Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Important Global News and Views - 25 November 2014



On the international day for the elimination of violence against women on 25 November, women’s rights organisation Womankind Worldwide is urging donors to pay more than lip service to the work of women’s rights groups across the globe by committing to fund projects for at least 10 years.
http://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2014/nov/25/gender-inequality-domestic-violence-womankind-worldwide


North Koreans protest against UN resolution on human rights
Soldiers and citizens join a mass rally in the capital to denounce United Nations report, accusing the US of trying to overthrow the regime
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/25/-sp-north-korea-protest-un-resolution-human-rights


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/25/lead

Important Global News and Views - 24 November 2014




European commission unveils €300bn infrastructure fund to kickstart growth
Three-year project aims to revive investment to pre-crisis levels but InvestEU faces scepticism over modest seed capital
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/24/european-union-to-launch-237bn-infrastructure-plan



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/24/lead

Sunday, November 23, 2014

Important Global News and Views - 23 November 2014



Carlsen retains world title
Magnus Carlsen retained his world title with win over Viswanathan Anand for the second year in running. He defeated the Indian Challenger in the 11th game in Sochi.

The Norwegian world champion closed the 12-game match with a 6.5-4.5 scoreline.
http://www.rediff.com/sports/report/carlsen-retains-world-title-anand-bows-out/20141123.htm


Suicide bomber kills at least 45 at volleyball match in Afghanistan
A suicide bomber killed at least 45 people when he attacked a crowd of spectators at a volleyball match in eastern Afghanistan on Sunday.


Iran nuclear talks:
Comprehensive accord appears unlikely, but hopes raised of some agreement with technical details to be resolved later
A final deal would involve Iranian acceptance of curbs on its nuclear activities in return for a lifting of sanctions. The duration of such an agreement, before Iran was free of such constraints, is one of the issues on the table in Vienna.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/23/iran-nuclear-talks-senior-politicians-vienna-anticipation-deal





Kenya claims 100 al-Shabaab killed in response to Mandera massacre
Kenya’s vice-president, William Ruto, says troops also destroyed Islamists’ camp and lorries after massacre of bus passengers
Kenya has said its troops have killed dozens of al-Shabaab Islamists in raids inside Somalia after the execution of 28 non-Muslim people on a Kenyan bus.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/23/kenya-claims-100-al-shabaab-killed-in-response-mandera-massacre

Citroën Cactus: car review
Citroën’s quirky new Cactus is packed with technology and sharp design details. But is it just too cool?
Price £12,990
MPG 61.4
Top speed 103mph
http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/nov/23/citroen-cactus-car-review-martin-love


Irish PM’s party suffers dip in popularity after water charge protests
Opinion poll shows only 22% would vote for Enda Kenny’s centre-right Fine Gael party
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/23/irish-pm-dip-popularity-water-charge-protests-enda-kenny


We have lost  Rochester to Ukip (UK Indendence Party). But the Tories need to keep calm and carry on. The party must not to lurch to the right, but make a positive case for voting Conservative - Damian Green

Damian Green is Tory MP for Ashford since 1997, was minister of state for immigration from May 2010 to September 2012.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/nov/23/ukip-after-rochester-the-tories-need-to-keep-calm-and-carry-on



Interview with Dr. Randy Schekman, who shared the 2013 prize with James Rothman of Yale University and Thomas Südhof of Stanford University for his role in working out how cells, the smallest units of life, transport and secrete proteins.
http://www.theguardian.com/science/2014/nov/23/randy-schekman-nobel-prize-cells-gene-publishing



Trade unions today need to work with the community
The decline in union influence since the 80s is not due to the character of work
http://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/2014/nov/23/letters-trade-unions-and-the-community


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/23/lead




India Headlines - Rediff - 23 November
________________________________

Live! Debris of MH17 flight leaves Ukraine
Pope confers sainthood on father and nun from Kerala - 21:54 IST
1 dead, 27 hurt in Assam blast - 21:45 IST
Suicide bomber kills over 45 at Afghanistan volleyball match - 21:32 IST
Cash, guns, bullet-proof jackets found at godman Rampal's ashram - 21:20 IST
Stage set for Modi-Sharif meet in Kathmandu - 20:54 IST
Congress sees red over voice vote, says won't allow assembly to function - 20:38 IST
It's not a family affair: Mulayam pulls up Akhilesh govt for slow pace of work - 19:42 IST
Sena to play role of opposition in winter session - 18:43 IST
Ahead of polls, army seizes 18 AK-47 rifles and 5 pistols in J-K - 18:06 IST
Burdwan blast mastermind's wife nabbed in Bangladesh - 17:35 IST
Mulayam comes clear on birthday celebrations, says no public funds were spent - 16:48 IST
Take a clear stand on Article 370, Omar tells BJP - 14:59 IST
When Education Minister Smriti Irani was grilled by her kids' school - 14:39 IST
Irani turns down demands to make Sanskrit compulsory - 14:10 IST
People are willing to give us a second chance: AAP's Yogendra Yadav : Sahil Makkar - 13:13 IST
PM Modi not to visit Janakpur during Nepal tour - 12:45 IST
'Taking moneybags along with the PM on tours doesn't send the right message' - 12:16 IST
TMC to skip all-party meet, says not available at BJP's beck and call - 11:43 IST


http://www.rediff.com/issues/231114hl.html


_________________________________

Friday, November 21, 2014

Global News - 22 November 2014




80 landmarks in 80 years: the people and events that shaped our world

Top 5
1 The invention of the world wide web, 1989.
2 Discovery of a method to mass produce penicillin, 1943.
3 The widespread availability of home computers, 1980s
4 The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948.
5 The attacks of 11 September 2001 on New York and Washington DC and the emergence of terrorism as a major international phenomenon.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/22/80-landmarks-in-80-years-that-shaped-our-world


Bill Cosby, comedian had packed audience in Melbourne, Florida State, USA despite allegations against him.
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/22/bill-cosby-receives-standing-ovation-at-florida-show


Indian Team leaves for Australia (4 Test series)
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/sports/indian-cricket-team-leaves-for-australia-test-series/articleshow/45238047.cms


Japan to buy V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft that it builds together with Bell Helicopter, a unit of Textron Inc.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/business/boeing-welcomes-japan-decision-to-buy-v-22s/articleshow/45237559.cms



http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/nov/22/lead







India News 22 November 2014

Top 10 Selling UVs in October 2014
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/auto/news/passenger-vehicle/uv/top-10-selling-uvs-mobilio-records-lowest-ever-sales-in-october/articleshow/45237562.cms


Tuesday, March 19, 2013

A Myth - alcohol kills brain cells - Article in The Conversation


Do you ever wake up with a raging hangover and picture the row of brain cells that you suspect have have started to decay? Or wonder whether that final glass of wine was too much for those tiny cells, and pushed you over the line?

Well, it’s true that alcohol can indeed harm the brain in many ways. But directly killing off brain cells isn’t one of them.

The brain is made up of nerve cells (neurons) and glial cells. These cells communicate with each other, sending signals from one part of the brain to the other, telling your body what to do. Brain cells enable us to learn, imagine, experience sensation, feel emotion and control our body’s movement.

Alcohol’s effects can be seen on our brain even after a few drinks, causing us to feel tipsy. But these symptoms are temporary and reversible. The available evidence suggests alcohol doesn’t kill brain cells directly.

There is some evidence that moderate drinking is linked to improved mental function. A 2005 Australian study of 7,500 people in three age cohorts (early 20s, early 40s and early 60s) found moderate drinkers (up to 14 drinks for men and seven drinks for women per week) had better cognitive functioning than non-drinkers, occasional drinkers and heavy drinkers.

But there is also evidence that even moderate drinking may impair brain plasticity and cell production. Researchers in the United States gave rats alcohol over a two-week period, to raise their alcohol blood concentration to about 0.08. While this level did not impair the rats’ motor skills or short-term learning, it impacted the brain’s ability to produce and retain new cells, reducing new brain cell production by almost 40%. Therefore, we need to protect our brains as best we can.


Even moderate drinking may impair brain plasticity. Image from shutterstock.com
Excessive alcohol undoubtedly damages brain cells and brain function. Heavy consumption over long periods can damage the connections between brain cells, even if the cells are not killed. It can also affect the way your body functions. Long-term drinking can cause brain atrophy or shrinkage, as seen in brain diseases such as stroke and Alzheimer’s disease.

There is debate about whether permanent brain damage is caused directly or indirectly.

We know, for example, that severe alcoholic liver disease has an indirect effect on the brain. When the liver is damaged, it’s no longer effective at processing toxins to make them harmless. As a result, poisonous toxins reach the brain, and may cause hepatic encephalopathy (decline in brain function). This can result in changes to cognition and personality, sleep disruption and even coma and death.

Alcoholism is also associated with nutritional and absorptive deficiencies. A lack of Vitamin B1 (thiamine) causes brain disorders called Wernicke’s ncephalopathy (which manifests in confusion, unsteadiness, paralysis of eye movements) and Korsakoff’s syndrome (where patients lose their short-term memory and coordination).

So, how much alcohol is okay?

To reduce the lifetime risk of harm from alcohol-related disease or injury, the National Health and Medical Research Council recommends healthy adults drink no more than two standard drinks on any day. Drinking less frequently (such as weekly rather than daily) and drinking less on each occasion will reduce your lifetime risk.


Health guidelines suggest men and women drink no more than two standard drinks a day.
To avoid alcohol-related injuries, adults shouldn’t drink more than four standard drinks on a single occasion. This applies to both sexes because while women become intoxicated with less alcohol, men tend to take more risks and experience more harmful effects.

For pregnant women and young people under the age of 18, the guidelines say not drinking is the safest option.

So while alcohol may not kill brain cells, if this myth encourages us to rethink that third beer or glass of wine, I won’t mind if it hangs around.


Provided under creative commons
Source: The Conversation
http://theconversation.edu.au/mondays-medical-myth-alcohol-kills-brain-cells-12666

Global poverty is shrinking: study - Article in Conversation


Global poverty is declining and may be eradicated altogether in some countries in the next 20 years, a new study by the University of Oxford has found.

The Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative analysed 22 countries using a Multidimensional Poverty Index, a collection of factors such as number of years of schooling, child mortality, nutrition, electricity and drinking water access, living standards, housing and asset ownership.

The findings showed poverty levels had significantly dropped in 18 out of 22 countries.

Bangaldesh, Rwanda and Nepal were the top performing countries, with the largest reductions in absolute poverty.

“If the current pace of poverty reduction continues to the end, then half of the countries would eradicate [multidimensional] poverty within 20 years, 18 of the 22 within 41 years and the remaining four countries within 95 years,” according to the report.

The study showed that a total of 1.6 billion people are living in multidimensional poverty – which looks at a range of factors driving poverty, rather than just income – and that 51% of the world’s poorest live in South Asia.

Dr Paul Burke, an economic and development expert from the Arndt-Corden Department of Economics at Australian National University, said the study will “help us better understand the global poverty picture – where poverty is located, and in what form impoverishment takes.”

“While income-based measures pick up a lot of what we need to know, when it comes to something as serious as poverty, more data is normally better,” he said.

“The data allow countries and regions within countries to be benchmarked against one another over a number of criteria. If a country is struggling in one particular dimension of poverty, the country’s government and international donors might be able to better target this area,” said Dr Burke, who noted that the data released did not include countries from the Australia Pacific region.

“The data complement what’s available from the World Bank, United Nations, and other sources. The provision of sub-national data is particularly useful, as differences within countries can be just as large as differences between countries.”

But some experts have expressed concerns with the use of an aggregated multidimensional index to compare levels of poverty and development.

“I am quite against the idea of constructing a single MPI index that collapses all dimensions of human development with equal weight or some arbitrary weighting schemes,” said Dr Sommarat Chantarat, from the Crawford School of Public Policy at the Australian National University.

“As a development economist, we all realise that poverty is multifaceted, but it is unclear what we could learn and what policy implications might be from looking (and comparing) an aggregated MPI index.”

Dr Chantarat said studies that compare MPIs across countries and regions could fail to indicate “the varying impacts of growth on households' productive investment and the varying impacts of looming stochastic shocks (economics, climate, manmade and natural disasters) that could prevent some subpopulation from gaining from growth.”

Dr Daniel Suryadarma, a development economics expert from the Arndt-Corden Department of Economics at the Australian National University’s Crawford School of Public Policy, also expressed concerns with the methodology of the study.

“First, the number of dimensions included and the weight assigned to each dimension depend on the judgement of the researcher,” he said.

“So, while they usually claim that their measure is more comprehensive than studies using a single measure of poverty – for example consumption poverty – the potential for researcher subjectivity to "pollute” the results is actually higher."

“Second, the factor analysis basically produces a single measure of poverty and, from experience, I understand that the resulting measure is usually very highly correlated with consumption. Therefore, the advantage of calculating multidimensional poverty over consumption poverty is negligible.”

Dr Suryadarma said while he had concerns for the study’s methodology, economic development may have reduced poverty in many areas.

“I believe the results that poverty – however measured – has generally fallen in most countries,” he said. “The explanation is simple: economic growth, which is the most powerful poverty reduction tool.”

Posted under Creative Commons - Source
http://theconversation.edu.au/global-poverty-is-shrinking-study-12877

Monday, September 19, 2011

Add Your Unique Experience to the Human Knowledge Pool - Publish on Google Knol

Knol Author Foundation Would Like to Invite All Those Who Want to Change the World to Join Us. Knol is Looking for Your Unique Experience to Add to the Human Knowledge Pool.

It is now three years since Knol, a platform conceived by Udi Manber, vice President of Google. Today it has reached a new milestone. Knol has grown into the top 1000 web platforms.

Those who do not know what is knol here is some background: The knol platform is a world stage for sharing knowledge. Wikipedia has the same objective. Then why do we need knol? Wikipedia is about sharing accredited knowledge; knowledge that is well defined universally. Knol's aim is to go beyond that. Knol wants to know what is our individual interpretation of accepted knowledge. And if our interpretation expands the frontiers of knowledge then that is what knol is all about.

Udi believes that every person has a story to tell, and that out of these stories emerge unique insights where at least some stories may have universal lessons. So do you have some new knowledge to share? Please start sharing your insights on knol and please join us.

Udi's vision of knol is to help provide the knowledge of life and everything else in it so that the world can turn the corner to a better and better life. From the ignorant to the sage all are welcome. As long as it helps someone, even if this is your own self. You can buy, sell, promote, recruit, share, help, seek help, advise, seek guidance, start a school on knol, start a radio show, post a weekly magazine, news letter, research journal and even propose marriage on knol etc., etc.! You can do anything on knol as long as it is legal and it helps mankind. We at knol want knol to be a foundation of knowledge that is a positive factor in life and everything else in it, for all humanity. We want to change the world through global knowledge that comes through every nook and cranny of the world. Because real change can come only when every one is actively involved.

Knol is a wiki-based platform with focus on academic, informative and knowledge focus articles.

Source: A Press Release by Knol Author Foundation