New Hyderabad airport has handled 93,000 passengers

Hyderabad (IANS) The Rajiv Gandhi International Airport, Shamshabad, which began its operations early Sunday, has handled 93,000 passengers in the past five days. The new airport, with world-class facilities, handled around 15,000 international and 78,000 domestic passengers till March 27. “Thus the airport is handling an average of 18,500 passengers per day,” said a statement by GMR Hyderabad International Airport Ltd (GHIAL) here Friday.

The total air traffic movement during the period was around 1,500. The air traffic movement is defined as one-round movement of an aircraft - landing and taking off.

“The performance of check-in, baggage handling and fuel farm systems has been steadily improving over the last five days,” said the statement, which came amid reports in a section of media about the lack of proper facilities and poor connectivity.

The first greenfield airport in public-private partnership has been built at a cost of Rs.25 billion ($627.8 million) at Shamshabad, about 30 km from the city. The old airport was in the heart of the city.

It claimed that the international pilot community has appreciated the runway and air traffic control systems installed at the new airport.

On connectivity to the new airport, it said the operation of 30 AC buses from four locations in the city is getting a positive response from the public.

“GHIAL is working with the operator to increase both the number of buses and locations in the coming days to improve travel convenience to the airport for travellers.”

Two other operators are also operating 700 radio taxis, which are charging a flat rate of Rs 15 per km.

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YouTube to provide more viewership info

New York:The popular video-sharing site YouTube is giving contributors more details about who’s watching their video clips and when, offering advertisers additional insights they can use to target their pitches. The free programme, known as YouTube Insight, also could help bands schedule their concerts and help anyone time the release of a new video.The launch of Insight on Thursday comes as Google looks for ways to make money off its $1.76-billion purchase of YouTube in 2006. Despite growing interest in online video ads, many marketers have stayed away from user-generated video like what’s on YouTube.Marketers who buy ads on YouTube already get a bevy of statistics about the performance of their ads. The new programme breaks down viewership by day and shows the states or countries where most viewers are.

A movie studio that uploads a trailer for free on YouTube could use those details to see where the clip is most popular and perhaps buy ads targeted to users in that region — on YouTube and even on television.

But everyday contributors also can benefit from the new program, said Tracy Chan, a YouTube programme manager. Until now, those users got limited information, such as how many times their video was viewed or commented on.

The new tools “give a lot of context around the performance of video over time, where are your audience coming from and how your message is connecting to your audience,” Chan said.

A band could use that information to plan stops on a tour, while video producers who find their viewership peaks on Wednesdays could release new clips then. Likewise, producers who see their shows peaking after three weeks would know to release a new episode every three weeks, and someone whose material turns out to be popular in Spain might want to release the next video in Spanish.

“With this information, you can concentrate on creating compelling new content that appeals to your target audiences and post these videos on days you know these viewers are on the site,” YouTube officials said in a blog entry announcing the program.

Upcoming features may indicate how viewers find a video, through a search, an outside link or YouTube’s share-with-a-friend feature, Chan said.

The new viewership breakdowns, like the current ones, will count on the number of times users start a video but not necessarily how many finish it. Geographic information is based on viewers’ numeric Internet Protocol address, the same mechanism Google uses to target ads by region.

Some data will still be limited to paid advertisers, including information on how many viewers make it through 25 percent, 50 percent or all of a video.

Gaming: a profile of young star Sangam Gupta

Cups of steaming cappuccino, people in jeans and experimental hairdos plonked on cushy beanbags, a couple of young Greeks and Germans chatting - that’s the daily meeting at Trine Animation and Gaming Studio, presided over by founder and Managing Director Sangam Gupta.The 22-year-old almost chokes when he hears the word ‘presided’.

“They’re all my friends. Jesus, I don’t preside over anything. We just have casual meetings in the evening to discuss the day’s progress.”

Gupta began his firm two years ago, but he had known he was headed in this direction ever since he was 13, hacking into Internet games so he wouldn’t have to spend all his pocket money.

A year later, the Delhi boy turned entrepreneur, with a website called planetcricket.net, which modified online games to make them snazzier.

His turning point came when someone from Electronic Arts, one of the world’s largest gaming companies, wrote to him about what a brilliant job he was doing.

“I had absolutely no background in gaming,” said Gupta. “My father owned theatres in UP and could never really figure out what I was up to in front of the computer all day.”

That one e-mail set his career path. After high school, he went to the US to study computer science and started working for a gaming company there.

It was on one of his vacations home that he realised how big gaming was getting in India - and that there was still no one creating full-fledged games in the country.

Trine Animation is now the only Indian company that creates XBox and PlayStation games in-house.
 
On the Streets of Mumbai
Gupta founded Trine Animation in April 2006, with Rs 8 crore invested by an equity firm, and five employees - all friends he made on the job in the US.

They began in a one-room office in Andheri, with packaging boxes for furniture. Today, Gupta has a plush set-up in Malad, spread across an entire floor. And 200 employees who spend the day creating content, writing scripts or illustrating for the online games he creates.

“I’m glad I decided to set up shop in Mumbai,” Gupta said. “It has the best atmosphere for a start-up, all the resources you need, and even the people within the industry are so helpful here.”

His is a typical success story of the nascent but fast-growing Indian game development industry, expected to grow tenfold to $425 million (Rs 1,700 crore) by 2010.

“Gaming has to succeed simply because it is one of the few industries that makes leisure a profession,” said Alok Kejriwal, founder of Games to Win, the gaming branch of online lottery company Contests to Win. “Virtually everyone’s a start-up, and everyone’s succeeding. It’s been a year since we began and we already have 150 employees.”

Gupta’s next venture is a game that is truly Indian in theme and characters. On the drawing board already, it’s called Streets of Mumbai and offers players a thrilling car race through Nariman Point, along Marine Drive and into the international airport.

“India creates mobile and flash games, but complex online games with detailed scripts are still not our forte. I want to break that barrier,” said Gupta. “India is far more talented and the manpower is much cheaper, so why not our resources to create games instead of doing it for other countries?”

If you study the $1 billion gaming markets in China or Korea, Gupta adds, the most popular games are the indigenous ones that have local characters and themes. “That is exactly what I want to achieve.”
 
Head-hunting, around the world
On Gupta’s payroll are Americans, Greeks, West Indians and Romanians - all people he gathered on work trips abroad and all known game creators in their own countries. But this field needs talent, not qualifications, he stresses.

Gupta found one of his best artists at Malad railway station. “He used to sit on the platform and draw brilliant portraits for Rs 10 each,” said Gupta. “I offered him a job and today he is one of my most important illustrators, earning about Rs 40,000 per month.”
 
Never a Sunday
While the thought of making your leisure your livelihood is appealing, it needs a lot of hard work. Gupta admits he has no social life.

His day begins at 10 am and ends at 3. It’s been this way ever since he set up his company. When everyone’s workday ends at 7 pm, it just gets more hectic for Gupta.

At 7 pm here, London starts their workday and it’s time to coordinate with his clients in the UK. At midnight, San Francisco, the biggest gaming hub in the world, wakes up. And the jetsetter, who is constantly flying off to either the US or Germany, usually ends up working weekends too.

“When I was 18 and studying in the US, my friends and I would always talk about turning 21 and finally being able to get into US nightclubs. Today, I’m 22 but I don’t go clubbing,” said Gupta, adding with a smile that it’s “worth the sacrifice” because he loves going to work every day.
 
Totting it up
So how did a 20-year-old raise Rs 8 crore?
“It wasn’t too difficult finding an investor because gaming is one of the hottest industries today and they knew that it wouldn’t backfire,” said Gupta. His age actually went for him - his ideas were fresh and original and he connected with the audience because he was virtually one of them.

When will his two-year-old company break even?
That’s a question that doesn’t worry Gupta too much. “We’re already doing better than we expected and we’ve surpassed our investors’ targets,” he said. The company is growing at an annual rate of 100 per cent and is expected to break even in 2009.
“By end-2010, the company will have a turnover of $30 million (Rs 120 crore),” declared Gupta.

Air India introduces direct flight to Dubai

Bangalore: Air India on Friday announced introduction of a new thrice weekly direct flight from Bangalore to Dubai and increased frequency of its flights between Bangalore and Male to daily from March 30.

As part of its summer schedule, Air India also announced reintroduction of daily flights between Bangalore and Kochi from March 30.

The new Air India flight IC 949 will leave Bangalore on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 3.20 pm to reach Dubai at 5.30 pm (local time), it said in a release here.

The incoming flight from Dubai will arrive Bangalore on the same days at 2.45 pm.

The Air India presently operates a direct flight to Sharjah in the UAE which leaves Bangalore at 8.15 pm on Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays and Sundays.

The existing five days a week flight to Male (Maldives) will be increased to daily it said adding flight IC 965 will leave Bangalore at 3.30 pm to reach Male at 5.00 pm. The incoming flight will arrive Bangalore at 2.15 pm.

The re-introduced flight IC 909 will leave Bangalore daily at 11.50 am and reach Kochi at 12.45 pm. The incoming flight from Kochi will reach Bangalore at 11.10 am, it said.

India-born doctor’s film set for Cannes

WASHINGTON: A film produced by an India-born doctor, which questions the conservative American mindset on stem cell research, is set to be premiered at the Cannes this year.

The film is based on the novel of Dr Shelley Chawla, who practices medicine in US. His book Hope… in vitro was released last year.

World premiere of HOPE, parts of which have been shot in New Delhi, is being sold at Cannes by Mumbai and London-based iDream Independent Pictures that produced and distributed Bollywood films such as Monsoon Wedding, Bend it like Beckham, Bollywood Hollywood, a release said in Washington.

The film will be up for at MIPTV Cannes in April 08 and the Cannes Film Market in May, it said.

A Kansas film director, Rich Ambler has directed this movie, which also stars Inder Mishra, an Indian actor who played a lawyer in A mighty heart.

Chawla’s script highlights the paradoxes of American conservatives who consider stem cell research as ”immoral”.

The film revolves around a powerful US Senator, who built his campaign career on a conservative platform. He is challenged for his tough stance against embryonic stem cell research.

The research controversy becomes a personal dilemma for him when a tragedy devastates his family. His son is paralyzed in an attempted murder. The senator is faced with a crucial choice: his family or his philosophical beliefs.

The author-cum-producer has tried bring his ten years as a neurologist the film, giving it medical authenticity as well as vivid emotional depth garnered from treating hundreds of chronically ill patients.

Salman Commented About Katrina’s Bulging Hip

Salman Khan is the biggest lover boy in Bollywood. His affairs and controversies are legendary. Salman Khan has changed several girlfriends over the years. His last big girlfriend was the sexy Katrina Kaif as known for all. Salman Khan is known to be very possessive with all his girlfriends. His attitude sometimes becomes so overbearing that the women in his life then have no option but to break free from his iron like grip.

Katrina Kaif was going steady for a couple of years when all of a sudden, she dropped Salman. She is now seeing another guy. 

The reason for her walking away is said to be due to some comments made by Salman. He was teasing her about her bulging hip. Salman commented about it not only in private but also in public, many times in front of Katrina’s friends. This enraged her and she walked out from him. 

Yes, Salman seems to be still a kid and doesn’t understand the feelings of his ladies.

Govt to set up four new IITs and six IIMs

New Delhi: The government has decided to establish four new Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT) and six Indian Institutes of Management (IIM) campuses, Human Resource Development Minister Arjun Singh said Friday.The new IITs will come up in Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Punjab, while the IIMs will be set up in Jammu and Kashmir, Tamil Nadu, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Uttarakhand and Haryana.

Singh told reporters: “The prime minister has approved the proposals made by us for the location of these four new IITs and six IIMS.”

Here is how you can never lose your laptop

New Delhi: Losing a fifty-thousand-rupee-laptop is a reason to be worried, but it may not be so any longer.

Laptop locating software – a silent burglar alarm – can now be easily installed and a company like Unistall offers just such a service.

When a laptop that has the software disappears, Unistall’s servers pick up its distress signals the instant the thief tries to surf on the stolen laptop. The Internet Protocol address is quickly tracked and just as quickly, the cops can recover the laptop.

Locate Laptop’s Project Manager Manu Bharadwaj says that it took them 1.5 years to create the software.

Bharadwaj also adds that if the laptop is not traced, they would give 7.5 times the money spent.For some, though, the deterrent in using Unistall’s software would be that it costs Rs 3,000.

However, Unistall is not the only software available.

Softwares such as Locate PC and Snap Files, both of which are easily available on the Internet offer the same protection without charging a penny. They even work exactly like Unistall.

There is catch, however. No matter which of these softwares are used, if once someone formats the hard disk, none of them would be able to track the laptop.

World’s tallest man struggles to fit in

Ukrainian veterinarian, Leonid Stadnik, 2.59 meter (8,5 feet) ...

Ukrainian veterinarian, Leonid Stadnik, 2.59 meter (8,5 feet) ...

Leonid Stadnik, left, 2.59 meter (8,5 feet) tall, the world's ... 

Ukrainian veterinarian, Leonid Stadnik, 2.59 meter (8,5 feet) tall, the world’s tallest living man according to the Guinness Book of Records, rides a bicycle specially made for him, in the village of Podoliantsy, Ukraine’s northwestern Zhytomyr region, 212 kilometers (131.74 miles) west of the capital Kiev, Sunday, March 23, 2008. Stadnik’s growth spurt started at age 14 after a brain operation apparently stimulated his pituitary gland. Stadnik, 37, is still growing up

Company offers moon as final resting place

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LOS ANGELES - The moon could become a final resting place for some of mankind thanks to a commercial service that hopes to send human ashes to the lunar surface on robotic landers, the company said on Thursday.

Celestis, Inc., a company that pioneered the sending of cremated remains into suborbital space on rockets, said it would start a service to the surface of the moon that could begin as early as next year.

The cost starts at $10,000 for a small quantity of ashes from one person.

Celestis president Charles Chafer said his company reached an agreement with Odyssey Moon Ltd. and Astrobotic Technology Inc., to attach capsules containing cremated remains onto robotic lunar landers.

Odyssey Moon and Astrobotic are among private enterprises seeking to land a robotic craft on the moon and conduct scientific experiments. The cremation capsules would remain on the moon with the lunar landers when the missions were complete.

Chafer said he expected about 1,000 capsules containing ashes to be launched on the first lunar mission, expected in late 2009 or early 2010, and about 5,000 on future flights.

“The moon is a special place,” Chafer said, adding a half dozen people had already signed up for the service.

“For many people, it would be a romantic notion to look up into the sky and see the moon and know that your mom or dad or loved one is up there memorialized.”

In the past 11 years, Celestis Inc., a unit of Houston-based Space Services Incorporated, has sent the ashes of hundreds of people from 14 nations into space, including U.S. astronaut Gordon Cooper and “Star Trek” actor James Doohan, who played chief engineer Scotty in the popular TV series.

Virender Sehwag lashes second test triple century

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CHENNAI, India - India opener Virender Sehwag hit his second career triple century in the first test against South Africa on Friday.

Sehwag finished unbeaten on 309 as India reached 468 for one in reply to South Africa’s first innings 540 all out at the close on the third day.

The 29-year-old, who also made 309 against Pakistan at Multan in 2004, became only the third player to achieve the feat of two triple 100s, matching Australian Don Bradman and West Indies batsman Brian Lara.

It was the fastest triple hundred in test cricket since the scorers began recording number of balls faced by a batsman.

Sehwag raced to 300 off 278 balls in the final session, surpassing Australian Matthew Hayden’s 362-ball effort when he scored a then world record 380 against Zimbabwe at Perth in 2003-4.

The Indian batsman lashed 42 fours and five sixes to race to his triple hundred, nudging paceman Makhaya Ntini for a single to squareleg.

Sehwag, who batted for eight hours to reach the milestone, lifted his arms triumphantly and embraced partner Rahul Dravid as the South African fielders applauded and the Indian players and the rest of the spectators gave him a standing ovation.

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