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Thursday, January 17, 2013

Dhoni helps India draw level with crushing win


Dhoni helps India draw level with crushing win

India 285 for 6 (Dhoni 72, Jadeja 61*) beat England 158 (Pietersen 42, Bhuvneshwar 3-29) by 127 runs
Scorecard and ball-by-ball details

MS Dhoni sends one to the stands during his knock of 72, India v England, 2nd ODI, Kochi, January 15, 2013
MS Dhoni fired India to a total that proved far too good for England © BCCI

Kochi, in tourist terms at least, is the gateway to the backwaters but India, 1-0 down in the ODI series with four to play, were in no mood to take that journey. MS Dhoni, impassioned not just with the bat but just as strikingly in every aspect of his captaincy, made that abundantly clear with every muscle flexed and every order barked and it was England who were sunk without trace in a 127-run defeat.
England's pursuit of 286 always looked a daunting task and it became an improbable one from the moment that Bhuvneshwar Kumar removed Kevin Pietersen and Eoin Morgan in the space of three balls in an outstanding new-ball spell. There is nothing like a humid evening in Kochi to perk up a swing bowler and Bhuvneshwar, a 22-year-old from Uttar Pradesh playing in only his fifth ODI, also summoned impressive stamina as Dhoni ran his 10-over spell through without interruption and was rewarded with his best international figures of 3 for 29.
But the match had swung India's way much earlier than that - and it was Dhoni, a captain deemed to be under pressure, and Ravindra Jadeja who were at the heart of it. England had sensed they held an element of control, at the very least, for much of India's innings but 108 runs from the last 10 overs, 68 from the last five, shook that notion to the core.
As so often, Dhoni was left to plot a route to victory, wresting control from England's attack with 72 from 66 balls. He creates his own virtuous circle, creating a febrile atmosphere and then feeding off it, in turn causing a crowd of around 70,000 to roar with even greater intensity. He fell four balls from the end of the innings when he sliced Dernbach to Joe Root at deep cover - a suitable end because Dernbach's unwavering policy of bowling wide to him outside off stump had been England's most effective counter.
India approached the last 10 overs in unconvincing shape, at 177 for 5, having been confounded in the batting Powerplay by the variations of Dernbach and Steven Finn, which conceded only 21 runs in five overs and dismissed their batting mainstay, Suresh Raina, in the process.
Dhoni had failed to manage India's run chase in Rajkot, holing out at long-off against Dernbach's slower ball. He received a near-replica in the closing overs but this time his hands were fast and his brain quicksilver and he muscled it well beyond the boundary rope. It was a statement about how things would be different this time.
What Dhoni stirred, Jadeja delivered, rounding things off by taking 14 from Dernbach's last three deliveries to finish with an unbeaten 61 from 37 balls. They were impressive statistics for a batsman who had been overshadowed until the last. As for Dernbach, for all his relative success against Dhoni, he still spilled 73 from nine overs.

Smart stats

  • The margin of victory - 127 runs - is the second-highest for India in ODIs against England.
  • England's score of 158 is their third-lowest all-out totalin ODIs against India.
  • India's Nos. 5, 6 and 7 all scored half-centuries, only the fifth time this has ever happened in ODIs, and the first such instance for India.
  • The 96-run stand between MS Dhoni and Ravindra Jadeja came at a run-rate of 9.60 per over, the fourth-best rate for a 50-plus stand for India against England. The top three such stands for the sixth wicket for India versus England all involve Dhoni and Jadeja.
  • Jadeja's strike rate of 164.86 (61 off 37 balls) is thefourth-highest for a 50-plus score by an Indian against England.
  • Since the 2011 World Cup, Dhoni has averaged 83.28 at a strike rate of 92.39, with 11 fifty-plus scores in 27 innings.
  • Dhoni averages 57.78 in 118 ODI innings as captain. His average is the highest among captains who've batted at least 15 innings.
For Chris Woakes, who was playing his first ODI in India after his late inclusion for the injured Tim Bresnan, it was an examination far beyond anything he had ever experienced. He thought he had Dhoni caught at the wicket when he had made 6 from nine balls but it was impossible for the umpire Vineet Kulkarni to hear a nick in such a din and normal-speed TV replays, which were all that were shown, made things no clearer.
Raina had made 55 from 78 balls before he dragged on a pull at Finn and departed bashing the peak of his helmet with his bat in frustration, just as Virat Kohil had done earlier when he flayed Woakes to the cover boundary. Raina prospered primarily against the offspin of James Tredwell, two slog sweeps for six representing the highlight of his innings, and ensured that Tredwell, who took four wickets in the opening ODI in Rajkot, did not repeat the mayhem. As for England's bonus allrounder in the opening match, Joe Root, who bowled nine overs relatively unscathed, there was no encore.
India's opening pair did not survive long, Gautam Gambhir and Ajinkya Rahane both departing by the fifth over. Finn and Dernbach, also impressive with the new ball, had clamoured for several lbw appeals before they prospered by hitting the stumps.
Dernbach's nip-backer to bowl Gambhir through the gate was a delivery made to order. There are few more productive, or less convincing, shots in ODIs than Gambhir's dab through gully for four, bat hanging away from his body and he had played it the previous ball much to the bowler's frustration. The ball that cut back was the classic retort. Finn also brought a delivery back in his next over, late inswing accounting for Rahane as he shuffled across his crease.
India's frustration grew when Yuvraj Singh fell to an erroneous lbw decision by Steve Davis, who did not see - and, like Kulkarni in the case of Dhoni, certainly could not hear in such a deafening atmosphere - a deflection off the glove as he swept at Tredwell. With no DRS in use, Yuvraj had to take his punishment, although he did not do so without a stray comment or two.
So, for that matter, did Alastair Cook in England's reply, with Bhuvneshwar fortunate to win an lbw decision with a delivery that pitched outside leg stump. Cook should have been run out on 17 when Jadeja failed to pick up cleanly at midwicket to take advantage of complete confusion between Pietersen and Cook over a leg-side single. Dhoni's annoyance was clear, but Bhuvneshwar's eighth over had an impact on the course of the match and the captain's mood.
First Pietersen (42 from 44 balls) was bowled by one that jagged back as he sought to run into the off side and two balls later Bhuvneshwar found movement away from the left-handed Morgan from a good length and Dhoni dived to claim one his finest catches against England this winter, in what has been a somewhat troubled wicketkeeping sequence.
England, four down for 74 by the 17th over, had much rebuilding to do. But the ball turned for India's spinners and it was jerry-built stuff. Craig Kieswetter and Joe Root assessed a while then both got out, Kieswetter unimpressively as he pushed a short ball from R Ashwin to midwicket, Root sliced apart by Jadeja's arm ball. Woakes' managed a second-ball duck - another Jadeja arm ball to enhance his excellent match -and England's tail quickly subsided, in no doubt about the extent of the challenge ahead.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Facebook’s challenge to Google: A more social Graph Search Jan 16, 2013


Facebook’s challenge to Google: A more social Graph Search

Facebook’s challenge to Google: A more social Graph Search
Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, second from right, speaks with Director of Engineering Lars Rasmussen at Facebook headquarters in Menlo Park, California. AP
    Menlo Park California: Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a new search feature, the Graph Search that’s designed to entice people to spend more time on his company’s website and will put the world’s largest online social network more squarely in competition with Google and other rivals such as Yelp and LinkedIn.
    Called “graph search,” the new service unveiled Tuesday lets users quickly sift through their social connections for information about people, interests, photos and places. It’ll help users who, for instance, want to scroll through all the photos their friends have taken in Paris or search for the favorite TV shows of all their friends who happen to be doctors.
    Although Zuckerberg stressed that “graph search” is different from an all-purpose search engine, the expanded feature escalates an already fierce duel between Google Inc and Facebook Inc as they grapple for the attention of Web surfers and revenue from online advertisers.
    “This could be another reason not to use Google and another reason to stay on Facebook for longer periods,” said Gartner analyst Brian Blau. “I don’t think Google is going to lose its search business, but it could have an impact on Google by changing the nature of search in the future.”
    Facebook’s foray into search marks one of its boldest steps since its initial public offering of stock flopped eight months ago amid concerns about the company’s ability to produce the same kind of robust earnings growth that Google delivered after it went public in 2004.
    Although Facebook’s stock has rallied in recent weeks, the shares remain below their IPO price of $38. Investors seemed let down by Tuesday’s news, causing Facebook’s stock to slip 85 cents, or 2.7 percent, to close at $30.10. Google’s stock gained $1.68 to close at $724.93.
    If the new search tool works the way Facebook envisions, users should be able to find information they want to see on their own instead of relying on the social network’s formulas to pick which posts and pictures to display in their fees, analysts said.
    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled a new search feature, the Graph Search. AP
    Until now, Facebook users were unable to search for friends who live in a certain town or like a particular movie. With the new feature, people can search for friends who, say, live in Boston who also like “Zero Dark Thirty.” And Facebook’s users will be able to enter search terms the same way that they talk, relying on natural language instead of a few stilted keywords to telegraph their meaning.
    Only a fraction of Facebook’s more than 1 billion users will have access to the new search tool beginning Tuesday because the company plans to gradually roll it out during the next year to allow time for more fine tuning.
    Not all the interests that people share on Facebook will be immediately indexed in the search engine either, although the plan is to eventually unlock all the information in the network while honoring each user’s privacy settings.
    That means users can only see content that’s available to them through other’s privacy settings, Zuckerberg pledged.
    “Every piece of content has its own audience,” Zuckerberg said.
    Though the company has focused on refining its mobile product for much of last year, the search feature will only be available on Facebook’s website for now, and only in English.
    Facebook’s decision to make its foray into search slowly reflects the formidable challenge that it’s trying to tackle. The “social graph,” as Facebook calls the trove of connections between people and things, is “big and changing,” Zuckerberg said. There are 240 billion photos on Facebook and 1 trillion connections.
    Indexing all this, he added, is a difficult technical problem the company has been working on.
    Although Facebook isn’t trying to fetch information across the Web like Google does, it’s clearly trying to divert traffic and ad spending from its rival. Facebook is hoping to do this by making it easier for its users to quickly find many of the things that are most important to them: movie, music and restaurant recommendations from friends and family; photo galleries of people they care about; and new connections to old friends and other people with common interests.
    It’s the kind of personal data that has been difficult for Google to collect, partly because Facebook has walled off its social network from its rival’s search engine. Instead, Facebook has partnered with Microsoft Corp. to use its Bing search engine to power traditional Web searches done through its site. That partnership remains.
    “For a certain set of searches, this is going to be far more powerful than Google,” predicted Ovum analyst Jan Dawson.
    Yelp Inc.’s online business review service also could be hurt if Facebook’s search feature makes it easier for people to find recommendations from the people that they trust instead of relying on the opinions of strangers posting on Yelp. Facebook’s search tool also will allow people to find people who worked at a specific company — one of the advantages of LinkedIn Corp.’s online service for professional networking.
    Yelp’s stock fell $1.36, or 6.2 percent, to close Tuesday at $20.61 while LinkedIn’s stock added 39 cents to finish at $117.91.
    Facebook doesn’t have plans to show additional ads as people use the new search tool, but analysts said that is bound to change. “If the appropriate privacy protections are in place, this could be a significant boost in value that Facebook can provide to its users and, in time, that will provide some really valuable new advertising avenues for advertisers,” Dawson said.
    Google is trying to overcome its social network disadvantage with Google Plus, a service that the company launched 19 months ago in attempt to glean more insights into people’s relationships and counter the threat posed by Facebook.
    Helped by Google’s aggressive promotion of the service, Plus boasts more than 135 million people who post information and photos on their profiles. But Google Plus users still aren’t sharing as much or hanging out on its service as long as Facebook users do, raising questions about whether Google will ever be able to grasp the Internet’s social sphere as firmly as Facebook does.
    Facebook now must prove it can master the intricacies of search and picking the right ads to show to the right people at the right time — complicated tasks that Google has honed during the past 14 years to establish itself as the Internet’s most powerful company. It currently produces 10 times more annual revenue than Facebook. Though neither company has released its 2012 financial results, analysts are projecting $52 billion in 2012 revenue for Google versus about $5 billion for Facebook.
    The search tool is laying the foundation for Facebook to close the gap, said Chris Winfield, co-founder and chief marketing officer for online ad agency BlueGlass Interactive.
    “They can just chip away incrementally,” Winfield said. “The can start by just taking away one in every 100 Google searches, then one in every 20, then one in every 10.”
    In an opinion apparently shared by many investors, Forrester Research analyst Nate Elliott doubts the search feature will prove to be a boon to Facebook. He views it as little more of a way for Facebook users to find new friends online more quickly and make new connections that ensure the social network remains relevant.
    “It’s vitally important” Elliott said. “If Facebook thinks people are going to start searching Facebook when they would have searched Google, then they I think they are going to wake up in a year and find they are sorely mistaken.”

    Facebook’s Graph Search: What you need to know

    Facebook’s Graph Search: What you need to know


    Facebook introduced a new version of search on the site called Graph Search late yesterday night India time. According to Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook now has three pillars, namely Newsfeed, Timeline and now Graph Search. Graph Search is still in beta mode and when it does go live it will be available on desktop first. Mobile version of Graph Search will still take some time.
    So what is that you as active Facebook users need to know about Graph Search? Here’s a quick look at exactly how it works.
    • How it looks:  Graph Search will appear as a bigger search bar at the top of each page once it goes live. When you search for something on Facebook, that search not only determines the set of results you get, but also serves as a title for the page. Facebook is giving users the option to edit the title of the page as well and thus create their own custom view of the content that you search/share.
    • This is not web search: Zuckerberg pointed this out at the very beginning of his presentation. It’s not going to give your best possible results and links like a regular web search. Instead Graph search will look at phrases that you type and give you results based on what your friends have shared.
    • What it will let you search for now: Currently search will focus on Photos, People, Places and Interests. So if you want to search for say people who live in your city with the same interests like a Tv show, Graph search will show you the relevant results. Every time you check into a restaurant or mall, Facebook’s Graph Search could show it to your friends if they too search for the same place.
    Mark Zuckerberg introducting the Graph Search. AP
    • What about privacy Again Zuckerberg was keen to emphasise this during the press event and it seems Graph Search will not shred your privacy settings. Only results that you have shared with friends, friends of friends, or the public, will be found by other people. Photos, updates and links that keep at a custom setting of “Me only” won’t be displayed in Graph Search.
    Remember though that if you have a group photo with several friends tagged in it, their friends will be able to search for the picture via Graph Search. Facebook will be giving users the option to review the Activity log before they make Graph Search live across the site.
    So yes, it’s time to go to your timeline and hide any pictures that you don’t want to public or share with all with all your Facebook friends.
    Facebook Graph Search is still in beta and is only available for users with US English as their default language. To join the waitlist click here.
    ‘Refine This Search’ box which is on the side of the Graph Search. It will let you change the pieces of your search equation as and when you want.
    Friends of friends feature is all about dating queries. The so-called new-connections that Zuckerberg was talking about. This will let you search for friends of your friends with certain filters.
    Photos of my friends The results are according to ‘the best photos’. This is decided by comments, likes etc.
    Zuckerberg said at the conference, “We are indexing our map of the graph, which is really big and constantly changing. Almost a million new people every day. 240 billion photos. 1 billion people. 1 trillion connections.” So yes Facebook has a lot of data and it’s going to try and let you search around it.

    Facebook rolls out friends-based search product


    Facebook rolls out friends-based search product


    Facebook Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg introduces a new feature called 'Graph Search' during a media event at the company's headquarters in Menlo Park, California January 15, 2013. REUTERS-Robert GalbraithFacebook Inc took the wraps off a new search tool on Tuesday that lets people trawl their network of friends to find everything from restaurants to movie recommendations, an improvement that's likely to increase competition with review websites like Yelp and potentially even Google Inc.
    The so-called graph search marks the company's biggest foray into online search to date, though it displays only information within the walls of the social network rather than links to sites available across the Internet.

    Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook's 28-year-old founder and chief executive, introduced the new product at the company's first major product launch since a rocky initial public offering in May.

    "Graph search is designed to take a precise query and return to you the answer, not links to other places where you might get the answer," Zuckerberg told reporters at its Menlo Park, California, headquarters. "What you've seen today is a really different product from anything else that's out there."

    Facebook shares, which have climbed 15 percent since the start of the year, slid 3 percent Tuesday to just above $30. The product news fell short of some of the most optimistic predictions, which included speculation that the social network would introduce its own smartphone or an Internet search engine.

    Dubbed "graph search" because Facebook refers to its growing content, data and membership as the "social graph," the function will be available at first only as a "beta," or trial, for just hundreds of thousands of its billion-plus users.

    It will let users browse mainly photographs, people, places and members' interests. Zuckerberg stressed that people can sort through only content that has been shared with them, addressing potential privacy concerns.

    Shares in Yelp dived more than 6 percent on fears that Facebook's new friends-based search concept will begin to draw users away from the popular reviews site, which also lets people maintain a circle of trusted friends. Google stock held steady.

    Some analysts said Facebook may be taking a tiny step toward eventually challenging Google on its home turf, but said that was a much more challenging undertaking and a long-term possibility at best.

    Zuckerberg stressed that the new graph search did not encompass Internet searches, Google's specialty.

    Sterne Agee analyst Arvind Bhatia said the product was inevitable. "We think this will enable them to expand beyond display ads and ultimately compete with Google," he said.

    THE PROMISE AND THE THREAT

    The world's largest online social network, Facebook is moving to regain Wall Street's confidence after the IPO and concerns about its long-term financial prospects.

    Much of Facebook's recent focus has been on making money from users who are migrating to mobile devices. Zuckerberg said he could foresee a business in search over time, but analysts advised caution. Facebook has come under fire numerous times for unclear privacy guidelines.

    While Tuesday's revelation fell short of some of the wilder guesses about what Facebook planned to reveal in its highest-profile news briefing since its market debut, analysts said it was overdue for a well-rounded search tool, given its current inadequacies.

    Wedbush Securities analyst Michael Pachter argued that recommendations from trusted friends were more valuable than from strangers on the Web.

    Facebook has a vast amount of information in its social network, including roughly 200 billion photos. But some analysts noted that the information each user has access to through a network of friends is not always that extensive and could limit the usefulness of Facebook's search offering.

    "Very well-connected individuals have a rich treasure trove of data that they can mine, but the average person's storehouse of data is much sparser and has less relevance to these queries," said Ray Valdes, an analyst for Gartner Inc.

    Facebook's announcement underscores the increasing overlap between social media and traditional Web search engines. Google, the world's No. 1 search engine, launched the Google+ social network in 2011 and has been integrating data between Google+ into its search engine.

    In the works for more than a year, Facebook's new search feature will initially be available for the English language only and for use on desktop PCs.

    Bringing the search tool to mobile devices, such as smartphones, would probably require a change in design of the product, noted Valdes. "It might be that they have to come up with innovation like voice search, a Siri-like voice assistant to get it to work well on mobile," he said, referring to the technology available on Apple Inc's iPhone.

    Facebook executives at the event showcased a variety of different potential uses of the product, such as finding a date by searching for single men who live in San Francisco and are from India, and creating a holiday card by finding all the photos in which spouses appear together.

    The search technology will use the "likes," "check-ins" and star-ratings that Facebook users have posted about restaurants to determine the order of the recommendations displayed, though Facebook search engineering head Lars Rasmussen noted that users' comments about restaurants don't currently affect search result rankings.

    Zuckerberg said the search tool was a work in progress that would take the company years to fully build out. He pointed to a variety of additional features on the horizon, such as support for additional languages and the ability to incorporate data from third-party services, like online music services, which connect to Facebook.

    "I don't necessarily think that a lot of people are going to start coming to Facebook to do Web search because of this, that isn't the intent," said Zuckerberg. "But in the event that you can't find what you're looking for, it's really nice to have."

    Facebook’s big revelation: new search tool


    Facebook’s big revelation: new search tool

    Feature will help users to sort through content within the social network, says CEO Mark Zuckerberg
    Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg speaks during a media event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Tuesday. Photo: Robert Galbraith/ Reuters
    Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg speaks during a media event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Tuesday.
    Updated: Wed, Jan 16 2013. 01 03 AM IST
    Menlo Park, CaliforniaFacebook Inc CEO Mark Zuckerberg unveiled on Tuesday a feature to help its users search for people and places within the social network, in the company’s first major product launch event since its May initial public offering.
    Speaking to reporters at its Menlo Park, California headquarters, Zuckerberg described what he called “graph search,” which allows users to sort through only content that has been shared with them — addressing potential privacy concerns.
    Available as a “beta” or early version now, the new feature — dubbed “graph search” because Facebook refers to its growing content, data and membership as the “social graph” — will initially let users browse mainly photographs, people, places and members’ interests, he added.
    Zuckerberg promised users will be able to tailor their searches, such as by specifying music and restaurants that their friends like, or their favorite dentist.
    The news drove shares in Yelp Inc, which focuses on customer reviews of restaurants and other popular services, about 7.1% lower.
    “You need to be able to ask the query, like, who are my friends in San Francisco,” Zuckerberg said. “Graph search is a really big product. It’s going to take years and years to index the whole map of the graph and everything we have out there.”
    “We’ll start rolling it out very slowly. We’re looking forward to getting into more people hands over coming weeks and months.”
    Critics have long deemed the social network’s current search capabilities inadequate. Zuckerberg stressed that Facebook was not getting into Internet searches, Google Inc’s specialty.
    The world’s largest online social network, with more than one billion users, Facebook is moving to regain Wall Street’s confidence in the wake of a rocky IPO and concerns about its long-term money-making prospects.
    Speculation had approached fever pitch over the past week about what Facebook planned to reveal in its highest-profile news briefing since its market debut. Guesses had ranged from a long-rumored smartphone to a full Web-search product.
    That anticipation, as well as expectations of strong fourth-quarter financial results, have helped boost Facebook’s stock. Its shares are up more than 15% since the start of the year.
    On Tuesday, its stock was off 0.3% at $30.84.

    Tuesday, January 15, 2013

    India look to prove a point

    India look to prove a point

    The hosts cannot afford another loss to England in Kochi.

    Even MS Dhoni's torrent of sixes couldn't save India at Rajkot in the first ODI. (File Picture)

    KOCHI:
     After another disastrous start to an ODI series, India take on England in the second fixture on Saturday searching for a much-needed equalizing victory. MS Dhoni’s team surrendered the opening game at Rajkot by nine runs, failing to chase down England’s massive 325 in batting-friendly conditions. More runs are expected on another belter of a track at the Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium, although who gets them and for which side remains to be seen.

    A batting paradise, the venue has witnessed several scores of above 300 and numerous ODI hundreds. Possibly the only bowler to have tasted some sucess at Kochi has been Sachin Tendulkar, whose five-wicket hauls have both come at this 60,000-capacity stadium. Tendulkar is no longer part of India's ODI set up. Even if he were, his presence would have been more to the end of shoring up the hosts' indifferent batting, which has worn an unsettled look of late. Virender Sehwag’s replacementAjinkya Rahane and Gautam Gambhir provided a good start at Rajkot, but the batsmen that followed failed to capitalize after playing themselves in. 

    Costly overs
    Yuvraj Singh, Suresh Raina and Dhoni all looked good in the middle, only to give it up at crucial times to scupper the chase. One cause for concern is Virat Kohli’s poor form at the pivotal No.3 slot. Kohli was the centerpiece of many an Indian ODI victory in the last season and his diminishing returns mirror the team’s present plight. The management has yet expressed a reluctance to beef up the batting by including Cheteshwar Pujara in the eleven, but that may change going into the second match.

    The last two overs of Enlgand’s innings cost India the match. Their principal seamers, Ishant Sharma and Bhuvneshwar Kumar, were clobbered for 38 runs in the 49th and 50th as Samit Patel wreaked havoc at the Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium. Ishant conceded 86 in his 10, which included two maidens. Dinda too was generosity personified - as was Bhuvneshwar Kumar - and the only Indian bowlers to convey a hint of economy were the much-maligned all-rounder Ravindra Jadeja and part-timer Raina. This only confounds the possible approach of including Pujara in the playing eleven at the expense of Jadeja for the upcoming encounter.

    England prepared
    Everything seems to be ticking for England. All their batsmen clicked, one exploded, and an unassuming, balding off-spinner turned it around with the ball. Ian Bell and Alastair Cook looked in good touch, setting up a record foundation opening the innings and allowing Kevin Pietersen and Eoin Morgan the freedom to come up with useful contributions. Samit Patel collared the bowling to massacre 44 in just 20 balls, while James Tredwell, who may not have the guile and influence of Graeme Swann, was instrumental in holding India back with 4/44. Every time the hosts seemed to get ahead of the asking rate, Man of the Match Tredwell pegged them back with a timely wicket. 

    Pacers Steve Finn, Tim Bresnan and Jade Dernbach were expensive, but Tredwell’s and debutant Joe Root’s tidiness more than made up for their errors. England may want to include fast bowler Stuart Meaker for the Kochi game, but it was really the last two overs and the 38 that came off them that proved to be the difference in the lung-opener. India would be praying that no such calamitous events do them in at Kochi. For they will have little hope – if any – of returning from a 0-2 deficit.

    Monday, January 14, 2013

    The Facebook Phone Is Coming Tuesday, TechCrunch Is Sort Of Reporting

    The Facebook Phone Is Coming Tuesday, TechCrunch Is Sort Of Reporting

    facebook phone 2
    Facebook is holding a press event at its headquarters on Tuesday.
    The company hasn't said what it's announcing.
    TechCrunch columnist MG Siegler says Facebook will finally announce a "Facebook phone."
    Or, at least, Siegler kind of says that.
    He writes:
    Multiple sources have told us that they expect some sort of Facebook Phone to be on display on Tuesday.
    Now for the caveats (and they’re important). It’s not entirely clear if this will be an actual piece of Facebook branded hardware or if they will simply use hardware from a phone maker to show off some sort of new Facebook OS for mobile. That is to say, it could very well be that the “Facebook Phone” is more about a Facebook OS running on a phone (or a few phones).
    But then he writes:
    Complicating matters is all the chatter that Facebook has both publicly and privately told partners such as Google and Apple that they had no intention to build their own phones. Again, maybe it’s semantics. Or maybe Facebook simply changed their minds. Or maybe this phone/OS isn’t meant to compete head-on with the iPhone and the Android phones that Google focuses on. Perhaps this is meant solely for emerging markets.
    Then Siegler quotes something Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said at a TechCrunch event in September:
    "It’s a juicy thing to say we’re building a phone, which is why people want to write about it. But it’s so clearly the wrong strategy for us."
    Finally, Siegler nearly walks back the entire thing:
    Facebook is fairly good at keeping things close to the vest these days. And the truth is that there are a number of things the company could announce on Tuesday. But speculation that is something smaller, like a new app, doesn’t jibe with the multiple sources telling us this is going to be “a big deal."
    So there you have it. Facebook will reveal a phone on Tuesday. Or maybe it won't.

    Facebook Phone To Be Announced On January 15


    Facebook Phone To Be Announced On January 15

    facebook phoneUnited States: Worlds most popular community engine is now hosting two press conferences the one in his headquarter and second one in London. Nothing is till known what is going to be announced and launched but critics are sure that it will be a big thing as the company never put such events unusually and it will definitely be not about new applications or about some improvements.
    According to the Techcrunch sources not revealed it will be something like mythical facebook phone. The idea of facebook phone has been in discussions for past few years. The whole scenario can  be well understood in one of Zuckerberg views in admitting that they not only want to built applications for the people but want to integrated with the systems and want to develop an ecosystem where applications can be built n top of facebook. Besides being working on facebook phone from November 2011, facebook has also collaborated with HTC for building smart phone that would work with customized version of android.This can also be clear with Zuckerberg statement that they had start hiring new engineering from apple and especially having experience of phone’s hardware.
    Facebook has also came up with new offerings besides from just messaging to camera application ,application stores and especially the facebook zero, the service which provide free signup from phone. Facebook is also in a try to engage more and more users by giving attractive packages for specified regions and in accordance with taste of people.Reportadly, facebook would go head first to compete with Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android smartphones in developed markets like North America and Europe and then move toward Asia especially India where millions of people start their day by giving morning status. Undoubtedly, these are the users that let it grow
    and urge for new applications .After Facebook phone, the company will try for the building of search engine that could beat Google. Having said that we can undoubtedly revealed that there will be a launch of Facebook mobile on Tuesday.

    Friday, January 4, 2013

    Apple admits flaw in Do Not Disturb feature, will be fixed after 7 Jan


    Apple admits flaw in Do Not Disturb feature, will be fixed after 7 Jan

    It’s now confirmed that Apple’s Do Not Disturb feature which is available for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad on iOS 6 doesn’t work. The buzz first started onMacRumours, where users complained that the Do Not Disturb was working ahead of the time that they had set it for.
    One user in Japan wrote, I am in Japan so it is 2013, and I am finding that my iOS devices (iPhone 4 and iPad 2) are showing “Do Not Disturb” even though it is outside of the time I set for them. Not sure if this is related to the new year. Reloading the devices does not help and the software is up-to-date.
    The Do Not Disturb feature lets users turn off notifications, calls, etc while they’re sleeping or are during a meeting.
    Apple’s DND feature is seen at the launch of iOS 6 in June 2012. Reuters
    Now it seems Apple has put admitted to the problem and asked users to manually turn the feature on and off. You can view Apple’s support page here.
    Apple’s page states: Do Not Disturb scheduling feature will resume normal functionality after January 7, 2013. Before this date, you should manually turn the Do Not Disturb feature on or off.
    To turn off the scheduling feature, tap Settings > Notifications > Do Not Disturb and switch Scheduled to Off.

    Wednesday, January 2, 2013

    Happy 30th Birthday, Internet!


    Happy 30th Birthday, Internet!

    Oh, Internet. What can we say about such a loyal and knowledgable friend that has been with us for such a long time? What did we ever do before you were in our lives? Read books, I presume. Blerch. Anyway, it’s the 30th birthday of the internet we know and love today. INTERNET PARTY IN HERE!
    Ahem.
    The internet was born after the founders of what was then known as the ARPANET (Advanced Research Projects Agency Network) switched over from Network Control Protocol (NCP) to Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP). The birth of TCP/IP heralded the beginning of the internet we now know and love today.
    Not everyone was such a fan of the new TCP/IP protocol at first, so the ARPANET’s admins simply demonstrated their power by shutting off NCP for a day or so to encourage people to shift. Thank goodness nothing has been that dramatic in the changeover to IPv6.
    The changeover to IPv6 came last year as the Internet Protocol’s address system, IPv4, ran out of addresses. Thankfully we’re in a world now where changing protocols is relatively easy and turning off the whole internet isn’t something that we need to be afraid of.
    Happy 30th Birthday, Internet. We love you.
    What’s the best thing you’ve seen on the internet?

    Internet quietly celebrates 30

    Internet quietly celebrates 30 years of taking ARPANET's placedomestic-internet-635.jpg
    The Internet, a revolutionary and cheap communications system that has transformed the lives of billions of people across the world, turned 30 on Tuesday.
    The computer network officially began its technological revolution when it fully substituted previous networking systems on January 1 1983.
    Known as "flag day", it was the first time the US Department of Defence (DoD)-commissioned ARPANET network fully switched to use of the Internet protocol suite (IPS) communications system.
    Using data "packet-switching", the new method of linking computers paved the way for the arrival of the World Wide Web.
    "I don't think that anybody making that switch on the day would have realised the importance of what they were doing," the Daily Telegraph quoted Chris Edwards, an electronics correspondent for Engineering and Technology magazine, as saying.
    "But without it the Internet and the World Wide Web as we know them could not have happened."
    Commenting on the historic event's impact on the world, Edwards said: "The Internet means there is nowhere and no one in the world you can't reach easily and cheaply.''
    Based on designs by Welsh scientist Donald Davies, the ARPANET network began as a military project in the late 1960s.
    It was developed at prestigious American universities and research laboratories, such as the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and the Stanford Research Institute.
    Starting in 1973, work on the powerful and flexible IPS and Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) technology which would change mass communications got under way.
    The new systems were designed to replace the more vulnerable Network Control Program (NCP) used previously, making sure the network was not exposed to a single point of failure.
    This meant a single attack could not bring it down, making it safer and more reliable, the report said.
    By January 1 1983, the substitution of the older system for the new Internet protocol had been completed and the Internet was born.
    British computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee was then able to use it to host the system of interlinked hypertext documents he invented in 1989, known as the World Wide Web.

    Internet turns 30

    Internet turns 30

    The computer network officially began functioning when it fully substituted previous networking systems Jan 1, 1983, the Telegraph reported.
    On that day, it was the first time the US Department of Defence-commissioned Arpanet network fully switched to use of the Internet protocol suite (IPS) communications system.
    This new method of linking computers paved the way for the arrival of the World Wide Web (www).

    Based on designs by Welsh scientist Donald Davies, the Arpanet network began as a military project in the late 1960s.
    It was developed at many American universities, including the University of California - Los Angeles (UCLA) and the Stanford Research Institute.
    In 1973, work on the IPS and Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) technology began. The new systems were designed to replace the more vulnerable Network Control Program (NCP) used previously, and made sure the network was not exposed to a single point of failure.
    By Jan 1 1983, the substitution of the older system for the new Internet protocol had been completed and the Internet was born.
    British computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee later used it to host a system of interlinked hypertext documents in 1989, known as the World Wide Web.

    Sunday, December 30, 2012

    India 227/6


    A Team 29/5 made 227/6, what a performance by the Indian Skipper.

    DHONI 113*
    Raina 43
    Ashwin 31*