China quake toll mounts to 1,100, hopes for survivors fade

Beijing, Apr 17(ANI): The death toll from the devastating earthquake that struck a Tibetan area in northwest China’s Qinghai Province rose to 1,100 on Saturday morning, with another 417 remaining missing.

Wednesday’s earthquake that measured 7.1 on the Richter scale, is believed to be the strongest to hit the country in nearly two years, and has left 11,744 people injured, including 1,192 serious cases.

Rescuers said that the toll is expected to rise as freezing nights, with temperatures around minus three degrees C, become increasingly difficult for survivors under the debris to bear.

Altitude sickness and low oxygen have already caused tremendous challenges for rescuers, volunteers and reporters alike, The China Daily reports.

The quake and a string of aftershocks, the biggest being 6.3 magnitude, toppled houses, temples, gas stations and electric poles, triggered landslides, damaged roads, cut power supplies and disrupted telecommunications. A reservoir also developed cracks, which workers are trying to patch.

Chinese President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have ordered local authorities to spare no effort in search and rescue operations, and in the caring of the victims.

According to the Qinghai provincial government, over 5,000 rescuers, including soldiers and medical workers, are at the quake-hit region,

Authorities in the neighboring provinces of Gansu and Sichuan and the Tibet autonomous region are also involved in the rescue efforts. (ANI)

Just be nice to others to make the world full of kind people

London, September 20 (ANI): Spreading altruism through social networks can make people across the world kind to one another, says an expert.

Nicholas Christakis, of Harvard Medical School in Boston, has observed in a study that one’s kindness can turn a friend kind to someone else he/she knows.

To demonstrate this, Christakis designed a cooperation game in which 120 students were organised into groups of four, and asked to give money to their group.

The game lasted five rounds, and after each round the students were reorganised so that no two appeared in the same group twice.

At the end of each found, the participants were told how much the others in their group had given.

Christakis observed that if someone gave a dollar more than the predicted group average, the others in that group gave approximately 20 cents more than expected in the next round.

The altruism persisted into the third round, said the researcher.

A separate study conducted by Christakis’s team showed that cooperative behaviour spreads to three degrees of separation, from friend to friend to friend, reports New Scientist.

Based on their observations, Christakis and colleagues came to the conclusion that a person who is popular and well connected could have a special role to play, as his/her compassionate acts could resonate further through the network, and he/she was also more likely to benefit from other people’s kindness. (ANI)

Hot weekend but relief likely soon

NEW DELHI: If Friday was uncomfortably warm, brace yourself for some more heat over the weekend. According to the Met department, the next three
days are likely to have clear sky due to which the day temperature will probably increase. However, by the middle of next week, an approaching western disturbance could spell thundershowers and squalls in some areas over northwest India.

The minimum temperature in Delhi went up a degree higher since Thursday to record at 21.5 degrees Celsius, three degrees above normal. This has been the highest minimum on April 3 since 2004. In 2004, the minimum on April 3 was 21 degrees Celsius. The maximum temperature went up from 35.1 degrees Celsius on Thursday to 36 degrees Celsius, two degrees above normal. The highest maximum on April 3 in the past five years was 38 degrees Celsius in 2004.

“For the next three days, there is no forecast of rain. The sky will remain clear which indicates high day temperatures over northwest India. However, the three days after that are likely to experience thundershowers and squalls. An approaching western disturbance around April 5 will see some rainfall activity around April 7-9,” said B P Yadav, director, Met.

“The weather had been so pleasant in the past several days and we were really hopeful that this pleasant spell would continue for some more time. However, when I stepped out in the afternoon I was caught by surprise by the sudden heat. I dread that this is the sign of peak summer finally setting in the city,” said Nitika Khandelwal, a resident of Dwarka.

Added R L Khanna from Green Park Extension: “After a long time I had to turn on the airconditioning in my car because it was suddenly so hot. I was driving from my Nehru Place office to Connaught Place for a meeting in the afternoon.”

Now, a device that buzzes you to straighten up when you slouch

London, Mar 28 (ANI): You can now stop worrying about the way you look while sitting, for iPosture a small gadget, which can be stuck on the skin and buzzes to remind the wearer to sit up straight, helping improve posture, has come to your rescue.

The revolutionary device vibrates discretely when the wearer slouches by more than three degrees for one minute.

Once the posture is corrected the buzzing stops and users have been found to adopt better habits after wearing the device for four hours a day for up to a month.

The iPosture gadget can be worn while sitting, standing or walking, making it ideal for workers who spend hours in front of a computer and can be stuck to the skin, worn as a necklace or attached to a bra strap.

It uses a slimline battery like those found in most watches or calculators and monitors posture every few seconds.

Dr Moacir Schnapp, a neurologist and pain management specialist, believes his invention is the easiest way to improve posture.

“We often forget how much posture affects how we look and feel, as well as how it influences how people perceive us. Everyone is afraid of developing a pooch or beer belly but we don’t realise the role poor posture can play in that, Telegraph quoted him, as saying.

“Posture directly affects how tall and thin we look and how confident we appear to others.

“But we are all so busy we hardly have time to think about it. The iPosture is designed to do the thinking for us, he added.

It may be bought on the Internet for 50pounds. (ANI)