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I am Krishna Srinivasan working as Software Engineer in Bangalore,India.My interest is everything related to Java,Google and Opensource products. Apart from my tech work, I love listening music, watching movies and reading books.
Labels: Linux
Ranatunga, who was appointed head of SLC by the country's President Mahinda Rajapakse earlier this month, said the board was surviving on bank borrowings.
"We are now surviving on a six-million dollar bank overdraft," Ranatunga told AFP in an interview this week. "We also plan to ask for a short-term loan from the Indian cricket board to be set off against some of our future tour revenues."
Allegations of kickbacks have dogged Sri Lanka's cricket administration for years and Ranatunga has asked a team of auditors to investigate the board's finances. SLC wasn't short of sponsors after they won the World Cup under Ranatunga's captaincy in 1996, but the kitty has been running dry in recent times. read full story
Labels: Cricket
Labels: India
Inaugurating the second annual conference of the Indian Science and Technology Entrepreneurs’ Parks and Business Incubators’ Association (ISBA) in the city today, he said that the State Government’s effort is to provide direct employment in the IT sector to at least 2 lakh people in five years through these efforts. This goal will be achievable only with the active participation of budding entrepreneurs, he added.
The business incubation facilities at the Technopark Thiruvananthapuram are a role model for the entire nation, the Chief Minister said. Inspired by the success of Technopark’s business incubator, the State Government will encourage the setting up of business incubators in all engineering colleges and polytechnics in the State, he added.
In his address to the gathering, Dr Ajay Kumar, Secretary, IT, Government of Kerala, said that business incubators will be established in all the district IT parks that the State Government plans to set up. Similarly, space for the business incubator in the ITES Habitat Centre in Kochi will be doubled, he added.
Earlier, addressing the gathering, the State Industries Minister, Mr Elamaram Kareem, said that the State needed a culture of entrepreneurship to flourish.
The three-day ISBA conference is being hosted by Technopark Thiruvananthapuram and will focus on the theme ‘creating global enterprises through the incubation route’.
Labels: India
Labels: TATA
Labels: TATA
Labels: Eric Schmidt, Google, Lary Page, Sergy Brin
XiTi's breakdown of monthly Firefox market share gains for the past year show that the browser climbed from about 20 percent two years ago to 23.1 percent in December 2006 to a record 28 percent in December 2007. Firefox market share hit a plateau and hovered around 27.7 percent between June and September before taking a 0.7 percent drop in October, but then recovered prior to reaching 28 percent last month.
XiTi also provides market share statistics for 32 individual European countries. Finland currently has the highest Firefox market share in Europe with 45.4 percent, followed by Slovenia with 44.6 percent and Poland with 42.4 percent.
In December alone, Internet Explorer fell to 66.1 percent in Europe after losing 0.9 percent market share. During the same time period, Firefox gained 0.7 percent. The statistics show that Safari currently has only 2 percent market share in Europe.
Labels: Firefox
Tata Consultancy Services’s decision to pare staff wages has triggered rumblings in the Indian outsourcing landscape with employees beginning to wonder if indeed they are circling the drain before the slowdown in the world’s largest economy drags them into a quagmire. |
Even as employees shuffle uneasily in their seats, top officials at Indian outsourcers closed ranks and sought to allay concerns claiming there was no generic parallel that can be drawn from the action of the country’s largest software exporter. |
On Tuesday, TCS in an email communique to its 100,000 plus employees said a combination of internal and external factors saw it failing to meet its Economic Value Added target—a financial performance method calculated as the net operating after taxes profit minus a charge for the opportunity cost of capital invested. |
Infosys Technologies, the closest Indian rival of TCS, chose not to read anything into the missive. “It is not an industry issue,” said Infosys Chief Financial Officer V Balakrishnan. |
On its part, TCS said, though it met its revenues targets, the EVA target forms the basis for the variable pay computation and has been given in advance, each month during Oct-Dec period. |
Based on the audited results, the EVA-based variable payout amounts to Rs 293 crore for the quarter. The actual variable payout based on expected EVA given in advance amounts to Rs 376 crore. |
Therefore, the advance payment that has to be adjusted amounting to Rs 83 crore, will be recovered during the current quarter from the employees. |
The recovery would be reflected in employee wages in the months of February and March 2008. |
“I think it is a company specific strategy. And right now, if you look at our own quarter and the way that business, is growing, I think volumes are not an issue at all,” said Ganesh Natarajan, vice-chairman of industry body Nasscom and managing director of Zensar Tech. |
Labels: Microsoft, Windows Vista
Labels: SCWCD 5.0
Labels: SCJP 1.6, SCJP 1.6 Books
Labels: Google, Google Labs
As of 2008, the only official integration for Gears is Google Reader, although there are rumours of offline functionality for Google Calendar, along with a report on Google Blogoscoped claiming that Google Docs now has partial offline access.
A spokesperson from Google's US headquarters told ZDNet.co.uk sister site CNET News.com that the company is "working on enabling many of our applications to run on Google Gears, but we don't have anything more specific to share at this time". read full story
Labels: Google, Google Labs
The company said net income for the quarter ended Dec. 31 fell to $206 million, or 15 cents a share, from $269 million, or 19 cents a share, for the same period a year ago. Contributing to the drop were stock-based compensation and other expenses. Operating income for the quarter plunged 38% to $191 million from $308 million a year ago.
Revenues rose 8% to $1.8 billion from $1.7 billion a year ago. Marketing services, which include online advertising sales, rose by 7% to $1.6 billion from $1.5 billion. Revenues from Yahoo's owned-and-operated sites rose by 23%, while sales on affiliate Web sites increased by 13%.
During a conference call with financial analysts, Yahoo chief executive Jerry Yang announced there would be a "realignment" of 1,000 jobs at the company, which had 14,300 employees as of the end of last year. As a result, the company expected to incur a $20 million to $25 million charge. Some employees would be shifted to other jobs, and the company planned to add people in areas deemed as priorities.
Yang told analysts the company was spending money to change its advertising platform and operations, and expected to exit 2008 stronger and more competitive, and return to higher levels of operating cash flow growth next year. "We're not tinkering around the edges," Yang said. "We're making significant and game-changing investments in Yahoo's future." read full story
Labels: Jerry Yeng, Yahoo, Yahoo CEO, Yahoo Founder
Labels: India
Few authors are as qualified to answer those questions as Kamal Nath. Known at home and throughout the world as the face of twenty-first century India, as well as a major architect of India’s reform, Mr. Nath has spent his entire professional life within the corridors of power, helping to shape the policies that have catapulted his nation to world prominence.
In India’s Century, Mr. Nath goes beyond the “flatworld” view to reveal the roots of the Indian economic miracle. With a compelling blend of economic analysis, political insight, and cultural observation, he traces his nation’s emergence from colonial rule in 1947 through four decades of planned economies, the gradual liberalization of India’s economy in the 1990s, and finally, the rise of the Indian global giant.
Nath also explores his people’s unique can-do attitude (also known as jugaad) and the ages-old entrepreneurial spirit that is once again free to express itself at every level of Indian society. Along the way Minister Nath provides understanding for businesspeople and world policy makers attemptattempting to formulate strategies for forging a mutually beneficial engagement with India in the twentyfirst century.
India’s Century is must reading for business strategists, public policy makers, and every thoughtful reader who wishes to understand more about the world’s largest, most vibrant democracy and the role it is likely to play on the global stage in the years ahead.
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Michael Yuan and Thomas Heute show how JBoss Seam enables you to create web applications that would have been difficult or impossible with previous Java frameworks. Through hands-on examples and a complete case study application, you’ll learn how to leverage JBoss Seam’s breakthrough state management capabilities; integrate business processes and rules; use AJAX with Seam; and deploy your application into production, one step at a time. Coverage includes
How JBoss Seam builds on–and goes beyond–the Java EE platform
• Using the “Stateful Framework”: conversations, workspaces, concurrent conversations, and transactions
• Integrating the web and data components: validation, clickable data tables, and bookmarkable web pages
• Creating AJAX and custom UI components, enabling AJAX for existing JSF components, and JavaScript integration via Seam Remoting
• Managing business processes, defining stateful pageflows, and implementing rule-based security
• Testing and optimizing JBoss Seam applications
• Deploying in diverse environments: with Tomcat, with production databases, in clusters, without EJB 3, and more
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Labels: Jboss Seam
Bangalore Tiger is the story of Wipro’s transformation and its impact on the tech services industry and the rules of global competition. BusinessWeek senior writer Steve Hamm takes you inside the halls of this transnational phenomenon to reveal the true secrets of Wipro’s superior business: its people, principles, and core competencies.
From Wipro’s triumphs to its missteps, Hamm mines a treasure of business lessons, explaining how and, more important, why it is necessary to:
Hamm also gives you a rare glimpse into the mind of Wipro’s charismatic chairman and thought leader, Azim Premji. Guiding Wipro’s growth every step of the way, Premji was one of the first business leaders in India to decree that his company would not pay bribes. You’ll see how his adoption of world-class business processes helped Wipro thrive—and how Wipro is helping to fulfill his dream of a better educated, more prosperous India. Removing the shroud of secrecy around Indian management principles, Hamm provides a real-world blueprint for operating a successful transnational organization, as viewed through the eye of the Bangalore Tiger.
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Labels: SteveJobs
Michael Dell's revolutionary insight has allowed him to persevere against all odds, and Direct from Dell contains valuable information for any business leader. His strategies will show you effective ways to grow your business and will help you save time on costly mistakes by following his direct model for success.
Direct from Dell is organized into two parts. The first recounts the history and the enormous growth of Dell Computer. The second part focuses on Dell's management approach, from developing customer focus to creating alliances with suppliers. The book manages to avoid most of the promotional and self-congratulatory air that seem to plague so many first-person CEO tomes. Anyone who has followed the PC industry or would like insight into Dell Computer's success should enjoy reading this book. Well written and easy to read. Recommended. --Harry C. Edwards
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Labels: DELL
This is a mediocre book that provides basic information but little of the insight that creates knowledge. As the title implies, it doesn't teach SOA in general, just how to approach application integration using SOA. Even in that, its treatment of the topic is reasonably accurate but superficial.
The book's six chapters are a reasonably logical overview of basic SOA and integration topics that finally culminates in the discussion promised by the book title.
The book demonstrates how SOA has risen in just a few years to a practical means of bolting together disparate online systems. Where these might have been coded and run with different languages and operating systems and web servers. Specifically, the book is concerned with the main choices out there these days. Java Enterprise Edition and Microsoft .NET. (Yes, Microsoft appears to be deprecating the ".NET" in some of its recent marketing, but for techies, that's still how we all refer to it.) Oh, it turns out there is a 3rd alternative, as the book is careful to point out. CORBA.
Labels: SOA Books
Labels: India
Soaring online ad growth has made Google
In a recession, spending slows most everywhere, analysts say.
Investors haven't had to be reminded. Google shares have fallen nearly 20% this year and are down nearly 25% since hitting their all-time high in November.
Investors are nervous because Google, Yahoo
"Google has been one of the worst performers over the last week because people are concerned," he said. "They don't know how Google is going to fare amid this economic downturn."
Investors will get a better handle on things when Google and Yahoo release fourth-quarter results on Thursday and Tuesday, respectively. Paid search has been a boon for Google. Analysts expect the company to report fourth-quarter revenue of $3.44 billion, minus the traffic acquisition costs it pays partner sites that carry its ads. That would be up 54% from the year-earlier quarter.
Google gets 98% of its revenue from ads tied to its online search service. Paid search is the fastest-growing segment of the multibillion-dollar online ad market. Yahoo also gets most of its revenue from online ads. Yahoo and Microsoft's (NASDAQ:MSFT)
Paid search ads have become especially popular among smaller businesses because advertisers pay only when a consumer clicks on an ad. In a recession, ads from smaller businesses could become an Achilles' heal for Google, says Barry Parr, an analyst for Jupiter Research. full story
"It's the recreation of the Internet, it's the recreation of the PC (personal computer) story and it is before us -- and it is very likely it will happen in the next year," he told a panel at the World Economic Forum.
Current estimates for mobile advertising are cautious, with consultancy Forrester predicting revenues of under $1 billion by 2012.
But Schmidt said this figure was too low and failed to take into account the fact the mobile Web was reaching a tipping point.
Google aims to be a prime mover by bidding for coveted airwaves to launch an open U.S. wireless network, pitting it against established telecommunications players. The move will take the Silicon Valley-based company well beyond its core Web search and online advertising franchises.
Some analysts are worried at the high costs involved but Schmidt said he was confident location-based advertising -- which could, for example, direct hungry travelers to nearby restaurants -- would be "a very, very good business".
Content providers, already struggling in the modern world of music and film downloads, are less convinced that mobile Internet is a minefield.
"It is not going to be easy to hang on the price of content," said Howard Stringer, chief executive of Sony Corp.
Labels: Eric Schmidt, Google
The world's largest search engine operator, Google, is considering setting up its global data centre in Taiwan, Taiwan's Central News Agency (CNA) said on Saturday.
Steve Chen, the economics minister of Taiwan, on Friday confirmed that Google was mulling launching a centre in Taiwan for data storage. The ministry has reserved a piece of land in the Changpin Industrial Park in Changhwa, western Taiwan.
Taiwan will offer incentives, such as a discount on the land tax, to Google and ensure a stable electricity supply, Chen said.
According to CNA, Google has considered 18 locations outside the US, including Taiwan, Japan and South Korea, to build its data storage centre, but is leaning towards Taiwan.
Labels: Google
The announcement before the stock market opened sent BEA's shares sharply up when trading started, up 19 percent to $18.53 a share. Oracle was slightly down at $21.29 a share.
The agreement calls for Oracle to acquire all outstanding shares of BEA for $19.375 - a hefty premium over the $17 a share Oracle originally offered, but less than the $21 a share that BEA's board of directors was demanding.
For that price, Oracle gets the company plus its $1.3 billion cash on hand. Oracle executives expect it to also boost the company's earnings; Safra Catz, Oracle president and chief financial officer, said in a statement released today that Oracle expects the deal to add to Oracle's earnings "by at least one to two cents."
BEA came under pressure to sell after Wall Street investor Carl Icahn began acquiring shares in the San Jose company last year. He eventually became the largest shareholder, Originally, Icahn had agreed with BEA's rejection of Oracle's $17 a share offer, but later he began agitating for a sale at that price. But Icahn fell silent after signing a non-disclosure agreement and getting a close look at BEA's technology and financials.
"Both companies will do very well," said Trip Chowdry, managing director of Global Equities Research. He said BEA's social computing products will give Oracle an entry into that growing sector. Customers of BEA should be pleased, he said, "because they were wanting BEA to be bought by Oracle as 70 percent of Oracle database customers are also BEA's customers."
The deal is expected to close by the middle of this year, subject to BEA stockholder and regulator approvals.
In morning trading, shares of BEA jumped 19 percent, or $2.96, to $18.54. Oracle investors were less excited, pushing shares of the company up 13 cents, or 0.61 percent, to $21.44.
This means that by the end of February 2008, roughly 500 of the 900 total Best Buy stores will be selling the best computers money can buy (see what I did there?). We’re, of course, glad to hear this latest development: the more Macs you see on store shelves, the better an indication it is of their growing popularity. And that can only be good, right?
This is a good book to learn the concepts of EJB but for the exam you need the HFEJB book. The details of Context objects (which method of Context object you can use in which method call of the Bean class) are more descriptive in HFEJB If you are planning to sit for the exam this book should be accompanied by HFEJB
Labels: SCBCD 5.0 Books
Labels: SCBCD 5.0 Books
What's more, the book has been design to be useful beyond the study period. All the objectives are explained using real-world examples so that your can come back to the book for reference. In addition to this, the book contains a large case study that will integrate all the topics and objective you have learned through the rest of the book. Java web applications are more than a disparate collection of topics and as such the case study pulls together all the topics in the book to give some context to the whole technology.
The book provides all that you will need to become a fully certified, professional Java web developer.
Labels: SCWCD 1.4
Labels: SCWCD 1.4
A programmers Guide to Java™ Certification, Second Edition, contains detailed coverage of all exam topics and objectives, helpful code examples, exercises, review questions, and several full practice exams. In addition, as a comprehensive primer to the Java programming language, this book is an invaluable reference tool for the reader.
This new edition has been thoroughly updated to focus on the latest version of the exam (CX-310-035). In particular, it contains more in-depth explanations of the syntax and usage of core language features that are now emphasized on the exam. The accompanying CD contains a version of the SCPJ2 1.4 Exam Simulator developed by Whizlabs software, which includes several mock exams and simulates the exam-taking experience. The CD also contains the complete source code for all the examples, and solutions to the programming exercises. buy now
Labels: SCJP 1.5 Book, SCJP 1.6
Labels: SCJP 1.6
In an article drawing purely on speculation the newspaper suggests that Ive is the best candidate to succeed Jobs, Apple's co-founder and chief executive. In Ive's favour, a design portfolio that includes four generations of the iMac, the iPod and the iPhone. And he is not a dull American businessman, unlike current Apple number two, Tom Cook. read more
Labels: Apple, iPhone, iPod, SteveJobs, Times Warner
Labels: Java Server Faces, JSF
Labels: JSF, WebServices