Thursday, May 28, 2009
Patna’s Super 30 script another ‘max’ story
Last year too all the 30 students of Super 30, being run by a local maths wizard Anand Kumar since 2002, cracked the JEE. Like previous years, most of the 30 successful candidates are wards of marginal farmers, school teachers, a police constable and a grade IV government employee.
The 30 students were selected from among 3,000-odd aspirants who had appeared at the Super 30 entrance test last year. “We would now be picking up 90 students every year for free coaching as well as food and lodging facilities.”
Last year, Patna saw two other coaching institutes, Rahmani Foundation and Triveni Super 30, offering free coaching and free food to deserving poor students. Abhayanand, an ADG-rank officer, offered his services at these two institutes.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Is IPL2 hurting India's World Cup chance?
The IPL2 gets over on May 24, just 12 days before Twenty20 World Cup2 begins on June 5. Does that leave the Indian squad with enough time to recharge their batteries and motivate themselves for the greater cause?
Playing anywhere between 14-16 high intensity Twenty20 games can take a physical as well as mental toll on any player. The climax of IPL2 will be cathartic. Can the players get themselves fired up -- hungry and raring to go - for another tournament that follows so soon?
Even physical injuries are ailing the Men in Blue: Virender Sehwag (finger) and Zaheer Khan (shoulder). Thankfully, at least Sehwag is back. But one also needs to worry about captain MS Dhoni's dodgy back, especially because India doesn't even have a back up. Just watch the way every fielder hurls himself at the ball. Can you rule out injury to any of the key players in the forthcoming games? Of all victories achieved by the Indian cricket team in the past 25 years, winning the Twenty20 World Cup was perhaps the greatest. But the big question now is: Are we really serious about retaining the Twenty20 World Cup?
Friday, May 15, 2009
Cyber Jam(But the internet needn’t collapse just yet)
It is true that with the advent of Web 2.0, internet usage has shifted to bandwidth-heavy applications like You-Tube and Skype. The amount of traffic generated by You-Tube in 2006 was more than that of the entire internet in 2000.At 50-60 percent a year,the current growth of internet traffic is enormous. However, several experts believe that the internet is in no danger of collapsing under the weight of its own success. Andrew Odlyzko, a computer scientist at the University of Minnesota who specialises in analysing historical trends in networking, believes that global internet traffic is and will remain manageable with modest capacity updates.
There is some evidence to support that conclusion. For one, telecom companies in both Britain and America are already investing significant amounts in order to upgrade internet infrastructure, including the last mile cable, to increase capacity. Secondly, the internet was originally developed to withstand all kinds of catastrophes and has proven to be remarkably robust. It has coped with massive growth over the past 15 years. There’s no reason to suppose this can’t continue. Anyway, engineers are preparing for the worst by working to replace the internet with a superfast ‘grid’. So, even if capacity updates fail to keep pace with demand, an alternative will be in place.
No one is suggesting that the internet wouldn’t face operational difficulties if it was left just as it is. The debate is over whether the rate of investment in capacity upgradation is fast enough to cope with rising demand. Studies like this can provide an impetus for telecom majors to invest in infrastructure. As of now, though, it’s safe to assume that the Net will be with us for a while more.