” There Will Never be Another NOKIA Smartphone “….

The Nokia brand name, one of the most storied marks in mobile, will never grace another smartphone.

Under the terms of Microsoft’s $7.2 billion acquisition of Nokia’s devices and services division, the “Asha” and “Lumia” trademarks will transfer to Redmond, but the “Nokia” mark will remain property of the Finnish company, and may only be used on featurephones running the basic Series 30 and Series 40 operating systems under a 10-year license agreement. (Nokia itself is barred from using the Nokia brand on any mobile devices at all until December 31st, 2015.) That means any future Windows Phones built by the newest division of Microsoft will be Microsoft-branded — and that Nokia has said its goodbyes to a smartphone market it once helped to create.

 

‘LUMIA’ AND ‘ASHA’ BELONG TO MICROSOFT NOW

That’s a quiet exit for what was once a powerhouse of smartphone innovation.

 

 

NOKIA: A VISUAL HISTORY

 

 

source :::::The Verge

natarajan

2013 is Very Much Worse than 1991 !!!!…A Wakeup Call For Indian Economy …

We are repeatedly told that 2013 is not 1991, the year of near external bankruptcy which put India on the road to reform and rejuvenation. The latest to tell us this is Kaushik Basu, Chief Economist at the World Bank, and during whose tenure as chief economic advisor in the finance ministry inflation stayed stubbornly high, the fiscal deficit hit the roof, and the current account deficit (CAD) went from bad to worse.

Basu told Business Line yesterday: “The economic situation is not good. India is nowhere near potential. But the gloom is overplayed. There can be no question of comparing the current situation with the 1991 situation, when we were on the brink of a major crisis. We are nowhere near that situation now.”

He is right. 1991 was an external payments crisis when we had less than two weeks’ imports worth of foreign exchange reserves at one point. This time we have $278 billion in reserves, enough for seven months’ imports.

But here are the vital differences which make 2013 seemingly worse than 1991.

ReutersThe most important difference, however, relates not to the macroeconomy, but human feelings. Reuters
The most important difference, however, relates not to the macroeconomy, but human feelings. We react more negatively to fears of anticipated loss than expectations of gain. In 1991, we were a poor country, with a very small middle class and nothing much to lose. Today, we are four times richer as a nation, and the size of the middle and consuming classes has been growing in leaps and bounds. We have EMIs to pay, increments to chase, gadgets to buy and everyday goodies to splurge on at malls. All these are under some threat.

In 1991, the economic crisis did not matter to most Indians. Why would the aam aadmi care whether you have enough forex to pay for two weeks’ imports or not? It doesn’t impact him.

Today it does. Several hundred millions of Indians are now part of the consumption story. They buy consumer goods, eat out, buy mobikes, and shop at malls. They also had, till recently, rising incomes to look forward to. In fact, the UPA’s economic mismanagement helped foster this sense of entitlement in all classes of people – from the poor to the middle classes to everybody.

Behavioural economists will tell you that human beings are more primed to avoid losses than seek gains.

This loss aversion tendency was established by behavioural economists Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman, who noted that “losses and disadvantages have greater impact on (human) preferences than gains and advantages.”

For the aam aadmi, 2013 is therefore worse than 1991. He has more to lose this time.

Now, to this entirely human sense of impending loss, add the broader reality, and it is not difficult to see why the rupee is crashing, the market is skittish, and people are rushing to embrace gold. In many ways, 2013 looks worse than 1991.

First, in 1991, the world was not in crisis. There was the IMF to run to, and if we took the medicine prescribed, the rest of the world could absorb our new export buoyancy. The world also had surplus dollars to bring to India for investment. This time, the world is in deep s***, and there is no one to go to even with a begging bowl. We have to rescue ourselves.

Second, in 1991, due to the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi in the midst of an election campaign, the Congress party won enough seats to manage with just a few MPs’ outside support. This time we have a weaker government at the centre with no credibility, and which is trying to hold on to power even at the cost of economic disaster.

Third, 1991 had one restaurant owner (Rao) and one chef (Manmohan Singh) cooking up a recipe for reform: this time no one knows who is running the show, and the government has so many cooks trying to rescue the economy – and arguing with one another – that it is going steadily downhill.

Consider the number of cooks advising this government on what do: one economist is heading the government; he has a band of economic advisors under Dr C Rangarajan; the Planning Commission is stuffed with another lot of economists under Montek Singh Ahluwalia; then there is finance minister who is busy drawing “red lines” on deficits without a clue on why no one is listening to him; and we now have his chief economic advisor heading for the Reserve Bank, a bank whose outgoing boss has been in constant combat with P Chidambaram. This circus is being presided over by an economically-challenged political dispensation under Sonia and Rahul Gandhi.

Fourth, the political power structure is completely different. In 1991, the centre dominated the states; this time, the states are calling the shots in politics and economic issues. Today, no single economic issue – from FDI to GST to food security – can be decided by the centre in isolation. It has to carry the states. But the Congress party is particularly inept in the way it deals with the opposition. It needed a friendly BJP to get at least some of the tougher things done; or it needed a coalition of state parties to do deals with. It has neither. For the regional leaders are the Congress’ rivals in their own states; and the BJP is the Congress’ national rival. And Narendra Modi has sent the Congress running for cover.

2013 is not 1991. It may not be worse than 1991, but it will certainly feel very much worse.

source::::::R.Jagannathan in Firstpost.com  on 20 aug 2013

natarajan

Here is A Flash !!! A Faking News …Story of One Nivesh who is Looking For AC Button in his Motorcycle!!!

Published on August 17, 2013  by Mishtik Journo  in First post

Man, who invested in stocks to buy a luxury car, settles for a second hand bike!!!!!

Mumbai. “I was about to buy an Alto car in 2010 with the two and a half lakh rupees I had saved, when this dream merchant Raj Kapoor sold the idea to me to invest in equities and buying a Honda City within two years by tripling my money,” Nivesh – a young man confided to the psychiatrist when he was brought to the clinic this morning.
Raj Kapoor is a relationship manager with a stock broking firm who managed Nivesh’s equity investments in the last three years.
It was sometime in April 2010, when Sensex reached 18000 after having fallen to the 8000 level in March 2009, when Raj Kapoor came to Nivesh and claimed that the upward trend will continue at least for the next two years.
“Not sure if it was the first day of April,” Nivesh recalled, “But I was impressed with all the graphs he showed and I decided to wait for a couple of years and convert my Alto into a Honda City.”

Nivesh tried to control his thoughts and emotions, but they overwhelmed him.
“But how did you lose money when Sensex is at the same level where it was in 2010?” asked the shabbily dressed psychiatrist who also dabbled in the markets.
“All these indices! They are opium of the masses. My shares are down by 80% and this Sensex remains at the same level!” Nivesh said tearfully, “I haven’t eaten daal tadka garnished with fried onions or Bhindi do pyaza in last two months, leave aside Tandoori Chicken! These indices are made to fool the public.”
“The final blow came yesterday when the Sensex crashed by over 700 points. Nivesh called up Raj Kapoor and told him to sell off all his shares as he couldn’t keep up with any more nonsense. He got 42000 rupees in his account, and he bought a second hand Hero motorcycle for his family of seven,” Nivesh’s friend Nipun told Faking News outside the clinic.
“This morning, he spent half an hour looking for the AC button on his second hand bike. We tried to tell him that it was a bike not a luxury car, but he refused to listen. That’s when we had to bring him here,” Nipun explained how Nivesh ended up at a psychiatry clinic.
According to latest reports, Nivesh had turned almost violent when the TV in the clinic showed ‘Bharat Nirman’ ad. He is being kept in ICU and doctors are trying to control the damage.
“I am a star performer for my company and have earned hefty incentives in last six months for the brokerage I have earned for them,” Raj Kapoor told Faking News when asked for his comments.

source :::::: FirstPost.com

natarajan

“World”s Best Airport” to Double Its Capacity with New Terminal !!!

Airs and graces: Singapore's Changi Airport.

Singapore will build a new terminal that will double the capacity of Changi Airport in a bid to retain its edge as a regional aviation hub, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Sunday.

Construction work will begin soon and will be completed in 12 to 15 years, Lee announced in his annual policy speech.

“T5 (Terminal 5) sounds like a terminal, but it is actually a whole airport by itself, as big as today’s Changi Airport,” said Lee.
Singapore's Changi Airport: you could spend a few weeks here and not realise you missed your flight.

SINGAPORE’S CHANGI AIRPORT

Singapore’s Changi Airport: you could spend a few weeks here and not realise you missed your flight!!!

He did not reveal the cost of the new facility, but said it would include a third runway that would double the capacity of Changi, which handled 51.2 million passengers last year.

 

Changi Airport, named the world’s best by Britain-based consultancy Skytrax this year, currently has three terminals with a total capacity of 66 million passengers a year.

In February it started to demolish its terminal for budget airlines to replace it with a larger facility.

The new facility, Terminal 4, will have the capacity to handle 16 million passengers a year when it opens in 2017.

In his speech late Sunday, Lee said there was growing competition from other major international airports in Southeast Asia.

He noted that Malaysia’s Kuala Lumpur International Airport and Thailand’s Suvarnabhumi Airport are planning to expand.

“The question is do we want to stay this vibrant hub of Southeast Asia, or do we want to let somebody take over our position, our business and our jobs?” Lee said.

Passenger traffic at Changi totalled 51.2 million last year, the first time in the airport’s 31-year history that the number of people passing through crossed 50 million.

As of January 1, 2013, Changi handled more than 6500 weekly scheduled flights with 110 airlines connecting Singapore to 240 cities in 60 countries.

source::::Sydney Morning Herald

natarajan

படித்ததில் பிடித்தது !!!….” No Cheque , only Cash !!!”

சினிமா தயாரிப்பாளர், காலம் சென்ற சாண்டோ சின்னப்ப தேவர், 40 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன், ஒரு வார இதழுக்கு அளித்த பேட்டியில் சொல்கிறார்:
நான், சொந்தப்படம் தயாரிக்க சினிமாக் கம்பெனி துவங்கினேன். நடிகர், நடிகைகளுக்கும் மற்ற தொழிலாளர்களுக்கும் சம்பளம் கொடுக்க, “காசோலை’ தர வேண்டும். அதுநாள் வரை, எனக்கு வங்கியில் அக்கவுன்ட் கிடையாது. அதனால், புதிதாக, என் பெயரில் ஒரு கணக்கு ஆரம்பித்து, கணிசமான ஒரு தொகையையும் போட்டு வைத்தேன். காசோலை புத்தகம் கொடுத்தனர்; வாங்கி வந்தேன்.
ஒரு வாரம் கழித்து, எனக்கு பணம் தேவைப்பட்டது. என் பெயருக்கு, காசோலையில் எழுதி கொண்டு வங்கிக்கு சென்றேன். ஆனால், என் கையெழுத்து சரியாக இல்லை. நான் பள்ளிக்கூடம் போய் படிக்காதவன். என் பெயரை எப்படி எழுதுவது என்று, மற்றவர்கள் சொல்லிக் கொடுத்து தான் கையெழுத்து போட்டு வந்தேன். என் கையெழுத்தையும், என் உருவத்தையும் பார்த்து சந்தேகித்த அவர்கள், என்னை ஒரு ஓரமாக உட்கார சொல்லி, போலீசுக்கு போன் செய்து விட்டனர்.
போலீஸ் வந்து என்னை விசாரித்தது…
“நான் தான் சின்னப்பா. சினிமாவில் நடித்திருக்கிறேன்…’ என்று சொல்லியும், அவர்கள் நம்பாமல் மிரட்டினர். பின், எனக்கு தெரிந்தவர் களின் நம்பருக்கு போன் செய்து, அவர்கள் என்னைப் பற்றி சொன்ன பின் தான் விட்டனர். நம் பணத்தையும் போட்டு விட்டு, இந்த அவமரியாதையா… என்று, கோபம் வந்துவிட்டது. கணக்கை முடித்து, முழுப் பணத்தையும் எடுத்துக் கொண்டு வந்து விட்டேன்.
இதுவரை, எத்தனையோ படங்கள் தயாரித்து விட்டேன். இந்திப் படங்களும் தயாரிக் கிறேன். ஆனால், யாருக்கும், காசோலை கொடுப்பதில்லை. நேரடி சம்பளம் தான். எனக்கு, வங்கியில் அக்கவுன்ட் இன்று வரை கிடையாது… என்று, கூறியுள்ளார் சின்னப்ப தேவர்.

source :::::Dinamalar ….Sunday Supplement

natarajan

 

A for Adarsh B for Bofors C for CWG Scam !!!……

Janata Party chief Subramanian Swamy has a new line of attack for the ruling party: using English alphabets from A to Z to mark the scams that surfaced during the Congress and UPA rule in the country. So, according to his interpretation, here are the new uses of the alphabets:

“A- Adarsh scam

B- Bofors scam

C- CWG scam

D- Devas-Antrix scam

E- Employee Guarantee Scheme scam

F- Fodder scam

G- Ghaziabad provident fund scam

H- Harshad Mehta stock market scam

I- IPL scam

J- Junior Basic Trained Teachers’ recruitment scam

K- Ketan Parekh stock market scam

L- LIC Housing scam

M- Madhu Koda scam

N- Non-banking financial companies scam

O- Oriental Bank scam

P- Punjab State Council of Education, Research and Training scam

Q- Quest for gold scam

R- Ration card scam

S- Satyam scam

T- Telecom 2G scam

U- UTI scam

V-Volkswagen equity scam

W- West Bengal telecom scam

X, Y, Z

Protest and be dead,

We will cheat money even out of a pig’s bread.”

source ::::::INDIA TODAY online….14 aug 2013

natarajan

Read more at: http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/adarsh-scam-bofors-scam-subramanian-swamy-new-attack-congress-india-today/1/299494.html

Buffalo Sold For Baffling Price … Rs.2.5 Million !!!

Murrah buffaloes in a dairy in Haryana

A farmer in the northern Indian state of Haryana says he has sold a buffalo for what is believed to be record-breaking 2.5 million rupees ($41,000).

Kapoor Singh told the BBC he sold his Murrah buffalo named Lakshmi to a farmer from Andhra Pradesh state.

The Murrah breed of water buffalo is much in demand for its high milk yield and normally costs between 100,000 rupees and 250,000 rupees.

They are highly coveted and their owners take a lot of pride in them.

For the price that Lakshmi was sold for it would be possible to buy a small luxury car.

Mr Singh, who lives in Singhwa Khas village in Hisar district, said he bought Lakshmi for 250,000 rupees ($4,100; £2,650) two years ago.

He said because she was a “special” buffalo – who yielded up to 28 litres of milk every day and won several prizes for producing record amounts – he was able to sell her for 10 times the price he bought her.

“I didn’t want to sell her, but the new owner offered me the price I asked for. He had come last year and offered me 190,000 rupees, but I refused. He liked the buffalo so much that he made a video film on her and showed it in his village,” Mr Singh said.

“I am very happy that I got the price I wanted. I will use the money for my daughter’s marriage.”

Kapoor Singh said Lakshmi will leave her village with her new owner, Rajiv Sarpanch, on Sunday.

Mr Sarpanch has been quoted as telling Hindustan Times newspaper that he is planning to make her participate in Andhra Pradesh’s “best cattle contest” in January next year where the winner will get a kilogram of gold.

source:::::bbc.com

natarajan

“We Have Not Read It “….For A Change Bank Says this …. Not Customer !!!

Generic image

 

A Russian man has outwitted a bank by sending back a credit card contract with his own, handwritten, amendments to the contract for zero fees and zero interest. Now he’s had a win in court

A MAN who decided to get his own back on a bank which sent him an unsolicited credit card in an ingenious way has had his first win in court.

Dmitry Agarkov decided to write his own small print in a credit card contract and has had his changes upheld in court. He’s now suing Russia’s leading online bank for more than 24 million roubles ($A800,000) in compensation, RT.com reports.

Disappointed by the terms of the unsolicited offer for a credit card from Tinkoff Credit Systems in 2008, Mr Agarkov, 42, from the city of Voronezh, decided to hand write his own credit terms.

The trick was that Agarkov simply scanned the bank’s document and “amended” the small print with his own terms, scribbled in his own handwriting.

He opted for a 0 per cent interest rate and no fees, adding that the customer “is not obliged to pay any fees and charges imposed by bank tariffs.”

The bank didn’t read “the amendments”, as it signed and certified the document, then sent him a credit card.

It took two years before the bank decided to terminate Mr Agarkov’s credit card because of overdue payments.

In 2012, it sued him for 45,000 roubles ($A1500) – an amount that included the remaining balance, fees, and late payment charges, which violated the actual agreement.

The court decided that the agreement Agarkov crafted was valid, and required him to settle only his balance of 19,000 roubles ($A635).

“They signed the documents without looking. They said what usually their borrowers say in court: ‘We have not read it,’ his lawyer said.

Tinkoff founder Oleg Tinkov tweeted: “Our lawyers think, he is going to get not 24 million, but really four years in prison for fraud.”

The next hearing will be in September.
source::::news.com.au

natarajan
Read more: http://www.news.com.au/money/banking/no-fees-0-interest-bank-fail-as-man-scribbles-his-own-terms-on-credit-card-contract/story-e6frfmcr-1226693921929#ixzz2bZ3AoT6Y

Strange But True !!! Wedding @ India…Honeymoon@ London…For Pet Dogs !!!!

CAN You believe !!!!! But it is a true story…. PL read this  story  published in mailonline.com india  today…. !!!!!

Natarajan

Two Amritsar-based families are all set to throw a lavish wedding party for their friends where their much-loved dogs will tie the nuptial knot.

R.K. Khosla of Officers Colony and S. Bawa of Ranjeet Avenue have decided to host a colourful wedding ceremony for their pooches – Jacks and Jennifer – on September 11. The marriage will be solemnised as per the Hindu rituals and other ceremonies such as the ring ceremony, Mehandi and Barat will also be organised.

And what’s more, famous Punjabi singer Sabar Koti will rock the wedding bash. The families, however, will not accept any gift.

The hustle and bustle has already begun as the families are busy finalising the programmes.

“The invitation cards have already been printed and are being distributed. The place for the wedding has also been booked. The ceremony will take place on a platform where the groom, Jacks, and the bride, Jennifer, will offer lockets to each other,” said Khosla, the proud owner of Jacks.

But the icing on the cake is that the newly-weds will go to England for their honeymoon.

“We asked several five-star hotels in India to book a honeymoon suite for Jennifer and Jacks but they refused. We were even ready to pay some extra money to them, but they refused. Finally, we have fixed London as their honeymoon destination where dogs are allowed in hotels,” Khosla said.

Jacks’s father, who is from London, is an intentional dog champion and lives in America. His mother Jesina lives in London.

“Jacks has an air-conditioned bedroom which also has a swing. He watches television soaps and is intelligent. A doctor attends to him every day. Nobody can dare to enter the house when the children alone at home with him,” Khosla said.

source:::::MANJEET SEHGAL in  mailonline.com India

Natarajan

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/indianews/article-2382077/Amritsar-families-throw-lavish-wedding-party-DOGS–complete-London-honeymoon.html#ixzz2aiWHiQsD

Royal Palace Footman Back Home ….But Certainly It is not the End Of the Road For Him !!!

The Royal Family’s footman who enjoyed world-wide fame on the day of the birth Prince George has returned to the Calcutta slum he grew up in.

Falling foul of new immigration laws, Badar Azim, a 25-year-old hospitality management graduate, has returned to his family in eastern India, where relatives beaming with pride have welcomed him home.

The young graduate accompanied the Queen’s press secretary Ailsa Anderson in placing the announcement of Prince George’s birth on an easel outside Buckingham Palace last week.

Proud: Badar Azim (R)

Proud: Badar Azim (R), who enjoyed world-wide fame on the day of the birth of Prince George, son of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, poses with his brother Muhammad Samir (second from right), father Muhammad Rahim (centre) and mother Mumtaz Begum (L) outside their home in Calcutta, Eastern India today

The Royal footman

The Royal footman became a well-known face globally when he accompanied the Queen’s Press Secretary Ailsa Anderson to place the Royal notice proclaiming the birth of a baby boy to Prince William and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge last week.

 

But just days later, his visa expired; he was unable to renegotiate his right to work in the country; and he quit his coveted post at the Royal Household. He has now arrived home – a world that perhaps couldn’t be more different from the life he had lived last week.

Ironically it appears that Mr Azim, whose chronically poor family scrimped and saved every penny they had in order to educate him, has fallen foul of strict new immigration laws because of his notoriously meagre palace salary of around £14,000 a year.

Mr Azim, who first came to Britain to study for a degree in hospitality, was one of a number of migrants living legally in Britain on a student visa who were allowed to stay on for two years at the end of their course and work.

But under the new points-based system, those applying to extend their visa after it expires must prove they are not taking a job which could be done by a native worker.

This means they need specialist skills which are in shortage among Britons, or for them to prove that they meet a minimum salary threshold, currently set at around £20,000 a year – neither of which applied to his palace footman’s post.

A friend of Mr Azim, who flew home last weekend shortly before his visa was due to run out, said: ‘It’s a crying shame, really. You couldn’t meet anyone more dutiful, hard-working and determined than Badar.

‘The new regulations were brought in for a very good reason, we all understand that. Particularly him. It’s just rather ironic that someone like Badar, who follows every regulation to the letter, is prevented from working here, compared to the many thousands who slip through the system.’

Mr Azim found fame on Monday last week when he was photographed with the Queen’s press secretary displaying the official announcement of the birth of the Duke and Duchess’s new son on an easel in the palace forecourt.

Resplendent in his black and red livery, it was complete chance that he was chosen for the job. In fact it would have fallen to the footman on duty at that moment, at the palace’s privy purse entrance.

‘The rota changes every three hours and it was a complete fluke. But he was a very popular member of staff and everyone was chuffed to bits for him,’ one official told the Mail.

His welder father Mohammed Rahim and mother, Mumtaz Begum, who are among nine members of the extended family sharing a shabby two-room home in one of Calcutta’s most impoverished slums, were unaware of the honour and only learnt of his starring role after his picture was reproduced in a local newspaper.

Mr Rahim, who has three sons, of which Badar is the eldest, used to regularly go without food in order pay for his son to be educated.

He was eventually taken in by the charitable St Mary’s Orphanage and Day School before being sponsored to go to the International Institute of Hotel Management College in the city.

The orphanage also raised £10,000 for him to complete his degree at the Edinburgh’s Napier University, from where he graduated in June 2011.

He secured his footman’s post in February the following year, a job which involved everything from greeting guests, serving at banquets or receptions and tending to the Queen personally.

He was also given a room in staff quarters at the Royal Mews, adjacent to the palace.

Although he was forced to sign strict staff confidentiality agreements, proud Mr Azim posted a photograph of himself outside Buckingham Palace on one social network site, as well as shots of royal residences such as Balmoral where he would have been required to work when the Queen was on holiday.

According to sources, he loved his job so much he explored the possibility of extending his visa with the palace personnel department, but discovered that due to his low salary and coveted position he was extremely unlikely to be successful.

As a result he did chose not reapply to the Home Office and flew back to India four days ago.

A source said: ‘It is a real shame as he was a very good member of staff about whom people only have very positive things to say. But it just goes to show that the rules are the rules, no matter who you work for.

‘He was here on a two-year visa and always knew it was going to expire. As a result he flew home at the weekend in good spirits and very rightly proud of what he had achieved.’

A Buckingham Palace spokesman declined to comment last night, saying it was policy never to discuss staff members.
source:::::mailonline.com UK

NATARAJAN