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Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Safe and Friendly Cities for All


More than half of the world's population — approximately 3.4 billion people — live in cities today. This number is projected to increase to 69 percent by 2050. With this rapid urbanization come increased risks for the citizens of urban areas, especially women and children. Currently, one billion people are living in urban slums and are denied basic human rights, such as access to safe housing and reliable health services.

UNICEF, UN-HABITAT and UN Women have launched a five-year programme, "Safe and Friendly Cities for All," that aims at making women and children feel safer in their local neighbourhoods, while improving their quality of life.

The new partnership will address these challenges by supporting a variety of initiatives in the participating cities. By working with local authorities and organizations on the ground, women and young people will be able to identify those areas in their neighbourhood where they feel most at risk, and find solutions together.

For more information, visit: http://www.unwomen.org/2011/06/un-launches-initiative-to-make-cities-safer-fo...

(Producers: UNICEF, UN Women, UN-Habitat; Date of Release: 22 June 2011)

A Historic Time for Gender Planning in India



Gender Experts to Analyze India’s Flagship Public Programmes

New Delhi, 7 September: In a historic two-day meeting, the Planning Commission of India invited leading gender experts to conduct an analysis of the Approach Paper to the Twelfth Plan and India’s flagship national schemes. The experts will now examine whether the plans and paper meet the needs of women across the country.
“The Planning Commission is committed to listen to women’s voices and recognizes the importance of engendering plans and policies. The important next step in this direction would now be to give specific inputs on how to make schemes and policies more gender responsive,” said Dr. Montek Singh Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairperson, Planning Commission of India.
The Planning Commission is also likely constitute a committee, consisting of these experts, to look into various reports and possibly, the Chapters of the Twelfth Plan, from a gender perspective.
Senior policy makers, leading feminist economists, representatives of women’s organizations, and officials from different ministries were present at the two-day consultation organized by UN Women and the Planning Commission in New Delhi, on 6th and 7th September, 2011.
The consultation was held to share knowledge and experiences on gender and planning, and came up with best practices at the national, state and district levels.
Outlining the importance of the meeting, Ms. Sushma Kapoor, Regional Programme Director, a.i. UN Women said: “The most crucial outcome is that inroads have been created for feminist economists and other women’s organizations to influence the formulation and implementation of the Twelfth Plan. It is a strategic time to conduct such an exercise as preliminary work for the Twelfth Five Year Plan is currently underway.”
High-ranking officials of the Planning Commission such as Montek Singh Ahluwalia and Dr. Syeda Hameed, Member Planning Commission (Women and Children) provided crucial inputs during the discussions. Perhaps for the first time, six others members joined the discussion on gender including Shri. Arun Maira, Prof. Abhijit Sen, Shri. B K Chaturvedi, Dr. Mihir Shah and Dr. K. Kasturirangan.
Dr. Syeda Hameed from the Planning Commission hoped that the methodologies arrived at in this consultation will feed into the 12th Plan, and provide valuable inputs for state and district planning.

Highlighting Women at the 2011 UN General Assembly Debate



The 66th General Debate of the UN General Assembly closed this week with evidence of firm commitments to gender equality throughout the speeches of high-level government representatives. Emphasizing the importance of international efforts to achieve gender equality, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) also announced USD 5 million to UN Women.
This year’s debate was the first since the formation of UN Women in January 2011. Held annually, it is attended by heads of state and government, foreign ministers and other officials of UN Member States. In 2011, in another first, a woman opened the session — H.E. President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil.
She stressed that in Brazil, “women have been fundamental in overcoming social inequalities…yet my country, like every country in the world, still has much work ahead of it when it comes to empowering women.”
She welcomed the creation of UN Women, paying tribute to its Executive Director, Michelle Bachelet.
“I add my voice to those of the women who dared to struggle, who dared to participate in politics and in the workforce, and who forged the political space without which I could not stand here today,” Rousseff proclaimed.
During the General Debate on 26 September the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the United Arab Emirates, H.H. Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, announced a contribution of USD 5 million to UN Women.
“The UAE sees the importance of supporting international efforts in the field of women’s empowerment,” Sheikh Abdullah said.
The Foreign Affairs Minister pointed to the UAE’s own constitution, which “guarantees equal rights for both men and women” in a number of areas, including the right to education and employment. He noted women there now comprise 70 percent of university graduates and occupy two-thirds of government jobs.
The President of Nigeria, H.E. Mr. Goodluck Ebele Jonathan, said that Nigeria’s substantial support for UN Women reflects “our desire to harness the potentials of women in the task of nation building.”
Thirty percent of his own Cabinet members are now women. He commended the Executive Board of UN Women on the successful take-off of the new entity.
Other presidential endorsements of UN Women came from Finland, which stated that UN Women provide a strong and unified voice for women and girls, along with Chile, Croatia, and Ghana. The Foreign Minister of Spain called women’s equality a basic human right, and pledged her Government’s full support to UN Women in fulfilling its mandate.
Several world leaders made reference to the need to empower women economically. The President of the United States and the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom spoke of tearing down the economic barriers still facing women.
Other states linked gender equality with economic growth and development. The Foreign Minister of Indonesia called enhancing the role of women in the economy right and smart, leading to balanced and equitable growth, while the Deputy Foreign Minister of Norway underlined evidence that states with discriminatory policies tend to remain poor.
Citing recent research findings that empowering women in agriculture would reduce hunger by 30 percent, the President of Slovenia affirmed that Slovenia “strongly” supports UN Women in its efforts to tackle gender discrimination around the globe. The Deputy Prime Minister of Ireland referred to the global hunger crisis, and stressed the need to build the productivity of small farmers in sub-Saharan Africa, 80 percent of whom are women.
Stopping violence against women figured in the speech of the President of Côte d’Ivoire, who said he was committed to fighting this scourge. The Foreign Minister of Burkina Faso announced that the African Group of states would introduce a draft resolution on female genital mutilation.
Several countries highlighted national measures to increase gender equality. The Vice-President of Liberia drew attention to a new national gender policy, while the Prime Minister of Papua New Guinea noted that his Government recently passed the first vote on a parliamentary bill reserving seats for women in 2012 elections.
The Foreign Minister of Tunisia announced that it had withdrawn all reservations to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, or CEDAW, and adopted a mandatory parity system for its upcoming Constituent Assembly elections.

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It’s Your General Assembly

A living factory



The time it takes for new products to come to market is getting ever shorter. As a consequence, goods are being produced using manufacturing facilities and IT systems that were designed with completely different models in mind. Fraunhofer developers want to make factories smarter so they can react to changes of their own accord.





Special software and data connectors will in future allow computers to produce graphical representations of new production lines automatically. Pictured: The production plant for the C-Class Mercedes in Bremen. Photo: © Daimler AG
As soon as DNA is mentioned, we automatically think of biology and living beings. It is the DNA molecule found inside each and every cell that holds the encoded blueprints for humans, animals or plants. But factories too have a master plan of this kind. All modern manufacturing facilities resemble living organisms in their complex structure. And, just as in biology, all their constituent parts are linked to one another and have to be painstakingly coordinated. Now, the Fraunhofer Institute for Optronics, System Technologies and Image Exploitation IOSB in Karlsruhe has taken up the challenge – together with Fraunhofer IPA in Stuttgart and Fraunhofer IPT in Aachen – of decoding “factory DNA”.
It’s a catchy concept, but one that is bound up with solid goals: The aim is to reduce the costs that arise whenever products or machines have to be changed. Up to now, the interplay between a factory’s various systems has not been optimal. This problem is at its most obvious when production is being switched to a new item, such as a new model of car. The simple addition of a manipulator to a production line – or even just an operating system update – can cause havoc, since the slightest of changes has an impact on the entire operation.
What is lacking is an intelligent link between components: the products being manufactured, the facilities doing the manufacturing, and the IT systems controlling things. This is where the experts from the IOSB are stepping in. They want to make the factory smarter by way of new interfaces that will enable it to react more or less autonomously to any changes. In this endeavor the researchers are benefiting from their years of experience of developing software solutions for factories. They are working first and foremost with Daimler AG: Their “ProVis.Agent” production management system manages around 2,000 machines in the plant where the C-Class Mercedes is made.
The key thing is to put in place intelligent links between the manufacturing facilities and the IT systems. Today, if a product is changed, the first step is to rearrange the production line. Only then is the IT system reconfigured. What’s more, the details of each machine that belongs on the line have to be entered manually into a computer. This work is tedious and error-prone, involving as it does a multitude of cryptic alphanumeric combinations. “And the trouble is, you only notice any mistakes when the line is back up and running,” says Dr. Olaf Sauer, division director at the IOSB.
Thankfully, the research scientist and his team have managed to come up with a more elegant approach: Now employees can simply plug in a data cable and that’s that. The magic words are “plug and work”.
Home computing underwent a similar development. In the past, you had to install the appropriate driver before you could connect a peripheral device. Nowadays, all you need to do is plug in a USB cable. The new device uses this to communicate with the PC and to identify itself. This is effectively the approach that is set to be taken in modern factories, even if things there are a little more complex.
For instance, a factory will often have many different kinds of machine built by many different companies. And the sector is nowhere near having standardized software – or even a standard software language. So the researchers have invented and patented a digital translator to take the various digital device descriptions and convert them into a standard machine language called Computer Aided Engineering Exchange (CAEX). This information is then sent to a special data storage system, which is also being patented by the Institute.
“Together, these two components are enough to make a simple USB-type solution feasible,” says Sauer. “Once the data have started to flow, the computer can design a process control plan for the new production line unaided.” The IT specialists have proved that the procedure works by putting together a miniature model facility comprising four components: a conveyor belt, a turntable, a testing device, and a further conveyor belt.
Work has already started on an initial real-world application. :)

Giant 'Kraken' Lair Discovered: Cunning Sea Monster That Preyed On Ichthyosaurs


Photo shows shonisaur vertebral disks arranged in curious linear patters with almost geometric regularity. The arranged vertebrae resemble the pattern of sucker discs on a cephalopod tentacle, with each vertebra strongly resembling a coleoid sucker. (Credit: Used with permission of Mark McMenamin.)
Science Daily — Long before whales, the oceans of Earth were roamed by a very different kind of air-breathing leviathan. Snaggle-toothed ichthyosaurs larger than school buses swam at the top of the Triassic Period ocean food chain, or so it seemed before Mount Holyoke College paleontologist Mark McMenamin took a look at some of their remains in Nevada. Now he thinks there was an even larger and more cunning sea monster that preyed on ichthyosaurs: a 'kraken' of such mythological proportions it would have sent Captain Nemo running for dry land.
























The evidence is at Berlin-Ichthyosaur State Park in Nevada, where McMenamin and his daughter spent a few days this summer. It's a site where the remains of nine 45-foot (14-meter) ichthyosaurs, of the species Shonisaurus popularis can be found. These were the Triassic's counterpart to today's predatory giant squid-eating sperm whales. But the fossils at the Nevada site have a long history of perplexing researchers, including the world's expert on the site: the late Charles Lewis Camp of U.C. Berkeley.
McMenamin is presenting the results of his work on Oct. 10 at the annual meeting of the Geological Society of America in Minneapolis.
"Charles Camp puzzled over these fossils in the 1950s," said McMenamin. "In his papers he keeps referring to how peculiar this site is. We agree, it is peculiar."
Camp's interpretation was that the fossils probably represented death by an accidental stranding or from a toxic plankton bloom. But no one had ever been able to prove that the beasts died in shallow water. In fact more recent work on the rocks around the fossils suggest it was a deep water environment, which makes neatly arranged carcasses even more mysterious.
This question -- shallow or deep ocean death -- is what attracted McMenamin to the site.
"I was aware that anytime there is controversy about depth, there is probably something interesting going on," McMenamin said. And when they arrived at the remote state park and started looking at the fossils, McMenamin was struck by their strangeness.
"It became very clear that something very odd was going on there," said McMenamin. "It was a very odd configuration of bones."
First of all, the different degrees of etching on the bones suggested that the shonisaurs were not all killed and buried at the same time. It also looked like the bones had been purposefully rearranged. That it got him thinking about a particular modern predator that is known for just this sort of intelligent manipulation of bones.
"Modern octopus will do this," McMenamin said. What if there was an ancient, very large sort of octopus, like the kraken of mythology. "I think that these things were captured by the kraken and taken to the midden and the cephalopod would take them apart."
In the fossil bed, some of the shonisaur vertebral disks are arranged in curious linear patterns with almost geometric regularity, McMenamin explained.The proposed Triassic kraken, which could have been the most intelligent invertebrate ever, arranged the vertebral discs in double line patterns, with individual pieces nesting in a fitted fashion as if they were part of a puzzle.
Even more creepy: The arranged vertebrae resemble the pattern of sucker discs on a cephalopod tentacle, with each vertebra strongly resembling a coleoid sucker. In other words, the vertebral disc "pavement" seen at the state park may represent the earliest known self portrait.
But could an octopus really have taken out such huge swimming predatory reptiles? No one would have believed such a tale until the staff of the Seattle Aquarium set up a video camera at night a few years ago to find out what was killing the sharks in one of their large tanks. What they were shocked to discover was that a large octopus they had in the same tank was the culprit. The video of one of these attacks is available on the web to anyone who uses the search terms "shark vs octopus."
"We think that this cephalopod in the Triassic was doing the same thing," said McMenamin. Among the evidences of the kraken attacks are many more ribs broken in the shonisaur fossils than would seem accidental and the twisted necks of the ichthyosaurs. "It was either drowning them or breaking their necks."
Of course, it's the perfect Triassic crime because octopuses are mostly soft-bodied and don't fossilize well. Only their beaks, or mouth parts, are hard and the chances of those being preserved nearby are very low. That means the evidence for the murderous Kraken is circumstantial, which may leave some scientists rather skeptical. But McMenamin is not worried.
"We're ready for this," he said. "We have a very good case."

How a Team of Enthusiasts Are Mapping Dark Matter


Earthly skills like handwritten signature verification turn out to be useful on a cosmological scale as well

Abell Elliptical Galaxy The giant elliptical galaxy ESO 325-G004, from the Abell S740 cluster. Wikimedia Commons
When the Euclid mission lifts off at the end of this decade, it will map galaxy clusters in infrared and visible light, helping to blueprint the large-scale structure of the universe. And a bunch of amateur science geeks who signed up for the competition will use their specialized skills to elucidate those findings.
The Mapping Dark Matter competition proves that Arabic handwriting analysis, glaciology and particle physics are more relevant to cosmology than anyone would have thought — and that when you ask people to solve problems for bragging rights, you get some very creative results.

NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory sponsored the competition in cooperation with Kaggle, a startup that hosts prediction and data modeling competitions. In all, 73 teams signed up to measure the ellipticity of galaxies in astronomy images, a key element in studying cosmology's dark materials. Physics professor David Kirkby and graduate student Daniel Margala from the University of California-Irvine won the prize and brought their findings to JPL last week.
The problem: estimating the shapes of simulated postage-stamp-sized galaxy images that had been deliberately blurred. Kirkby’s background is in particle physics, but he’s interested in cosmology, so he was intrigued when he saw the competition online.
“It’s hard to get into a new area of research, because so much has already gone on before, and there’s so much jargon, it’s hard to work with the data,” Kirkby said in an interview. “But because this was a competition, it was a really well-designed problem. It posed the question in a way that was really easy for us to understand and jump in — they wanted to bring in unique ideas to work on the problem.”
And it worked. Right off the bat, Martin O’Leary, a Ph.D student in glaciology from Cambridge University, spends most of his time studying satellite images to detect the edges of glaciers; his techniques also applied to determining galactic edges. Then teammates Eu Jin Lok, an Australian graduate student at Deloitte, and Ali Hassaine, a signature verification specialist from Qatar University, built on O’Leary’s findings. Kirkby and Margala built an artificial neural network and were able to come up with the most accurate values for the galaxies’ ellipticity.
Jason Rhodes, an astrophysicist at JPL and an investigator on the Euclid mission, said the results will likely be incorporated into future algorithms that will measure real data.
“We’ll have the best quality of data from Euclid, and we need these techniques to fully exploit that data,” he said.
Looking for dark matter is something like looking for the wind — it’s invisible, but you can tell it’s there because of its impact on other objects. (Obviously wind has more observable effects than dark matter, but you get the idea.) Just as you might study a waving flag to infer that it’s windy, dark matter researchers look at warps in galaxy light to infer that the dark matter is present.

The Bullet Cluster:  Wikimedia Commons
The image above, of the Bullet Cluster, is probably the best example of this. It depicts two colliding clusters of galaxies that have passed through one another at unspeakably energetic speeds. As they moved past each other in opposite directions, the stars slowed down a little, and the hot gas, which is the pinkish areas, slowed down a lot. But the dark matter, which doesn’t interact with anything except gravitationally, didn’t slow down. It is represented in blue here, way ahead of the rest of the material in these clusters. It’s not directly visible in this image; the blue shading is inferred from the effect that its gravity has on background radiation. The gravity of dark matter acts like a lens, warping the passing light.
Think of a penny in a pool of water — the penny you see is distorted because the light reflecting off it has to travel through water, Rhodes explained.
“In the same way, a very distant galaxy has a shape that we see as distorted, as it is moving through the intervening dark matter,” he said.
To know how much the light has been distorted, you’d need to know the shape of the object emitting it — a galaxy that looks warped might just be a particularly ovoid galaxy. Determining galactic ellipticity helps astronomers determine how much of that ellipticity is the result of dark matter.
Kirkby and Margala came up with a model for each galaxy, involving six or seven different parameters. This global view, rather than looking at each data point on its own, was a novel approach, according to Rhodes. Then they fed the data into an artificial neural network, which they used to find the galaxies’ elliptical shapes. Kirkby said he planned to write a paper about his work.
“The astronomy community is trying to get out in front of the large data analysis problem that’s looming,” Kirkby said. “The fact that it was set up as a competition was kind of unusual for research, but I think that made it fun ... It adds a new element to research that we haven’t seen before, where people tend to work by themselves and publish papers.”

plz plz watch this...in my whole life i never seen ds type


FIVE BEST PAYING HOURLY JOBS





In a tough economy it’s important to find jobs that have the highest pay and potential. If you are in the market for an hourly salary you should look into these great career choices! Get the list of the top 5 paying jobs here!
Payscale highlights…
1. Commercial Diver - $25.58 – $35.75
Welding work can be rigorous and demanding. Can you imagine doing it in the dark, under 1,000 feet of water? Commercial divers do all kinds of repairs, construction work, search and rescue, and other tasks while floating over river beds or past schools of fish. Divers must be efficient workers, excellent communicators, comfortable working in teams and up for very physically demanding work. Divers attend diving school then look for work placement opportunities where they can build their skill and experience level.
2. Construction Superintendent – $22.52 – $35.17
From strip malls to 50 story office towers, construction superintendents are responsible for coordinating the building of commercial and residential structures. A person in this job needs to be an effective leader who can coordinate the teams and processes needed to complete a project on time, from hiring workers to getting materials to the site. Depending on the size of the project, there may be more than one construction manager involved. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), most construction managers are often self-employed and those with college degrees in construction tend to have better job prospects.
3. Grant Writer – $24.75 – $50.51
When non-profit groups, research institutions and community-based organizations look for funding, they often rely on grant money. And, grant writers are responsible for bringing in those dollars. Besides having excellent written communication skills, grant writers must be good researchers, know how to organize information well, be aware of the best grant sources and know how to write persuasively. Many grant writers work for themselves, though a large organization can hire them full-time. And, grant writers have the opportunity to work for a cause they believe in which can make it a very satisfying job.
4. Ultrasound Technologist – $29.11 – $38.04
Diagnostic medical sonography is a growing field. When compared with less portable and more expensive approaches, like CT and MRI scans, ultrasound is growing in popularity. And, as the baby boomers age, this technology will become more in demand. Technologists often work at healthcare facilities and need to be available on weekends and evenings. This career can be entered several ways, including study at vocational institutions, colleges or in the armed forces, along with on-the-job training. There are certifications available and sonographers can also specialize in certain areas of the body.
5. Landscape Architect – $22.73 – $32.90
When a new freeway goes in or a home is being built, the undeveloped land around it often requires the care of a landscape architect. If you love the outdoors and have an eye for both beauty and function, this may be a great career for you. Landscape architects review a site, talk to their clients about their needs, create a plan, follow a budget and then work with the other members of the project team to ensure that the final landscaping is completed as planned. Landscape architects spend time indoors doing research, meeting with clients and creating proposals, but the rest of their time is spent on the job site. A bachelor’s or a master’s degree in landscape architecture is usually needed to enter this profession, as well as licensure in most states.
Get more high paying hourly jobs at Payscale!

THE UNEXPECTED KEY INGREDIENT TO SUCCESS



When you think of success, you are much more likely to imagine perfection than imperfection. If this is the case, you may be overlooking a vital ingredient to success. It is not perfection which makes success, but instead overcoming the imperfections. Find out why this is so important here!
Success.com explains…
Imperfection is part of the human condition.  We all make mistakes, fail to perform at an optimum level sometimes, miss things that should be obvious and have moments of reflection in which, in hindsight, we say: “how did I miss that?”  What is important is to recognize is that in order to achieve success you do not need to be perfect.  In fact, the lessons you learn from your imperfections are critical for your growth and are essential in your success journey.
Not only is it important to accept our condition of imperfection, it is also critical that we build up the courage to own up our own shortcomings and take responsibility for when we make mistakes.  When you are in the heat of battle, dealing with difficult situations and being accused of things that are not true, we tend to become defensive.    It is important to get the facts straight and communicate it in a professional manner, defending your position when the facts show that you not guilty as charged.
But it is just as important to recognize when you do fail.  No one expects you to be perfect, and owning up to the occasions when you made mistakes or did not fully meet expectations will only increase the respect other people have for you and strengthen your ability to win and be successful.
Others relate to you when you make mistakes because they realized that they are not perfect themselves.  Just like you make mistakes, other people are also vulnerable to imperfections.  But if you expect others to understand when you make mistakes, it is important that you don’t become quick to judge others either.  Judging others by different standards than what you expect them to judge you is not a good way to develop your character and leadership abilities.
Don’t be afraid of making mistakes, or to admitting to them.  Even the best and most experienced people in your field will make mistakes.  Not only is making mistakes natural, it is also healthy and good for success, as it teaches you lessons that you can use when the stakes are higher.
Get the full story at Success.com!

Tum To There Pardesi - Sai Baba Version