Major Developments Major Developments by Calendar Year

December 28, 2011

Facebook Beats its Competitors in India

Filed under: Society — Tags: — Winson @ 2:42 AM

The popularity of Facebook across the globe is well known. Among all the developing countries it has reached maximum number of users from India by attracting more number of teenagers. According to the latest reports from ComScore, Facebook has beaten its competitors like Orkut and Yahoo and became the top social networking site in India with 20.9 million users.

Previously it was Orkut, which remained as the most popular site in India, but its now Facebook’s turn. With more number of features and sharing options than Orkut, it has attracted more number of users in less time. For the first time in July, 2011, facebook grabbed number one rank in social networking category with 20.9 million users, up 179 percent from the previous year.

The report also mentioned that there are more than 33 million Internet users in India, who visited social networking sites in the month of July, but among them most visited was Facebook making it as top one. With this, India now ranks as the seventh largest market worldwide for social networking after the US, China, Germany, Russia, Brazil and the UK. The report also mentioned that during last year growth of social networking audience is 43 percent which is triple the rate of total internet audience in India.

Followed by Facebook is Orkut ranked second with 19.9 million visitors, BharatStudent.com, Twitter, and Yahoo. Sites like Orkut, Twitter, and Yahoo used to be in the top places among the social networking sites before the advent of Facebook. But now it is ruling the networking world with a huge user base. By including more privacy options it is attracting more and more users every month/year.

December 2, 2011

Facebook Ranked Second During October 2011 US Online Video Rankings

Filed under: Society — Tags: , — Winson @ 2:12 AM

Facebook, one of the most popular social networking sites has already reached its rank for having huge number of users and is equally liked by many number of people. But latest news shows its ranking in terms of online videos is giving a good competition to one of the famous video hubs Youtube.

Comscore, released data from the comScore Video Metrix service which showed 184 million U.S. Internet users watched online video content in the month of October for an average of 21.1 hours per viewer. The total U.S. Internet audience viewed 42.6% billion videos which is recorded as an all time high.

When it comes to the Top 1- video content properties by unique users, iGoogle sites are ranked as top online video content property in October. Driven primarily by video viewing at Youtube.com, it secured 161 million unique viewers and reached a record high of 20.9 billion videos viewed.

Facebook ranked second with 59.8 million viewers followed by VEVO with 57 million, Microsoft sites with 49.1 million and Viacom Digital with 48.2 million. More than 42 billion videos were viewed during the month of October, with the average viewer watching a record 21.1 hours. Google Sites demonstrated the highest viewer engagement with 7.1 hours per viewer.

These reports are showing how a social networking site without any official videos but just get videos from the uploads done by the members of the site is giving huge competition to Google which has an official video uploading website You tube. Facebook has extensive following among the teens and since the video has been shared many times, and hence it takes very less time for the video or any other upload to get popular among people.

March 11, 2011

Nobel Laureates of 2010

Filed under: Society — Tags: — Winson @ 3:48 AM

Nobel prizes are the most prestigious international awards for intellectual performance. The awards are administered by the Nobel Foundation in Sweden. They have been awarded for great achievements in physics, chemistry, physiology or medicine, literature and peace since 1901. Later in 1968, achievements for economics were added in memory of Alfred Nobel, the founder of the Nobel Prize.

Nobel Prize in Physics
The Nobel Prize in physics is 2010 was awarded jointly to Andre Gelm and Konstantin Novoselov. The prize money was distributed between them equally. They were awarded for work on groundbreaking experiments regarding the two-dimensional material ‘Graphene’.

Graphene is a form of carbon which is just one atom thick. It is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity. Andre Gelm and Konstantin Novoselov extracted thin layers of particles from graphite of a pencil making a new material called Graphene. They found the unique properties of Graphene. It can now be used for practical applications in the development of electronic devices.

Nobel Prize in Chemistry
Richard F. Heck, Ei-ichi Negishi and Akira Suzuki were awarded jointly the Nobel Prize in chemistry in 2010. The work for which they were awarded was ‘palladium-catalyzed cross couplings in organic synthesis’. Every organic synthesis laboratory and industrial processes across the world uses the Heck, Negishi and Suzuki reactions.

During the initial years, it was a challenge to combine carbon atoms together because carbon does not react with other similar atoms due to its structural configuration. Certain reactions were discovered by the scientists using Palladium as a catalyst so that carbon reacts more easily.

In 1968, a series of papers were published by Heck reporting the addition of methyl and phenylpalladium halides to olefins at room temperature. A further step allowed the unprecedented alkylation of an olefin. Later, in 1976 the palladium-catalyzed cross-coupling of organometallic species with organohalides was investigated by Negishi. This demonstrates the permission of highly selective reactions by organozinc compounds under mild conditions in the presence of a range of functional groups. In 1979, Suzuki demonstrated that organoboron compounds in the presence of a base could be cross coupled with vinyl and aryl halides using palladium as a catalyst.

Further modification and improvement was made in these reactions in subsequent years for use in synthesis of a wide range of complex natural products.

Nobel Prize in Medicine
The Nobel Prize in 2010 in Physiology or Medicine was awarded to Robert G. Edwards for the development of in vitro fertilization. He was called the father of test tube baby. Since 1955, he had been working on the process of in vitro fertilization along with his colleague, Patrick Steptoe, and achieved it by 1968.

A human culture media was developed by Edwards to allow the fertilization and early embryo culture. His colleague worked on laprosopy for recovering oocytes from patients with tubal infertility. About four million babies were born by in vitro fertilization technique because of their huge efforts. Edwards was awarded the Albert Lasker Clinical Medical Research Award by the Lasker Foundation in 2001 for the development of in vitro fertilization.

Nobel Prize in Literature
In 2010, Mario Vargas Llosa was awarded the Nobel Prize in literature. He was awarded for his cartography of structures of power and his trenchant images of the individual’s resistance, revolt, and defeat. Through his work The Time of the Hero, he became popular in the world.

Some of his well-known works are Conversation in the Cathedral, The War of the End of the World, and The Feast of the Goat. He is the first South American winner of the prestigious 10 million kronor, or $1.5 million, Nobel Prize in literature since Colombian writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez won in 1982.

Nobel Peace Prize
Liu Xiaobo was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize 2010 for his long and non-violent struggle for fundamental human rights in China. Announcement of the Nobel Peace Prize for Liu created a huge angry response from China.

He was a literary critic in 1980s. He took part in the Tiananmen protests in 1989 for advocating the fundamental rights in China. He had been arrested several times since spending 20 months in detention after the 1989 protests. He was sentenced in 2009 in prison for 11 years for subversion of state power. There were people who received Nobel Prize who were under house arrest and prison before receiving it. However, Liu was the first one who was honored with Nobel Peace Prize while being in prison.

Nobel Prize in Economics
The Nobel Prize in economics in 2010 was awarded jointly to Peter A. Diamond, Dale T. Mortensen and Christopher A. Pissarides. They were awarded for their work on analysis of markets with search frictions.

Demand and supply are the two factors on which a market is based. There are situations in market where a lot of people are there who are looking for employment and companies having vacancies, but still the vacancies are not being filled. Also, we find many people who want to buy and sell a house at the same time, but still do not find a solution.

The work of the Nobel Prize Winners helped in providing better solutions in these areas. A theoretical framework was formulated by them for search markets. Peter Diamond focused on the analysis of foundations of search markets. The theory was expanded and applied to labor market by Dale Mortensen and Christopher Pissarides. This theory however can also be applicable to house, monitory theory and various areas of economics.

December 25, 2010

Prince William and Kate Middleton Becoming Couple

Filed under: Society — Tags: — Winson @ 3:24 AM

There was an announcement, that Prince William of Wales is going to marry his girlfriend, Kate Middleton on April 29, 2011. Their engagement was on the 16th November in 2010. Prince William is the elder son of the Prince Charles and Princes Diana.

According to the British officials, the wedding will be taken place at Westminster Abbey in London, one of the popular wedding venues.

In such wedding venue, William’ grandmother, Queen Elizabeth II, and her mother both got married. Once again this venue has been picked as the ideal venue for royal wedding. Westminster Abbey is the special place in British history.

Westminster Abbey is the large, mainly Gothic church in Westminster, London. This is the traditional place of the coronation and burial site for English and later monarchs of the Commonwealth countries.

This Abbey was built at the start of the 11th century. This venue has space for 2000 guests to attend the ceremonies.

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