the voice-activated device automatically plays the background babble when the person begins to speak.

A sensor placed on the neck detects that the person has begun to speak and tells the device to play the babble through an earpiece worn by the patient.

“I got the idea that if we train them with a natural cue in their everyday environment, we will probably get better results. We ask them to wear the system for about four hours a day as they go about their daily routine,” she added.(ANI)

Now, a ‘smart house’ that texts you if you’ve left the front door open

London, July 14 (ANI): Think about a “smart house” that automatically turns the lights and cooling systems off and on as per our needs, and even texts us if we have left the front door open.

Well, this could soon be a reality, thanks to University of Hertfordshire researchers’ latest innovation- InterHome.

The researchers have designed a doll’s house on similar lines to test and demonstrate how much greener and secure our homes could be if they incorporated intelligent technologies that adapt to our daily routine.

The house is fitted with a network of infrared sensors connected to a central computer.

Johann Siau, the project’s coordinator, says that the software algorithms work out which rooms we tend to occupy at different times, and, accordingly, learn when we need the lights, heating or air conditioning systems turned on and when we don’t.

His tests have indicated that such technology could cut carbon emissions, and slash energy bills by an estimated 300 pounds per year, on average.

In fact, InterHome could also boost home security-by connecting door and window lock sensors to the computer, it can send a text message to the homeowner if they have forgotten to lock the front door, for instance.

Texting back will lock any doors or windows in question.

The “smart house” was unveiled in Cairo last week at the finals of the Microsoft Imagine Cup – a competition for technologies designed to solve global problems. (ANI)

Carmen Electra goes topless for burlesque show in LA

London, July 10 (ANI): Carmen Electra wowed the crowd at The Crazy Horse Paris Show at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas by baring her boobs.

The former ‘Baywatch’ star teased fans by strutting her stuff in an array of saucy outfits for two previous sexy routines, reports the Sun.

Carmen, who will be starring in the show for six nights, attracted the audience by donning high heels, stockings and suspenders while cavorting on a sofa shaped like a giant pair of lips.

Her second routine, called Chain Gang, saw the Playboy pin-up caged like a wild animal and sent temperatures soaring by revealing one boob with a tassel covering her modesty.

The brunette beauty is not the only ‘Baywatch’ star to perform at the famous burlesque club.

Pamela Anderson appeared at the original saloon in Paris last year, performing a steamy striptease involving a sheer black body stocking and a motorcycle.

Burlesque star Dita Von Teese has also performed at the Paris club. (ANI)

Eerie pictures show Michael Jackson rehearsing on stage for London comeback gigs just 48 hours before he died

These are the last pictures of Michael Jackson on stage, taken just two days before he died.

The images of the singer hard at work rehearsing for upcoming tour This Is It give a glimpse of what was in store for fans at his planned gigs in London’s 02.

Jackson was due to begin the first of 50 dates at the arena on July 13, but died on Thursday after being rushed to hospital in Los Angeles.

Putting on a thriller: Michael Jackso strikes a familiar pose as he practises his routine in the Staples Centre, LA,  for the This Is It comeback concerts

Putting on a thriller: Michael Jackso strikes a familiar pose as he practises his routine in the Staples Centre, LA,  for the This Is It comeback concerts

Eerie pictures show Michael Jackson rehearsing on stage for London comeback gigs just 48 hours before he died

Eerie pictures show Michael Jackson rehearsing on stage for London comeback gigs just 48 hours before he died

In one of the newly-emerged images, taken on Tuesday at the Staples Centre in Los Angeles, the singer points towards the audience as backing dancers perform in front of a huge This Is It banner.

Despite looking frail, the star strikes a familiar pose and appears to be in full flow during the rehearsal.

In another photo, he smiles broadly, microphone in hand, dressed in a long shimmering mac over a top and trousers.

Man in the mac: Microphone in hand, the singer appears to be enjoying himself as he rehearses

Man in the mac: Microphone in hand, the singer appears to be enjoying himself as he rehearses

More than 800,000 tickets costing up to £1,000 had been sold for the concerts at London’s O2 arena which were hailed as the most ‘expensive and technically advanced’ live shows ever.

The concerts, which were due to start in two weeks’ time, had been expected to be the highest grossing pop production of all time.

Hundreds of thousands of fans who bought tickets for the cancelled gigs have been told they will be entitled to a refund.

ON DVD, THE FINAL PERFORMANCE

Footage from Jackson’s final rehearsals is already being compiled for a DVD and album.

The star is believed to have been filmed running through his songs and dance routines the day before he died.

In the groove: Footage of star rehearsing could be released on DVD although it's unclear who owns the rights

In the groove: Footage of star rehearsing could be released on DVD although it’s unclear who owns the rights

It is expected that when released this could become one of the star’s biggest selling works.

It is understood filming took place last Wednesday during Jackson’s rehearsals at the Los Angeles Staples Centre for the 50-date This Is It tour.

It remains unclear who has official ownership of the footage. A spokesman for concert promoter AEG
declined to comment. It is expected that the star’s estate will make more money in the next year from his music than he did in the last decade of his life.

The king of pop’s family will release a series of posthumous albums, starting this Christmas. It is understood Jackson wrote a number of songs for his three children, which were not to be released until after his death.

There are also songs left over from his last album, Invincible, released in 2001.

A tribute show is planned for September with Diana Ross, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Wonder and Barbra Streisand said to be in talks to appear.

Source By – http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-1196369/New-pictures-Michael-Jackson-hard-work-rehearsing-just-days-died.html

Brit Army’s Band of the Coldstream Guards marches to Jacko’s ‘Thriller’

London, Jul 3 (ANI): Brit army’s world-famous Band of the Coldstream Guards left hordes of tourist stunned after they started playing Michael Jackson’s mega hit ‘Thriller’, and even marched to its tune on Wednesday.

As many as 40 drummers, trumpeters, clarinet, and trombone players played out the song, with the band marching in formations almost mimicking the famous choreographed zombie routine from the music video.

“It came out of nowhere,” the Sun quoted Philip Marfleet, 22, a lighting engineer, from Colchester, Essex, as saying.

“We were stunned. They were practising some more traditional tunes and then all of a sudden they started playing Thriller.

“What a moment,” he added.

Marfleet, who managed to capture the show on his mobile phone, had gathered with more than 20 foreign tourists outside The Guards Museum, in Birdcage Walk, central London to enjoy the spectacle.

“It obviously wasn’t the first time they had played it. It was a polished performance,” he said.

“A few foreign tourists asked me what it was all about, but I was unable to give them an explanation. I was as stunned as they were.

“At one point the musicians even appeared to be putting together some moves to go with the music.

“Instead of marching in straight lines they formed a triangle,” he added.

The oldest and best known band in the Army, based at the capital’s Wellington Barracks, have actually been doing the routine for the last two months.

“The piece has been part of their summer repertoire for a number of events and they’ve been playing it publicly for the last eight weeks, including at the Windsor Tattoo,” a MoD spokesman said.

“It is just a coincidence and not a tribute to Jackson,” he added. (ANI)

Jacko looked picture of health two days before death

London, Jun 30 (ANI): King of Pop Michael Jackson is said to have been in incredible form just two days before his death.

Jacko was pictured strutting about the stage rehearsing his moves for his gigs at London’s O2, which was to start next month.

In a picture taken during rehearsals, the late singer could be seen performing a high-energy routine with a ‘This Is It’ lighting display flashing at the back.

“Michael was in better form than for years,” the Sun quoted a source, who had watched the Thriller hit maker’s final rehearsal in LA, as saying.

“He was preparing for what would have been an absolutely incredible show.

“He was laughing and joking with his dancers. He seemed to have so much energy – it’s hard to believe that 48 hours later he was dead,” the source said.

Even photographer Kevin Mazur, who had taken the shots, was impressed by the moves.

“When he hit the stage I was thrilled that the magical Michael Jackson was back,” he added. (ANI)

PCB asks Alam to submit Akhtar’s medical report

Lahore, May 15 (ANI): The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has asked coach Intikhab Alam to submit a medical report of the controversial fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar.

The PCB asked for the medical report after a mysterious health problem forced Akhtar to miss the conditioning camp in Bhurban.

“We want to have a look at the medical report because players are supposed to attend the conditioning camp which is primarily meant to check their fitness and endurance levels ahead of the Twenty20 World Cup,” PCB’s Chief Operating Officer, Saleem Altaf said.

Akhtar had said that doctors have advised him rest for a week, after he developed a skin infection near his groin area.

There are a few brows raised over the timing of Akhtar’s problem, as the management had made it clear well in advance that the conditioning camp would require the players to undergo a rigorous physical routine in order to get in perfect shape for the Twenty20 World Cup starting from June 5.

Several former cricketers and experts have raised questions over Akhtar’s fitness and his inclusion in the Twenty20 World Cup squad.

Akhtar, who returned to the national side in the Dubai series against Australia, was not at all impressive and struggled during the whole series.

He took just three wickets in four matches and didn’t bowl even a single 10-over spell in the series. (ANI)

Diet, exercise, weight maintenance are key to cut cancer risk

London, May 12 (ANI): A healthy diet, regular physical activity, and maintaining a healthy weight are the three best ways to ensure a reduced risk of cancer, according to recommendations by the World Cancer Research Fund.

Looking at the evidence on the links between diet and physical activity and cancer, an independent international panel of experts and researchers took five years to sift through 500,000 studies, and to analyse the 7,000 most relevant, to come up with 10 recommendations to best reduce a person’s risk of cancer.

And their main finding was that eating a healthy diet, being regularly physically active, and maintaining a healthy weight were the three best strategies.

The panel suggests that a healthy diet is based around fibre-rich plant foods with only modest amounts of alcohol, salt and red meat, and little if any processed meat, reports the Scotsman.

While the evidence suggests that fruits and veggies probably reduce risk of cancer, one needs to eat a wide variety to get as many different nutrients as possible.

The panel recommends that one should not take dietary supplements.

According to estimates, just eating healthily, exercising and maintaining a healthy body weight could prevent almost one-third of the most common cancers, and if followed these recommendations could also help reduce risk of other diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes.

The panel has also recommended avoiding sugary drinks and limiting consumption of foods that are energy dense, i.e., they have a lot of calories for their weight.

Limiting calories is important for cancer prevention because one of the report’s main messages is the evidence that being overweight increases risk of cancer is stronger now than ever before.

Thus, it is recommended that people should aim to be as lean as possible without becoming underweight.

And another way to maintain a healthy weight is to make sure that one is physically active, because it helps keeping you trim, and can also reduce your risk of cancer in its own right.

In their recommendations, experts have asked people to be active at a moderate level or more for at least half an hour a day.

However, being active doesn’t necessarily mean working out in the gym, but can even include things like brisk walking, cycling and even housework.

Also, the entire workout for the day should not be done in one go, which means that if you are walking ten minutes to the shops, that counts towards your total.

Incorporating activity into your existing daily routine is in fact the best way of sticking to it in the long term. (ANI)

Bungling aide leaves UK PM Brown red-faced

London, May 11 (ANI): British Prime Minister Gordon Brown was left red-faced on Sunday when a bungling aide left his make-up tips in a taxi.

The note, which was found among a pile of sensitive documents, told how the craggy-faced PM applies layers of slap and fake tan.

A white A4 sheet listed Brown’s make-up routine if he has to do it himself. It read:

1.Transparent Brush. Foam all over. This is believed to be an illuminating foam to give the PM’s face that certain glow.

2.Small pot under eyes, dimple, creases, blend in. This refers to the use of concealer to smooth out facial bumps and blemishes.

3.Clinique. Super balanced make-up. All over again, like painting a wall, and ears. Shut eyes over lids then with make-up pad smooth over liquid. This tells the PM to trowel foundation over his whole face.

4.Powder (dark brush) terracotta Guerlain, all over. Slap on fake tan bronzer.

Taking the shine off … powder

A Westminster insider said: “It’s an idiot’s guide to applying heavy make-up. It will cause deep embarrassment because the PM paints himself as a no-nonsense man’s man.”

Brown, 58, whose claims for a cleaner were revealed last week, has never put cosmetics on expenses.

But No 10 officials will be more concerned by other papers in the aide’s rucksack, left in a London black cab after the ministerial party arrived at Kings Cross from Yorkshire on Friday.

It contained discussions on how to handle the expenses scandal – and a schedule for Brown’s trip, marked Confidential.

Times of departure, the cars the PM and Home Secretary Jacqui Smith were in and their train times were detailed. It could have been put to deadly use if it fell into the hands of terrorists before the journey.

The cabbie handed it to The Sun, which returned it to Downing Street last night. (ANI)

Dolly Parton’s not-so weighty issues

Washington, May 2 (ANI): Dolly Parton is familiar with what goes behind the scenes to get a fit looking body but the country singer is far from being obsessed.

The Grammy-Award winner said at the Broadway opening of 9 to 5: The Musical in NYC that there was not much to debate about on health issues.

“I’m up and I’m down, but I don’t have any tips for anybody. It’s a bitch any way you look at it. You either starve or you get fat,” Us magazine quoted her as saying.

The 63-year-old also revealed her own routine included just “a tiny little bit of squats and sit-ups” but she does not ignore the scale completely.

She added: “I’m very short, so I just have to watch my weight because I have a big appetite.”

And the actress-philanthropist further revealed alternatives to dieting, saying: “You need a good push-up bra — and wear clothes that make you look good.” (ANI)

Keeping mentally fit: the daily crossword is not enough

Bonn, Germany – A man sits on a train solving a crossword puzzle, a woman broods over a Sudoku grid while an ad for an electronic memory game flashes across a television screen. There is no shortage of ways to improve the brain’s memory powers – after all, lots of people want to improve their mental abilities.

But are Sudoku, crosswords and other training games any good at improving memory? Are they really effective in training the mind or just a nice way of passing the time?

“If you train your brain, you can improve your performance,” says Carsten Brandenburg from Germany’s Memory Training Association. But not every exercise can radically change a person’s ability to remember things.

“If you repeat the same kind of exercise, your mind gets into a routine, and there is no challenge anymore,” says Brandenburg.

Sudoku is most effective in the initial stages. “The brain is not used to thinking in that manner and that’s why new connections are made between the individual nerve cells,” explains Brandenburg.

The chairwoman of the Professional Association of German Psychiatrists, Christa Roth-Sackenheim says, “We have recently come to understand that the human brain can make new connections and even new paths.”

That explains why Sudoku and computer memory games can have a positive effect on the brain’s memory performance. “You don’t just improve your concentration, you also practice strategic thinking and how to link different facts,” explains the psychiatrist. That ability can be useful in daily life.

The most effective puzzles are those that test more than your existing knowledge which excludes puzzles such as crosswords.

There are a number of books and games for electronic consoles that go in that direction, according to Brandenburg, who also works as a memory coach at Germany’s Memory Clinic in Essen.

“The best exercises are well designed and gradually become more challenging as they progress,” he says.

But computer games and electronic memory puzzles are not all-purpose weapons against memory loss, says psychiatrist Michael Rapp from Berlin’s Charite University Hospital.

“There is no exercise that can make a person more intelligent overall,” says the head of the clinic’s geriatric psychiatry working group.

You don’t need to buy expensive games to keep your brain fit. If you follow a few pointers every day, you will improve your memory or at the very least, keep it at the present level.

“Communicating is essential,” says Brandenburg, adding, “That’s how you learn to query things, gain new knowledge and grapple with questions.”

Another way of improving memory is to learn a new language, according to Roth-Sackenheim. Listening to music, doing domestic chores alone or pursuing a hobby can also help.

“Engaging in physical exercise is important for all age groups,” says Roth-Sackenheim. “That’s because sport trains the brain because you have to remember certain physical movements and practice your coordination.”

There is another alternative – keeping busy with your grandchildren. When elderly people try to understand young people’s lives, they also exercise their brains. (dpa)

Nightly bedtime routine improves maternal mood, kids’sleep

Washington, May 1 (ANI): In the journal SLEEP, researchers have demonstrated that the use of a consistent bedtime routine contributes to improvements in multiple aspects of infant and toddler sleep, bedtime behavior and maternal mood.

Results indicate that the establishment of a nightly bedtime routine produced significant reductions in problematic sleep behaviors for infants and toddlers. Improvements were seen in latency and sleep onset and in the number and duration of night wakings.

Toddlers were less likely to call out to their parents or get out of their crib/bed during the night. Sleep continuity increased and there was a significant decrease in the number of mothers who rated their child’s sleep as problematic. Maternal mood also significantly improved.

According to the study, sleep problems are one of the most common concerns of parents of young children; approximately 20 to 30 percent of infants and toddlers experience sleep difficulties. Previous studies have found that successful treatment of children’s sleep problems with behavioral interventions also result in improvements in parental well-being.

According to principal investigator, Jodi Mindell, PhD, professor of psychology at Saint Joseph’s University in Philadelphia, PA., creating a bedtime routine is an easy change that can significantly improve both the child’s sleep and the mother’s quality of life.

“There is no question that maternal mood and children’s sleep impact one another. The better a child sleeps and the easier bedtime is, the better a mother’s mood is going to be,” said Mindell.

“In addition, a mom who is not feeling tense, depressed, and fatigued is going to be calmer at bedtime, which will help a child settle down to sleep,” the expert added.

Data were collected from 405 mothers and their infant or toddler,(206 infants between the ages of 7 and 18 months and 199 toddlers between the ages of 18 and 36 months), who then participated in two age-specific three week studies.

Families were randomly assigned to a routine or control group. The first week of the study served as a baseline, during which the mothers followed their child’s usual bedtime weeks.

During the following two weeks mothers were instructed to conduct a specific bedtime routine, while the control group continued with their child’s normal bedtime procedure.

All children included in the study had a small to severe sleep problem, as identified by the mother. Problems included more than three nightly wakings, awakening for longer than 60 minutes per night, or having a total daily sleep duration of less than nine hours. All mothers completed an expanded version of the Brief Infant Sleep Questionnaire (BRISQ), and provided subjective data concerning their child’s sleep habits.

Parents in the infant routine group were given a three-step bedtime procedure to follow that included a bath, a massage and quiet activities (such as cuddling and singing); lights were to be turned out within 30 minutes of the end of the bath.

Mothers then proceeded to put the child to sleep as they normally did, by either putting the child to bed while awake or rocking them to sleep. Thus, the only instituted change was the routine. The toddler group followed the same routine, except that mothers were instructed to apply lotion rather than give the child a massage.

Research shows that daily routines in general lead to predictable and less stressful environments for young children and are related to parenting competence, improved daytime behaviors and lower maternal mental distress. (ANI)

Mars exploration rover Spirit resumes driving

Washington, Apr 25 (ANI): For the first time since April 8, NASA’s Mars Exploration Rover Spirit went on a drive on April 23.

The drive took Spirit about 1.7 meters (5.6 feet) toward destinationsbout 150 meters (about 500 feet) away.

The engineers facilitated the drive while they investigate bouts of amnesia and other unusual behaviour exhibited by Spirit in the past two weeks.

Already, the rover has operated more than 20 times longer than its original prime mission on Mars.

This week, rover engineers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., judged that it would be safe to send Spirit commands for Thursday’s drive.

The engineers were thinking if the rover experience another amnesia event, the day’s outcome could be helpful in diagnosing those events.

Thrice in the past two weeks, Spirit has failed to record data from a day’s activity period into non-volatile flash memory, which is a type of computer memory where information is preserved even when power is off, such as when the rover naps to conserve power.

“We expect we will see more of the amnesia events, and we want to learn more about them when we do,” said JPL’s Sharon Laubach, chief of the rover sequencing team, which develops and checks each day’s set of commands.

Researchers are also investigating two other types of problems Spirit has experienced recently- failing to wake up for three consecutive communication sessions about two weeks ago and rebooting its computer on April 11, 12 and 18.

However, engineers have not yet found any causal links among these three types of events.

Last week, the researchers checked whether moving the rover’s high-gain antenna could trigger problems, but routine communication via that dish antenna resumed on April 20.

Spirit has maintained stable power and thermal conditions throughout the problem events this month, although power output by its solar panels has been significantly reduced since mid-2007 by dust covering the panels.

“We decided not to wait until finishing the investigations before trying to drive again. Given Spirit’s limited power and the desire to make progress toward destinations to the south, there would be risks associated with not driving,” said Laubach.

Researchers have made a change in Spirit’s daily routine in order to help in the diagnostic work if the rover experiences another failure to record data into flash memory. (ANI)

Phone saves the day

HOW DO politicians communicate with people waiting to hear them for hours at election meetings in hilly areas where choppers cannot land due to bad weather? Politicians in Uttarakhand appear to have found a solution to this problem. When faced with problems like bad weather they prefer using their mobile phones to address poll rallies while being comfortably airborne.

State BJP president Bachhi Singh Rawat made such a beginning on Monday. And by his own admission “quite accidentally”.

Though “not a techno-savvy” politician, Rawat hit upon the idea of addressing some of his election rallies via the cell phone when he along with some of his colleagues were on a whirlwind tour of Nainital Lok Sabh constituency, from where he is contesting election for the first time. Rawat “thought of that” when the chopper carrying him was caught in high velocity winds while flying over Sufi, Nidar and Shilalekh, all hilly areas falling in the district.

“Looking at the high speed winds blowing over these three spots the captain refused to land the helicopter,” said Rawat adding landing it (helicopter) would be all the more risky at Sufi, “the first of the windy spots where we were reaching” owing to it being closely surrounded by hills. No wonder, the very next moment saw Rawat “reaching for my cell-phone, switching it on and, telling my party colleague at the venue of the election meeting below to put his mobile phone a bit closer to the mike so that people could hear me clearly.

” “Things having been fixed as suggested, I instantly began my speech over the cell-phone by profusely apologising to the people for being late and not being able to be physically present at the election meeting,” said Rawat. The same routine was followed when the chopper flew over Nidar.

But those who had come to hear him at Shilalekh had to go back disappointed, as he could not address them due to weak signal. Rawat, no doubt, described that “tiny technological wonder” (mobile phones) as “very, very useful for the politicians as well”.

Claudia Schiffer ‘lives’ in a zoo!

Washington, Mar 30 (ANI): Supermodel Claudia Schiffer has fulfilled her childhood dream of living in a farm by building up a collection of countryside animals and exotic pets.

The 38-year-old model keeps her pets at her country retreat in Suffolk, England.

Her farm contains three dogs, two sheep, four chickens, a pregnant pig, two black swans, four ducks, three tortoises and a parrot.

Schiffer compares her everyday routine to living in a “zoo”.

“I always dreamed that one day I would like a farm with lots of animals, so I thought I’d get little amounts of each and find out how it works,” Contactmusic quoted her as saying.

Schiffer has made all possible arrangement to make the farm eco-friendly. She has installed an Austrian Wood-fired eco-boiler to heat the 17th century property. (ANI)

Punjab villagers take up yoga

Ferozpur, Mar 27 (ANI): Believing in the truism “Health is Wealth”, the villagers of Punjab’s Ferozpur District are promoting a yoga campaign in their community.

For many of them, their day starts at dawn and the first task of the day is to practise yoga.

This yoga drive has been taken up by the rural folk of Begawali village. They are not backed by the government or supported by any NGO.

Most of the villagers are engaged in farming whole day and in their free time they practice yoga

The credit for promoting yoga in the village goes to Lal Chand, who taught and spread awareness about yoga.

“Nobody in the village used to practice yoga before. I was practicing it alone. Now slowly, everybody has joined in and every family practices it. Earlier, villagers were suffering with several ailments, but now as they are practicing yoga, they are fine and healthy”, said Lal Chand.

Yoga has become a part of their daily routine. They have treated many ailments by practicing yoga regularly.

They keep fast once a week and do yoga everyday. Even womenfolk of the village are practicing it actively.

” I was taking medicines before, but it was not helpful. Rather, I was feeling more unwell. Then I started doing yoga and it helped very much. I am absolutely healthy now and actively managing household chores”, said Raj Rani , a villager.
They have also collectively banned alcohol in their village. A local store, which used to sell liquor, is closed now. They have vouched to adopt healthy options for improving their lifestyle. By Avtar Gill (ANI)

Robots take centre stage in U.S. war in Afghanistan

Washington, Mar.24 (ANI): The U.S. military is deploying the robots to Afghanistan to navigate the country’s treacherous terrain.

Called BigDogs, these robots are being deployed in addition to big guns.

The BigDogs – four-legged robots that can navigate the country’s treacherous terrain – and pilotless helicopters than can transport tons of supplies to very remote bases are just two of the new weapons being tested in Afghanistan, reports Fox News.

The machine’s creator, Boston Dynamics, has a motto – “dedicated to the way things move” – and that’s precisely what is both jarring and fascinating about its invention.

Using a gasoline engine that emits an eerie lawnmower buzz, BigDog has animal-inspired articulated legs that absorb shock and recycle kinetic energy from one step to the next.

Its robot brain, a sophisticated computer, controls locomotion sensors that adapt rapidly to the environment. The entire control system regulates, steers and navigates ground contact. A laser gyroscope keeps BigDog on his metal paws – even when the robot slips, stumbles or is kicked over.

Boston Dynamics says BigDog can run as fast as 4 miles per hour, walk slowly, lie down and climb slopes up to 35 degrees. BigDog’s heightened sense can also survey the surrounding terrain and become alert to potential danger.

All told, the BigDog bears an uncanny resemblance to a living organic animal.

Routine helicopter flights operating 24 hours a day, year round, are crucial for the American mission.

The Marine Corps has recently called for unmanned cargo flights to carry essentials to isolated areas that can be reached only by air.

Enter the K-MAX, a remote-controlled helicopter designed to transport heavy loads – even in Afghanistan’s high altitudes.

The K-MAX’s unique rotor design – two intermeshed rotors turning in opposite directions and slightly angled to prevent the blades from colliding – give this unmanned aircraft a distinct advantage.

“All the energy goes into the lift and eliminates the need for the tail rotor,” said Frans Jurgens, spokesman for Kaman Aerospace Corp, which manufactures the K-MAX.

The design enables the relatively small chopper to tow up to 6,000 pounds.

“The K-MAX is basically an aerial truck,” Jurgens said. (ANI)