FUNTOOSH

April 21, 2011

A comprehensive guide to India






Living

More and more, foreigners are coming to India for reasons other than sightseeing.

Business wise, India is opening up and international companies are testing the waters.  Foreign companies, large and small, are sending employees from abroad to live and work in India.  Foreign consultants are coming.  So are specialist, educators, trainers, and others.

These people are making India their home, at least for a while.  More will come.  Similarly, some of the many Indians who have been working or studying abroad are coming home, often after a long absence.  They bring influences from their experiences abroad and are adjusting again to a country that has changed while they were gone.

There is also a large group of urbanites who are very international in awareness and attitude.  This section is for these groups.  Can you get a good wine in India? What about international schools? How do you find a place to live? How do you furnish it? What are the legalities - visas and such? What can you buy here? What about health issues? How do expats and others feel about living here? What is the insider's scoop on life in various cities? What are the best products to buy? These issues, and more, are the kinds we'd like address, and we'd like your input.












This section will grow as we get data and as readers participate. Please send us your opinions and your questions.  Tell us what you'd like to see.  Thanks.

Endosulfan usage in India: map with statistics

Endosulfan usage in India as per survey conducted in the year 2007


Voice of Keralam has obtained a copy of a map which shows Endosulfan usage distribution in India in the year 2007.

As observed in the map, Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh, Andhra Pradesh and part of West Bengal use more than 1000 kilolitres of Endosulfan. Also, states such as Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh, Gujarat, Chandigarh, Uttaranchal, Tamil Nadu, and Haryana amongst others use 500-100 Kilolitres of Endosulfan. 
 
This clearly shows Endosulfan usage in India is spread across various geographical areas of the country. However, the victims reported have been largely in the state of Kerala, which has virtually no Endosulfan usage across the state. This leaves a lot unanswered in term of the current debate on the insecticide and poses difficult questions to those who have called for a blanket ban of the molecule across the country and the world. 

What do you feel about these findings?  Do you think there is more to the “endosulfan poising’ story in India?

India Map

near India

India 
Map

Blank Map of India

This is the 100th post on Free Printable Maps, so I decided to focus on the country that I am most interested in travelling to next: India. But I've already posted some good maps of India and South Asia, so today I decided to post a blank map of India collection, for the benefit of students learning about India in geography class, and those students' teachers. Some of the blank India map images show India alone, with no political boundaries, while others showing the surrounding countries and India's state borders.

Here are the blank India map downloads:

Blank map of India showing the Indian states' boundaries
Blank India map showing the surrounding countries and Indian 
Ocean
Completely blank map of India with on boundaries or other 
countries

I hope you found a blank map of India that was useful for your studies and reference. India is a fascinating place, and I plan to visit very soon!

Indian Women’s Hot Western Trends

Modeling Pics - Indian Women’s Western Trends:

Sonakshi Sinha Latest Photos

Sonakshi Sinha Latest Photoshoots ever:

April 19, 2011

Google's mobile hopes go beyond Nexus One

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif.--Forget about the Google Phone already: the Nexus One is merely a blip on Google's long-term strategy for the rise of mobile computing.
One could be forgiven for assuming Google was about to knock over the smartphone market--two and a half years after Apple did just that--with one quick blow going into Tuesday's Android event with a phone designed by Google and sold at retail by Google. After all, that's what the Internet said would happen leading up to the event.
Phones like the Nexus One are more sexy than mobile distribution strategies.
Phones like the Nexus One are more sexy than mobile distribution strategies.
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
But what actually emerged from Building 43 on Tuesday is just another Android phone: a nice one, to be sure, but one featuring hardware designed completely by smartphone maker HTC and software features that will soon be available to other Android phones with advanced hardware, like the Droid. The real story is perhaps less sexy than a sleek iPhone killer that so many techies would love to see compete with Apple, but it's a sign that Google CEO Eric Schmidt has learned his lessons about competition over a lifetime in the tech industry.
What Google is trying to do is gradually reel in Apple over a period of years by emphasizing open phones with open application stores sold through a variety of channels running an open-source operating system. And, for good measure, it's also trying to do nothing less than reinvent the way mobile phones are sold in the U.S.
In order to do that, Google is going to have to do two things. It will need to show that consumers are willing to embrace a distribution channel for smartphones that is not controlled by wireless carriers, who will never give up their gatekeeper role over access and pricing of these phones if they are not forced to do so by customer demand. And it will have to continue to create compelling mobile software that serves as a check on the iPhone.
Google is certainly proud of the Nexus One. But it didn't build the phone, which, in any event, is at best a modest improvement on the current generation of Android phones.
According to a source familiar with the process, the Nexus One was designed by employees of One & Co., a San Francisco design firm acquired in 2008 by HTC. Andy Rubin, vice president of engineering for Android at Google and leader of the project, later told GigaOm that "there are no hardware or industrial designers on my team." Leading up to Tuesday's event, widespread reports claimed that Google had designed the Nexus One by itself, and while the company may have specified hardware requirements to go with its software, that's not the same as designing the phone.
So while Google is not making its own hardware, as Rubin maintained back in October, it will eventually be doing the second thing he claimed Google wasn't doing that day: competing with companies it formerly considered customers.
Google's Andy Rubin, head of Android development
Google's Andy Rubin, head of Android development
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET)
With T-Mobile and Verizon on board for the Nexus One launch, all appears rosy between Google and those partners, who even though Android was a free product were essentially the end customers of that software up to this point. But make no mistake: Google's ultimate goal is to create a business plan where top-notch Android phones are created by companies like Motorola and HTC and then sold through a virtual mall of sorts where carriers like T-Mobile and Verizon have to compete for your business.
Indeed, in the same report referenced above, Om Malik's sources claim that behind the scenes, Motorola and Verizon are annoyed as they were expected to be leading up to the launch of the Nexus One. That's because Google's plans for the Nexus One and future Nexus One phones involve cutting out the heart of the smartphone market.
At the moment, the carriers cut three-way deals with the phone makers and operating system vendors to sell phones exclusively on their network, hoping to get the best phones on the market as to entice as many people as possible to sign up for two-year contracts with data service. What Google is proposing is a business model in which you pick a phone and then separately pick a carrier, all without having to leave your house.
In other words, it would be like buying a PC. Comcast doesn't have an exclusive deal with Dell where if you want one of their PCs, you have to get it from Comcast and lock yourself into a two-year cable modem package. It means wireless carriers would have to compete on pricing and the quality of their networks rather than exclusive deals for hot phones.
Google argues this is what caused the PC-based Internet to flourish, and if the mobile Internet is to do the same thing, it needs someone to break the logjam of carriers, phone makers, and software providers.
But will it work? In a way, Google is currently doing exactly what it decries: it's offering an excellent phone through an exclusive channel tied to a single carrier. Later this spring the Nexus One will be available on Verizon's network, but it's harder to sell unlocked CDMA phones (Verizon's technology) because they don't use removable SIM cards found in phones based on the GSM family of standards. So that phone might well be tied to a two-year Verizon contract, and Verizon confirmed Tuesday that it won't be sold anywhere other than Google's store.
But Rubin said during a question-and-answer session following Tuesday's event that Google has to be in the game before it can start shaking up the market. He linked the potential for this type of strategy to the same revolution that took place in retailing, with companies like Amazon.com proving that people were willing to buy products over the Internet without checking them out in stores first. That allowed companies like Amazon to eliminate the overhead associated with maintaining a physical retail store and consumers to have more flexibility with their spending.
In a way, the strategy behind the Nexus One is very Googly: launch early and iterate constantly. Schmidt's previous gigs at Novell and Sun Microsystems showed him what could happen when innovative companies were slowly subsumed by determined competitors with deep pockets (Novell versus Microsoft) and open software married to cheap hardware (Sun versus Linux). This time, he's marrying both in an attempt to remake mobile computing in Google's image by taking on Apple and the wireless carriers.
Don't expect Google to sell a ton of Nexus One phones in 2010. Rubin told GigaOm he thinks the company can sell 150,000 this year, which is a fraction of the 1.8 billion smartphones that Pyramid Research recently said it expects will be sold over the next five years.
The upside for Google is that even if this strategy doesn't work, the mobile Internet will still carry advertising.

April 14, 2011

Preity Zinta in Yash Raj Camp

Preity Zinta in Yash Raj Camp  Preity Zinta in Yash Raj’s next!: Latest Bollywood Buzz has it that dimpled beauty Preity Zinta is all set to make her comeback with the Yash Raj’s new film ‘Mere Brother ki Dulhan’, starring cutie pie Imran Khan and gorgeous Katrina Kaif. The film is a musical, a story of an upper-middle class North Indian family where the young Khan falls in love with his brother’s would-be wife!


With an interesting story line, it is being said that Preity will be donning an all new glamorous look for the film. The pretty actress, however, maintains complete secrecy about it.

Preity who portrayed offbeat roles in Deepa Mehta’s ‘Earth’ and Rituparno Ghosh’s ‘The Last Lear’ will now be seen flaunting her glamorous avatar and sex-appeal. So all the men who have been craving to see Preity back on the silver screen can heave a sigh of relief and sport a big smile.

Salman Khan Wallpapers Gallery

Salman Khan Wallpapers Gallery
Bollywood Bad Boy Salman khan.Wallpaper Collection in hd .Million of Gilra hearth thorb .His Last Flim "Dabangg"Super Duper hits break all reacord of collection .here wallpaper Collection for your Desktop


Salman Khan Movies Wallpapers Gallery

Emraan Hashmi Wallpapers



Emraan Hashmi Wallpapers - Pictures - Bollywood Celebrities Photo Gallery - Wallpapers
Bollywood Serail kisser .His Latest Flim Crook in this time in Theater .

Blog Archive