Saturday 29 November 2008

Terrorists had several credit cards

  Terrorists had several credit cards
A officer of Indian Navy said on Friday that they recovered several credit cards issued by top Indian and foreign banks from a rucksack of a
terrorist at the Taj while conducting their combing operation on early Thursday morning.

The credit cards were issued by Citibank, HSBC, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank, HDFC Bank and SBM (State Bank of Mauritius). "We recovered several credit cards apart from US$ 1200 from the rucksack," the Indian Navy officer, who had participated in the operation from early Thursday morning at the Taj said.

"We have forwarded all the evidence to the Mumbai police for further investigations," the officer said on conditions of anonymity due to security reasons.

The marine commandos or Marcos of the Indian Navy also recovered a national identity card issued by the government of Mauritius from the rucksack which contained 400 extra rounds of the notorious assault rifle - AK-47 and Made-in-China grenades.

What has come as a surprise that the terrorists managed to get hold of multiple credit cards in spite of strict Know Your Clients norms formulated by the Reserve Bank of India to avoid money laundering and use of banks by the terror outfits.

When contacted a Citi spokesperson said: "We have not received any information on this from the authorities . Our procedures require validation of identity and address of all our customers, in line with regulatory norms. If we are approached by the authorities, we will cooperate with them fully" .

Other banks did not respond as they had not been officially informed by the police as yet and did not have any details on the cards.

Friday 28 November 2008

NSG, Army closing in on Nariman House; fresh explosions heard

The NSG Commandos and the army personnel were closing in on the Nariman House, even as three fresh explosions were heard early this morning
Mumbai terror

rom inside the building in Colaba in South Mumbai.

The three explosions, perhaps caused by the grenade blasts, were heard at around 2:30 am from inside the Nariman House. However, the commando force was fully in control of the situation.

The night was by and large peaceful. The entire operation has been slowed down as the commandos are taking precaution for the safety of the holed-up people in the building. There are still some people believed to be holed-up in the Nariman House.

"The operation to clean up the Nariman House was still going on," Director General of National Security Guard (NSG) J K Dutt said, adding the operations would end soon.

Dutt said the operations at Hotel Taj was by and large over with just one injured terrorist still holed-up in the building. "He has been injured and I think we will be able to mop up the operation there very quickly," he said.

He said the injured terrorist has not yet been captured but "we will be able to do so soon".

Dutt said two terrorists are holed up in the 8th floor of the Oberoi hotel while in the Trident section the combing operation has been completed.

"As far as Trident is concerned, we have been able to completely clean up and we do not have any report of any terrorist being holed up over there.

"As far as Oberoi is concerned, yes, we have engaged two terrorists on the 8th floor," he said.

The attacks which began Wednesday night has so far claimed 127 lives, including six foreigners.


http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/News/PoliticsNation/NSG_Army_closing_in_on_Nariman_House_fresh_explosions_heard/articleshow/3767580.cms

Thursday 27 November 2008

Mumbai attacks: British tycoon is shot dead – hours after telling his family 'I'm safe'

Andreas Liveras: Ranked No265 on rich list
Andreas Liveras: Ranked No265 on rich list


A WEALTHY British businessman was among those killed in the attacks on Mumbai, it emerged last night.
Andreas Liveras, 73, had earlier spoken on his mobile phone of how he and other guests were locked in the basement of the five-star Taj Palace hotel after it was stormed by terrorists.

Mr Liveras, who was ranked 265 in the Sunday Times Rich List with a fortune of £315 million from wholesale food and yachts, was said to have suffered several gunshot wounds and was pronounced dead on arrival at St George's Hospital.

A family member in Cyprus told The Scotsman: "We're a large extended family and we're all in shock. I haven't spoken to any of his four children yet, but I heard they are all devastated."

Last night, Mr Liveras's brother claimed that he could have escaped death if he had been carrying his Cypriot passport.

"But he never took it with him," his brother, Theophanis, said.

The terrorists had separated British and American passport holders and chose six to shoot, he said.

Mr Liveras's British assistant, who has not been named, was one of the hostages singled out for cold-blooded execution, but he managed to escape despite suffering two gunshot wounds. He was being treated for serious wounds in hospital last night.

The assistant called Mr Liveras's family in England to alert them to his plight without knowing his fate.

Theophanis, who lives in Nicosia, Cyprus, promptly called Liveras's mobile phone, which was answered by an Indian woman who stunned him by shouting: "He's been shot."

A Cypriot foreign ministry official, Phaedonas Anastasiou, said: "He was executed in cold blood, and he was carrying a British passport."

Before his death, Mr Liveras had described the chaos in a telephone interview recorded as he and others were still in one of the buildings. "All we know is the bombs are next door and the hotel is shaking every time a bomb goes off," he said.

Before he was killed, the self-made millionaire, who emigrated to Britain from Cyprus, told the BBC he was with more than "a thousand people living on their nerves".

He said he had visited the Taj Palace hotel for a curry after hearing it served the best food in Mumbai. "I think it's got the best restaurant here, but as soon as we sat at the table, we heard the machine-gun fire outside in the corridor.

"We hid ourselves under the table and then they switched all the lights off. But the machine-guns kept going, and they took us into the kitchen, and from there into a basement, before we came up into a salon where we are now.

"There must be more than 1,000 people here. There are residents and tourists and locals. We are not hiding, we are locked in here – nobody tells us anything, the doors are locked and we are inside."

The Cypriot foreign ministry said Mr Liveras had gone to India on business. He was in Mumbai for a yacht show, family members said.

Mr Liveras's story is a classic rags-to-riches tale. After his family moved to London in 1963, he worked as a bakery deliveryman for a patisserie in Kensington. Within five years, he had bought the company.

Another British entrepreneur, Sir Gulam Noon, known as Britain's curry king, spoke yesterday of how he escaped the attack. He booked a table, but opted to order room service.

"He said the restaurant was the first place that the terrorists went to."

http://thescotsman.scotsman.com/latestnews/Mumbai-attacks-British-tycoon-is.4741506.jp

Wednesday 26 November 2008

Bollywood Explore Movies

Explore Movies

http://in.movies.yahoo.com/

Hollywood Explore Movies

Terrorists came from Karachi via sea routes to Mumbai

The terrorists who attacked Mumbai came via sea routes from Karachi in Pakistan, according to an intelligence report.

Militants armed with automatic weapons and grenades attacked Taj and Oberoi hotels, hospitals and a famous tourist cafe in Mumbai late on Wednesday, killing more than 100 people.

* WHO IS BEHIND THE ATTACKS?

Witnesses say the attackers were young South Asian men speaking Hindi or Urdu, suggesting that they are probably members of an Indian militant group rather than foreigners.

The attacks were claimed by a previously unknown group calling itself the Deccan Mujahideen in an e-mail to news organisations. Deccan is an area of southern India.

Analysts say that while it is not clear whether the claim is genuine, the attacks were most likely carried out by a group called the Indian Mujahideen. The name used in the claim of responsibility suggests the attackers could be members of a south Indian offshoot or cell of the Indian Mujahideen.

* WHO ARE THE INDIAN MUJAHIDEEN?

Indian police say the Indian Mujahideen is an offshoot of the banned Students' Islamic Movement of India (SIMI), but that local Muslims appear to have been given training and backing from militant groups in neighbouring Pakistan and Bangladesh.

SIMI has been blamed by police for almost every major bomb attack in India, including explosions on commuter trains in Mumbai two years ago that killed 187 people.

Police said the Indian Mujahideen may also include former members of the Bangladeshi militant group Harkat-ul-Jihad al Islami.

* WHY ARE THEY SUSPECTED OF BEING BEHIND THE MUMBAI ATTACKS?

The Indian Mujahideen have made credible claims of responsibility for most of the recent major attacks on civilian targets in India over the past two years.

The Mumbai attacks appear to have been carefully co-ordinated, well-planned and involved a large number of attackers. A high level of sophistication has also been a hallmark of previous attacks by the Indian Mujahideen.

The Mumbai attacks also focused clearly on tourist targets, including two luxury hotels and a famous cafe.

In May, the Indian Mujahideen made a specific threat to attack tourist sites in India unless the government stopped supporting the United States in the international arena.

The threat was made in an e-mail claiming responsibility for bomb attacks that killed 63 people in the tourist city of Jaipur. The e-mail, signed by "Guru Al-Hindi", declared "open war against India" and included the serial number of one of the bicycles on which the bombs were left.

Witnesses in Mumbai say the attackers in Mumbai singled out Americans and Britons in their attacks.

* WHAT OTHER ATTACKS HAVE INDIAN MUJAHIDEEN CARRIED OUT?

The group first emerged during a wave of bombings in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh in November 2007, sending an e-mail to media outlets just before some of the bombs exploded.

Their next attacks were the Jaipur blasts.

On July 25, eight small bomb attacks in the IT city of Bangalore on July 25 that killed at least one person and wounded 15. There was no known claim of responsibility.

But a day later, at least 16 bombs exploded in Ahmedabad in the state of Gujarat, killing 45 and wounding 161. Shortly before the blasts, an e-mail in the name of the Indian Mujahideen was sent to local media warning that people would soon "feel the terror of death" in the name of Allah.

It said the attacks were revenge for the Gujarat riots of 2002, when around 2,500 people, most of them Muslims, were killed by Hindu mobs. A later e-mail accused several state governments of harassing, imprisoning and torturing Muslims and threatened consequences if they did not stop.

In September, at least five bombs exploded in crowded markets and streets in New Delhi, killing at least 18 people.

The Indian Mujahideen sent out an e-mail moments after the first blast in New Delhi, saying the explosions were to prove its capability to strike in the most secure of Indian cities.

* WHAT WAS DIFFERENT ABOUT THE MUMBAI ATTACKS?

All previous incidents in which the Indian Mujahideen are suspected of involvement involved co-ordinated serial bombs.

The Mumbai attacks also show clear signs of coordination but were carried out by gunmen, some carrying grenades.

The tactics -- a military-style assault on soft targets, singling out foreigners, and taking hostages -- is rare and does not fit the usual methods of militant attacks on civilian areas.

However, similar attacks have been carried out before, notably the May 2004 attacks in the eastern Saudi city of Khobar.

Gunmen attacked two oil industry installations and a foreign workers' housing complex in the city, taking more than 50 hostages and killing 22 of them. The attackers asked hostages whether they were Christian or Muslim before deciding whom to kill.


http://in.news.yahoo.com/48/20081127/804/tnl-terrorists-came-from-karachi-via-sea_2.html

Deccan Mujahideen' claims responsibility for Mumbai terror strike

A little-known militant group going by the name of "Deccan Mujahideen" today claimed responsibility for the coordinated terror strikes in Mumbai on Wednesday night.

The previously unknown or little known group sent an e-mail to news organisations claiming responsibility.

Indian journalist Ameet Sha told a private TV channel there was no confirmation but the pattern suggested involvement of Laskar-e-Toiba.

She said terrorist attacks of such a magnitude and the participation of such a large number of gunmen raised questions on the security situation in India.

The identity and nature of the attack has left security agencies baffled.

In the camera shots of a suspected terrorist show him with an AK-47 assault rifle, dressed in a black half T-shirt and jeans with a blue rucksack hung over his left shoulder and red sacred thread tied on his right wrist.

What has left security agencies baffled is the sacred thread tied on his wrist which many say could be a plot to show that the attack was undertaken by probably an extreme Hindu group, but the claim of the Deccan Mujahideen has put this view in doubt.

Meanwhile, Maharashtra Chief Minister Vilasrao Deshmukh has told the media here that the terrorists came in boats and struck at 10 places but their number is not known immediately.

The terror attacks began between 9 pm and 9.15 pm with indiscriminate firing and bomb blasts, Deshmukh said.

At least two sten guns have been recovered from the terrorists, the Chief Minister said.

To a question, he said it was not immediately known as to who was involved in the attacks as the entire police force is concentrating on saving lives.

He said around 200 National Security Guard (NSG) commandos had been dispatched from Delhi for the operation to flush out terrorists.

Asked whether foreigners were the target of the attacks, the Chief Minister disagreed, saying it could not be said.


http://in.news.yahoo.com/139/20081127/808/tnl-deccan-mujahideen-claims-responsibil.html

Cricket: England cancel tour mid-way


Smoke emerges from behind a dome on the Taj Hotel in Mumbai, India, after it was attacked by terrorists

The Mumbai terror attacks had high resounding repercussions for the country's cricket as, in an unprecedented move, the touring England squad refused to continue with the tour and decided to head back home.

England were scheduled to play a Test match in Mumbai beginning on December 19.

Team's media relations manager Andrew Walpole had earlier refused to confirm speculation about the team returning home immediately, even as the England team management held talks with BCCI.

"We are speaking to Mr Srinivasan and we will wait before any decision is taken," Walpole said. "Let's wait for the meeting to end." Walpole also refused to comment on television news reports that England have refused to go Guwahati for the sixth one-dayer on November 29.

Guwahati had been rocked by terror attacks last month when more than 60 people were killed by blasts in the city.

The seventh and final ODI was in Delhi next week.

No one from the Indian board was available for comments. However, one official was quoted as saying: "This has been a terrible day for India but at the moment it's far too early to talk about cancelling England's tour or the Champions League," by a British newspaper.

England's High Performance squad, which is currently training in Bangalore, is also waiting for guidance from the British government on the future of its tour. The squad, which includes Michael Vaughan, Monty Panesar and Andrew Strauss, was scheduled to reach Mumbai on December 3 to play a practice game and train with the England Test squad.

Earlier, English county side Middlesex had cancelled their flight to India on Thursday for the inaugural Twenty20 Champions League after a series of attacks in the financial capital Mumbai.

Middlesex captain Shaun Udal told reporters on Wednesday the team would not be travelling as planned on Thursday.

"All we know is our flight has been cancelled in the morning," Udal said.

Meanwhile, Cricket Australia (CA) has instructed the Victorian and Western Australian sides, participating in the Twenty20 Champions League scheduled to begin next week, not to travel to India following the series of terrorist attacks.

The Victoria team was to stay at the Taj Mahal Palace and Towers, one of the two hotels that were targets of the deadly assault.

The terror attacks that left 90 people dead in the country financial capital, have put the ongoing tour of England and the upcoming Champions League T20 tournament in jeopardy.

Five suspected terrorists were killed in two separate incidents overnight including two during a gun battle in the country's iconic landmark Taj hotel, police said.

Little known Deccan Mujahideen has claimed responsibility for the terror strikes in e-mails sent to some media organisations.


http://www.zeenews.com/archives/2008-11-27/486774news.html




A literal blast from the past.........

Woke up this morning... Mum told me, "There were blasts in Bombay last night". I shrugged it off in my just-woke-up-so-am-still-groggy state, thinking, oh well, they always happen don't they...

Then I saw the news for myself. Pictures. Accounts. The places mentioned that were attacked last night...all places I frequent when I'm in Bombay. That scared me. Especially the Taj Hotel. When I'd gone to Bombay this time in July-August...I had gone to the Taj specifically for the Sea View Lounge because it's amongst the best (and therefore very expensive :P) cafe style food I've ever had. Since I was a child, I would go there very often. When my aunt was going out with my uncle (before they were married ie), he'd take her to that Lounge and I'd tag along as well... good memories.

Then, I see these pictures.

That is not how I want to remember Bombay. Not how I want to remember the Taj and the Oberoi or Colaba.

This is the road that the Taj is situated on... a busy road... always been busy...

This is how I remember the view from inside the Taj... Gateway of India... the sea... I used to love just gazing out from the Lounge windows while hogging on the super food...
Inside, the Taj was beautiful as well.


Senseless isn't it? Now people will bandy around the words "Hindu militant attacks" or "Islamic fundamentalist blasts" ... who gives a f***ing shit? At the end of it, to me, it doesn't matter whether a freaking Scientologist did this... the point is, someone did. People always do stupid things like this. And more often than not, the causes have been labelled as being religion-based. I don't know any religion that encourages violence. So the idiots who harm others like this and proudly claim their religion and say they did it for their religion no less... are the most foul people ever. They first of all kill people, take another person's life...and then tarnish the name of whatever religion they belong to.

This one hit close to home. It made me remember that if they'd done this in the first week of August...I could've been inside the Taj and become one of the statistics in the news.
It could've been me. Could've been anyone from my family... Bombay, especially South Bombay is full of them...


http://big-fat-ego.blogspot.com/2008/11/literal-blast-from-past.html


Mumbai Attack

200 people held hostage in Taj Hotel
 
About 200 people were on wednesday night holed up inside a hall in the Taj Hotel in Mumbai as they were advised by the hotel staff not to go out because of the attack by terrorists.

They are holed up in the hall in the old wing of the hotel since 9.30 PM, when terrorists struck.

Krishna Das, MP, who was among those held up, said they had been advised not to move out of the hall till the police clears the place of terrorists.

He was having dinner with some friends in a restaurant of the hotel when he heard gunshots. The guests ducked under the table from where they had fleeting glimpse of terrorists who were firing indiscriminately.

At least 10 top business executives are also stuck on another floor of the hotel.

7 foreigners among 15 taken hostage by 2 gunmen in Taj Hotel

Two terrorists carrying guns tonight took 15 people, half of them foreigners, hostage on the roof of the luxury Taj Hotel here, one of the hostages who managed to escape said.

Two youths in their 20s came to the restaurant of the hotel and took 15 people to the roof of the hotel, Rakesh Patel, a businessman from London who lives in Hong Kong, told NDTV giving the first eyewitness account of what happened in the five-star hotel in South Mumbai.

"The two young boys came to the restaurant and took us upstairs. We were taken to the 18th floor from where we escaped", he said.

Replying to a question, Patel said the terrorists wanted to know if any one of the hostages was carrying American and British passports.

 

Bush, Obama condemn Mumbai attacks; offer assistance

The Bush Administration and President-elect Barack Obama on Thursday strongly condemned the deadly attacks in Mumbai, offering assistance to the Indian government and convening defence and intelligence officials amid a "grave and urgent threat" of terrorism.

"President (George) Bush offers his condolences to the Indian people and the families of the innocent civilians killed and injured in the attacks in Mumbai, India," White House Press Secretary Dana Perino said in a statement.

The United States condemns this terrorist attack -- which left at least 80 people dead and over 275 injured -- and will continue to stand with the people of India in this time of tragedy, she said.

"This afternoon, the White House National Security Council convened officials from counter-terrorism and intelligence agencies as well as the State and Defence Departments," Perino said.

"The US government continues to monitor the situation, including the safety and security of our citizens, and stands ready to assist and support the Indian government," the senior White House official said, adding the President has been updated regularly.

Strongly condemning a series of coordinated attacks in Mumbai's financial hub, Obama said it only demonstrated "the grave and urgent threat" of terrorism and nations must work to "root out and destroy terrorist networks."

"President-elect Obama strongly condemns terrorist attacks in Mumbai, and his thoughts and prayers are with the victims, their families, and the people of India," Obama's Chief National security Spokesperson Brooke Anderson said in a statement.
 
 

Indian Commandos Battle to Free Hostages at Elite Mumbai Hotels

Nov. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Indian commandos battled to free hostages held by gunmen at two luxury hotels in Mumbai, after terrorist shootings and blasts across the city killed 101 people and left 287 injured.

Militants armed with grenades and rifles stormed into the Taj Mahal Palace and Tower hotel and the Trident Oberoi complex late yesterday, saying they were targeting Americans and Britons, according to witness reports.

"The terrorists are still hiding," said Mumbai Police Sub- Inspector S.D. Tarwadkar as security forces swept through the hotels. The officer said he didn't have details of the number of hostages or their nationalities.

Targeting foreign nationals at key tourist hotels and restaurants adds a new dimension to a wave of bombings in India this year that has killed more than 300 people. Multiple attacks have rocked India's cities with bombs planted in markets, theaters and near mosques.

A little known Islamist group called the Deccan Mujahadeen claimed responsibility for the Mumbai attacks, the Press Trust of India reported. Gunmen may have come from Pakistan, the Times Now television channel reported, citing an unidentified intelligence official.

"Mumbai is the New York of India and this is a clear attack on Westerners," said Clive Williams, a terrorism specialist at the Australian National University. "The targeting of British and Americans means there is a new modus operandi."

'Sheer Chaos'

"It was sheer chaos," said Manuela Testolini, a Canadian businesswoman who was dining at the Oberoi when gunmen burst in hunting for foreign nationals. "Every time we heard gunshots they were right behind us," Testolini, who escaped through the kitchen with guests and hotel workers, told CNN television.

President-elect Barack Obama led global condemnation of the attacks as his transition team said the U.S. would work with "India and nations around the world to root out and destroy terrorist networks."

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called for the attackers to be "brought to justice swiftly."

Six foreigners, 14 policemen, including the head of India's anti-terrorism unit, and 81 members of the public were killed, according to police.

The U.S. State Department said it wasn't aware of any American casualties in the attacks "at this point." Two Australians were among those injured, according to the government in Canberra. One Japanese citizen was killed and another injured, the Foreign Ministry in Tokyo said.

Explosions, Gunfire

The attacks, the worst in the city since train blasts in July 2006, began late yesterday with explosions and gunfire ringing out across the city. Shootings occurred outside Cafe Leopold, in the Colaba district of south Mumbai and at the Chhatrapati Shivaji Terminus, CNN-IBN television reported.

There was an explosion near a junction in Vile Parle, near the airport, where the remains of a taxicab were strewn across the road. Another explosion in a taxi was reported at Mazgaon dockyard road, according to PTI.

As smoke from a fire billowed from the 565-room Taj hotel, emergency services evacuated guests via ladders. All of the 26 South Koreans at the Taj were rescued, the Foreign Ministry in Seoul said in a statement.

Previous guests at the Oberoi have included News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch and Microsoft Corp. co-founder Bill Gates, according to the hotel's Web site. The Oberoi Group, founded in 1934, also operates the luxury Trident hotel brand.

Schools Closed

Schools and colleges in Mumbai will be closed today, the PTI news agency reported.

The attacks come as India accelerates efforts to prop up a slumping economy battered by the global financial crisis.

India's central bank said last month that growth in the $1.2 trillion economy may be as little as 7.5 percent in the year ending next March, compared with 9 percent in the previous 12 months. That would be the weakest pace since 2005 for what is Asia's third-largest economy after Japan and China.

The attacks may affect tourism, which climbed 10 percent in the first nine months of the year to 3.87 million visitors, generating $8.8 billion in revenue, according to government figures. Foreign direct investment into the country more than doubled between April and August to $14.6 billion.

Death Toll

Between January 2004 and March 2007 the death toll from terrorist attacks in India was 3,674, second only to Iraq during the same period, according to the National Counterterrorism Center in Washington.

The government has previously blamed terrorist attacks on organizations linked to foreign powers, without offering evidence or making arrests. Local media often blame the attacks on groups backed by Pakistan or Bangladesh, without identifying the security officials who provided the information.

India's capital, New Delhi, was rocked by five blasts during an evening rush hour in September, killing as many as 26 people and injuring about 133. Indian Mujahadeen, which claimed responsibility for similar attacks in Ahmedabad and Jaipur, said it was behind the blasts.

Sixteen bombs exploded in Ahmedabad within 20 minutes late on July 26, a day after seven bombs tore through India's technology hub of Bangalore, killing two. At least 20 devices hidden in cars and garbage cans were discovered and defused in the Gujarat city of Surat, days after the Ahmedabad blasts.
 

Troops confront Mumbai attackers

Employees and guests of the Taj Mahal Palace hotel are rescued by fire crews

Employees and guests of the Taj Mahal Palace hotel are rescued by fire crews

Indian security forces have been exchanging fire with gunmen holding dozens of hostages in two luxury hotels in the Indian city of Mumbai (Bombay).

Troops surrounded the premises shortly after armed men carried out a series of co-ordinated attacks across the city, killing 101 people and injuring 287.

The hotels were among several locations in the main tourist and business district targeted late on Wednesday.

Police say four suspected terrorists have been killed and nine arrested.

The situation is still volatile in two of the most high-profile targets of Wednesday's attacks - the Taj Mahal Palace and Oberoi Trident hotels, where armed men are believed to be holding about 40 hostages.

Flames and black smoke billow from the Taj Mahal Palace hotel, Mumbai

 
 

There are reports of intermittent exchange of fire between security forces and the armed attackers barricaded inside both hotels.

Correspondents say security personnel have so far not stormed the premises perhaps for fear of endangering the lives of hostages, some of whom could be Westerners.

There are also unconfirmed reports that five gunmen have taken hostages in an office block in the financial district of Mumbai.

The city's main commuter train station, a hospital, and a restaurant were among at least seven locations caught up in the violence

Police declare curfew around Taj in Mumbai

 
MUMBAI: Police with loudspeakers are declaring a curfew around Mumbai's Taj Mahal hotel, as fresh gunshots ring out from the area, in what could
signal the start of an assault on gunmen who have taken hostages in the hotel.

Ambulances are driving up to the entrance to the hotel and journalists have been moved even further back from the area.

Teams of gunmen stormed luxury hotels, a popular restaurant, hospitals and a crowded train station late Wednesday in coordinated attacks across India's financial capital, killing at least 82 people, taking Westerners hostage, police said.

A group of suspected Muslim militants has claimed responsibility.
 

Monday 24 November 2008

Computers That Can Think Like Humans

By seeking inspiration from the structure, dynamics, function, and behavior of the brain, the IBM-led cognitive computing research team aims to break the conventional programmable machine paradigm. This team led by Dr. Dharmendra Modha, manager of IBM's cognitive computing initiative, hopes to rival the brain's low power consumption and small size by using nanoscale devices for synapses and neurons. This technology stands to bring about entirely new computing architectures and programming paradigms.

Cognitive computing offers the promise of systems that can integrate and analyze vast amounts of data from many sources in the blink of an eye, allowing businesses or individuals to make rapid decisions in time to have a significant impact. For example, bankers must make split-second decisions based on constantly changing data that flows at an ever-dizzying rate. And in the business of monitoring the world's water supply, a network of sensors and actuators constantly records and reports metrics such as temperature, pressure, wave height, acoustics and ocean tide.

In such cases, making sense of all the input would be a Herculean task for one person, or even for 100. A cognitive computer, acting as a global brain, could quickly and accurately put together the disparate pieces of this complex puzzle and help people make good decisions rapidly. The end result of this research is to ubiquitously deploy computers imbued with a new intelligence that can integrate information from a variety of sensors and sources, deal with ambiguity, respond in a context-dependent way, learn over time and carry out pattern recognition to solve difficult problems based on perception, action and cognition in complex, real-world environments.
 

Six problems with iPhone OS 2.2

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Could not Connect to Internet'
 

 

`SIM card not inserted'
 
 
 
Problems in deleting emails
 
App Store extremely slow
KM instead of miles in Google Maps
 
 

Are you an iPhone owner? Read this carefully before jumping to the new iPhone upgrade, OS 2.2. Remember, it is prudent to wait a while, rather than struggle with the bugs that may come with the new update.

Apple's just released update for iPhone and iPod touch adds several features to both the devices as well as a number of security improvements. However, according to iPhone Atlas, several users who have updated to iPhone OS 2.2 are facing serious issues, including problems with third-party apps, Internet connection and email. Here's a listing of the major bugs being faced by users.
 
 
 
Several users have complained of some third-party apps not functioning properly with iPhone OS 2.2. These include a number of applications that make use of CoreAudio.

This is due to API changes and other modifications. These applications will need to be updated by their developers. Users can look forward to fixes from developers to roll out over the next few weeks. In the meanwhile, users can try uninstalling then reinstalling applications for issues that do not involve API or other strict compatibility.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
              
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Several users are experincing issues with their SIM card not being recognised. Some updated iPhones are giving errors that the `SIM card not inserted' or that a PIN lock is in place (where it has not been set).

The SIM recognition issue can be resolved by removing the iPhone's SIM card, then connecting it to the user's PC and restoring. iTunes may then reload the iPhone software successfully, after which the user can re-insert the SIM card and attempt synchronisation with iTunes.
 
 
Many iPhone users are unable to connect to the internet over EDGE or 3G cellular networks. In certain cases, manually switching between 3G and EDGE can resolve the issue.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
Several users, specifically AOL users are facing trouble deleting email from their accounts after OS 2.2 update. According to the report, 'this problem can generally be resolved by navigating Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > (your account name) > Advanced > Deleted Mailbox, then setting for the `On My iPhone' Trash for a POP account, or `On the Server' for an IMAP account.'
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Some users are reporting an extremely slow experience while browsing or trying to use the App Store after the iPhone OS 2.2 update. This may be a server-side issue that Apple is working to resolve
 
 
 
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Google Maps is displaying kilometers instead of miles for various countries. Here, selecting `USA' in International Settings can resolve the issue. However, this may lead to other issues for users outside US. There has also being reports of users not being able to use Google Street View. If Street View doesn't appear on the desktop version of Google Maps, it won't show up on your iPhone.
http://infotech.indiatimes.com/quickiearticleshow/3750382.cms

Competition to iPhone? Verizon claims hundreds queue up to order BlackBerry Storm

 

Verizon launched on the weekend its much anticipated bundle offer with Research in Motion's (RIM) BlackBerry Storm to take on the might of AT&T and iPhone 3G.

 

While the launch of Apple's iPhone 3G was relatively a much larger event mainly due to the global launch with thousands queuing up to get a hand on the model, Verizon witnessed comparatively lower numbers but still the hundreds outnumbered the units available on offer on day one.

 

Verizon said that it ran out of stock in most of the places and is now taking orders from subscribers guaranting them a quick shipment as soon as possible; reportedly within 5-6 days at some places.  

 

At a particular place in Manhattan, queued up subscribers lost their cool when it was informed that the shop had run out of the handsets.

 

It is too early to conclude on the success of BlackBerry Storm in USA. But it has certainly provided Verizon a ray of hope especially after the service provider lost  significant number of subscribers to rival AT&T's network after iPhone 3G was introduced.

 

Verizon has priced the Storm at the same price as that offered by AT&T for iPhone 3G i.e. at $ 199 for a two year contract.
 

Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 Phone entered the indian market

XPERIA X1 by Sony Ericsson has hit the Indian market. The company introduced the XPERIA X1 mobile in India.

XPERIA X1 offers a combined experience of multimedia entertainment and mobile Web communication. The phone has the capability to work as a camcorder. XPERIA X1 is available in selected markets across India.

Xperia X1 phone has touchscreen interface, high-speed HSDPA/HSUPA, A-GPS and Wi-Fi. It alsosports an expandable memory, voice dialing and multi tasking ability and a 3.2 megapixel auto focus camera with photo light feature for bright pictures.

The other features of mobile phone are full QWERTY keyboard, a 3-inch clear wide VGA display, 4-way key and optical joystick navigation along with Windows Mobile platform. Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 also comes bundled with FM radio, support for multiple media players and PlayNow feature to access a wide range of music library to download songs.

XPERIA X1 is available at the cost price of Rs. 44,500.

http://www.freshnews.in/sony-ericsson-xperia-x1-phone-entered-the-indian-market-99610

On-screen depiction of smoking harms public: Centre

New Delhi, Nov 21 (PTI) Justifying a blanket ban on smoking scenes in films and television programmes, the Centre today contended before the Delhi High Court that on-screen depiction of smoking is against public interest as people try to imitate their stars' actions.
"A large number of people get affected by observing what their stars do on screen in films or advertisements. People start imitating them. People would be encouraged for smoking if they see film stars or sports person doing the same in a film or advertisement," Additional Solicitor General P P Malhotra and Advocate Mukul Gupta said.

"There have been many instances where people particularly youth and children have tried to imitate what they see on the screen. In some cases people have jumped from high buildings trying to imitate what they saw in a film. So will be the case if on-screen smoking is allowed," the government said.

The Centre's submission came before Justice S K Kaul, who is hearing the matter as an umpire judge after a split verdict was given by a division bench on filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt's petition challenging the government notification banning smoking scenes in films and television programmes.

A division bench of Justice Mukul Mudgal and Justice Sanjiv Khanna had, on February 7, had given a split verdict after disagreement on the issue.

The two had different opinions on the constitutional validity of a provision in the Cigarettes and other Tobacco products (Prohibition of Advertisement and Regulation of Trade and Commerce, Production, Supply and Distribution) Act 2003 which bans smoking on screen. PTI

http://www.ptinews.com/pti%5Cptisite.nsf/0/8BC6CAF1D40A674165257508004BE694?OpenDocument

Screen ban on smoking must, govt tells HC

OUR LEGAL CORRESPONDENT
 
The Centre is convinced that a ban on screen smoking is necessary to prevent millions of imitators spawning in real life.

"People get affected by what their stars do on screen in films or ads…. They would be encouraged to smoke if they see filmstars or sportspersons doing the same in a film or ad," the government yesterday told Delhi High Court.

"There have been many instances where people, particularly youths and children, have tried to imitate what they see on screen. In some cases, people have jumped from high buildings."

A three-judge bench is rehearing a plea, from filmmaker Mahesh Bhatt and others, to squash the ban after an earlier two-judge bench arrived at a tie.

One of the two judges, Justice Mukul Mudgal, had said a blanket ban violated Article 19(1)(a) of the Constitution that safeguards freedom of expression. Such a ban would proscribe the portrayal of an act that happens in real life, curbing artistic expression and creative freedom.

He cited the TV serials on the Mahabharat and the Ramayan which showed gambling, kidnapping and deceit, and said such depictions cannot be banned to promote a morally idealistic society.

"Imagine a movie where all is well and every character is moral and obeys the laws and is happy and content. Such a script, apart from being very boring, also necessarily has to be very short," he had said. But his fellow judge did not agree and the case was referred to the larger bench.

The ban, notified on May 31, 2004, was to take effect from August 2005 but was twice stalled amid protests from the information and broadcasting ministry and the film industry. It eventually took effect on January 1, 2006.

Bhatt had challenged the ban on the ground that it violated freedom of expression, and also argued that it applied only to advertisements and not to movies or any other creative form of expression.

He claimed the ban was in direct conflict with the Cinematography Act of 1952. The notification asked distributors and TV channels to blur smoking scenes, banned such scenes in new films and required old movies to run a scroll warning that smoking was injurious to health. The ban extended to foreign films.

However, under pressure from the I&B ministry, the health ministry reluctantly agreed not to insist on a complete ban on historical characters lighting up, and in cases where it was necessary to depict the ill effects of smoking and in live programming.

But the health ministry insisted: "If the script cannot do away with such a character, the producer needs to write on the screen that smoking is injurious to health."
 
http://www.telegraphindia.com/1081123/jsp/nation/story_10150519.jsp

Kangana Ranaut on Seventeen cover

Kangana Ranaut, star of the Madhur Bhandarkar pic, Fashion, has come into the spotlight, featuring on the cover of fashion magazine Seventeen.

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With her electrifying performance in Fashion, Kangana has established herself as a favorite with Fashion Magazines and Fashion shows.

She appears on Seventeen is a pretty pink dress and cascading locks, a la Rapunzel.
With this project, she seems to have outrun co-stars Priyanka Chopra and Mugdha Godse in the popularity charts.

Kangana also seems to be following the path of ravishing Bollywood queen Katrina Kaif who has been the darling of fashion Magazines till recently.

http://www.newsline365.com/20083358/kangana-ranaut-on-seventeen-cover/

No new episodes as TV workers' strike continues

STRIKE CONTIUNES: The technical workers are not happy with the agreement signed on Wednesday.

STRIKE CONTIUNES: The technical workers are not happy with the agreement signed on Wednesday.
 

Mumbai: Television audiences will have to make do with re-runs of old soaps for some more time as technical workers unhappy with a deal signed on Wednesday to address their demand for higher wages, decided on Friday to scrap the agreement. No shooting was held for fresh episodes on Friday as workers did not turn up.

Members of the Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE), the workers' apex body, conveyed their unhappiness over the November 19 agreement when they met among themselves Friday evening.

The federation office-bearers then sat for an emergency meeting to discuss the fallout of the decision taken by their unhappy affiliates.

The federation decided to scrap the agreement and revert to the one it had signed with the core committee of television programme producers in October, though producers had earlier backtracked from it leading to an impasse in the industry.

The FWICE is, however, yet to convey its decision taken at Friday's meeting to the producers' committee, but is hopeful that the producers would finally be amenable to it.

"I am sure producers who are after all our colleagues in the industry would understand our constraints when we sit with them to discuss the new development that have surfaced," federation general secretary, Dinesh Chaturvedi, told IANS after the meeting.

He, however, refused to elaborate.

But it is clear that by deciding to scrap the November 19 agreement, the federation has given in to the demands of the sound recordists, dressmen and make-up artists - the three categories of professions who in particular were unhappy with the new rates of monthly salary fixed for them and were demanding a further hike.

In view of the stand producers had taken earlier, it can be expected that the impasse in the television industry will continue for long. Until it is resolved, the indirect loser will be the viewers.

Earlier Friday, some associations of technicians failed to report for work though producers said that they would resume shooting for their on-going serials.

On Wednesday, the FWICE and the core committee of the television programme producers had signed an agreement over wages and workers were to resume shooting from Thursday.

But soon after the agreement was signed, some associations of technicians complained to FWICE that they were unhappy with the new wages fixed for them.

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/no-new-episodes-as-tv-workers-strike-continues/78732-8.html

No new episodes as TV workers' strike continues

Television audiences will have to make do with re-runs of old soaps for some more time as technical workers unhappy with a deal signed on Wednesday to address their demand for higher wages, decided on Friday to scrap the agreement. No shooting was held for fresh episodes on Friday as workers did not turn up.

Members of the Federation of Western India Cine Employees (FWICE), the workers' apex body, conveyed their unhappiness over the November 19 agreement when they met among themselves Friday evening.

The federation office-bearers then sat for an emergency meeting to discuss the fallout of the decision taken by their unhappy affiliates.

The federation decided to scrap the agreement and revert to the one it had signed with the core committee of television programme producers in October, though producers had earlier backtracked from it leading to an impasse in the industry.

The FWICE is, however, yet to convey its decision taken at Friday's meeting to the producers' committee, but is hopeful that the producers would finally be amenable to it.

"I am sure producers who are after all our colleagues in the industry would understand our constraints when we sit with them to discuss the new development that have surfaced," federation general secretary, Dinesh Chaturvedi, told IANS after the meeting.

He, however, refused to elaborate.

But it is clear that by deciding to scrap the November 19 agreement, the federation has given in to the demands of the sound recordists, dressmen and make-up artists - the three categories of professions who in particular were unhappy with the new rates of monthly salary fixed for them and were demanding a further hike.

In view of the stand producers had taken earlier, it can be expected that the impasse in the television industry will continue for long. Until it is resolved, the indirect loser will be the viewers.

Earlier Friday, some associations of technicians failed to report for work though producers said that they would resume shooting for their on-going serials.

On Wednesday, the FWICE and the core committee of the television programme producers had signed an agreement over wages and workers were to resume shooting from Thursday.

But soon after the agreement was signed, some associations of technicians complained to FWICE that they were unhappy with the new wages fixed for them.
 

Deal or no deal? TV and movie strike looks as if it could be over

Tired of reruns? The TV season may be about to be rebooted.

Striking writers have reached a preliminary agreement with the major film studios and U.S. broadcast networks, several Los Angeles area media outlets reported over the weekend.

There has been no official announcement. Both sides have imposed a media blackout.

Several Los Angeles area radio stations reported a breakthrough in the negotiations late Saturday night, however. The Los Angeles Times reported in its Sunday editions that a deal is all but done, and an agreement could be signed as early as this Friday.

If ratified, the agreement means the show will go on at this year's Oscars. The Feb. 24 Academy Awards telecast was in jeopardy after striking writers announced they would picket the ceremony. Last month's Golden Globes ceremony was cancelled after nominated actors and scheduled presenters refused to cross writers' picket lines and boycotted the event.

An official settlement means new episodes of such popular TV programs as House, Grey's Anatomy and Desperate Housewives could be back as soon as late March. Production on a new episode of a sitcom or drama can take up to six weeks. Network insiders have said privately that a resolution now will allow time for six new episodes to be made of such series as CSI and Law & Order, enough to finish out a shortened 2007-'08 season.

The latest round of negotiations between the Writers Guild of America, which represents 10,500 film and TV writers, and the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents such major media companies as NBC-Universal, Viacom/CBS, Warner Bros. Studios, Disney/ABC and 20th Century Fox, were jumpstarted after the Directors Guild of America reached an agreement on Jan. 17 after just five days of negotiations.

The directors' agreement put pressure on both sides to reach a quick settlement in a dispute that has dragged on for three months, with no end in sight.

The directors' contract is believed to have established a template for the writers' tentative agreement. Writers put down their pens on Nov. 5 over such issues as fair compensation for online video downloads and live streaming from the Internet. The tentative agreement is said to resolve key sticking points that were holding up a settlement.

The three-month dispute has cost the Hollywood film and TV industry an estimated $500 million in lost financial revenue. The strike caused a ripple effect that curtailed U.S.-based movie and TV production in Canada and resulted in widespread layoffs to below-the-line workers such as caterers, set decorators, make-up artists, electricians, cameramen and drivers.

A quick settlement will mean the 2008-'09 fall TV season can go ahead as originally planned. There will be fewer pilot episodes made of new series, however.

Pilot season, in which roughly 100 new series vie for 35 slots on the fall schedule, is traditionally staged in March and April. The U.S. networks unveil their fall schedules to advertisers in May, and the Canadian networks follow suit in June.

The media blackout remains in effect, and the writers are still officially on strike. The Los Angeles Times reported that the Writers Guild's lead negotiators will brief the union's negotiating committee and board of directors on Monday (Feb. 4), however, with contract language for the proposed agreement decided by the end of the week.

It will still take the union's members several days after that to ratify the agreement. The strike will likely be called off, however, if the union's leaders strongly endorse the deal, the Times reported.

Another major Hollywood union still has to negotiate an agreement before labour peace is assured, however. The Screen Actors Guild contract with Hollywood studios expires on June 30, and union leaders have expressed  similar concerns to the writers in recent days. A settlement with the writers will probably provide a blueprint for the actors, however. Stay tuned.
 

Bollywood's showman lives it up at IFFI

Bollywood's showman Subhash Ghai addresses reporters at the IFFI in Goa

Trade pundits may have given a thumbs down to Subash Ghai. But the showman, who is busy promoting his new film 'Yuuvraaj' at the International Film Festival of India (IFFI) in Goa certainly thinks he's got a hit in his bag.

Unperturbed by his latest flop the showman of Bollywood Subhash Ghai made his presence felt at the ongoing IFFI festival. He said, "The IFFI is a great thing to happen to India. The 39th one is much better than the previous seasons. The state government is taking keen interest in the festival and ensuring that every year promises a new experience."

Critics may have given a thumbs down to his magnum opus 'Yuvvraaj', but Ghai still has his hopes pinned to it. He said, "All my earlier films have been flops for the first couple of weeks. And then they pick up later on. I am not disturbed by the verdict because eventually what matters is the audience. If they feel that there is truth behind the emotions displayed in the movie, they will like and accept the same."

With a string of flops in the recent past Ghai seems to have lost the plot. The next couple of weeks though will prove an acid test for the filmmaker and his his latest offering.

http://www.timesnow.tv/NewsDtls.aspx?NewsID=21707

Nokia N96 Bruce Lee Edition Phone Launched In Hong Kong

Nokia N96 Bruce Lee Edition Phone Launched In Hong KongTechnology giant Nokia has launched the special edition of 'Nokia N96', which has Bruce Lee's image on the phone, in Hong Kong.

The Nokia N96 Bruce Lee limited edition phone features Bruce Lee's face, signature on the back panel, and is also comes packed with rare pics of the ace martial artist and actor.

Moreover, the phone also comes packed with several accessories including a Bruce Lee doll and a nunchaku.

Nokia N96, which was recently launched, offers a memory size of 16GB, which can be increased to 24GB with an optional microSD card, permitting users to store hours of media and entertainment on the go.

The dual-side N96, which sports a 5-megapixel camera with Carl Zeiss optics and dual LED Flash, is a perfect of style and advanced technology and represents a complete new chapter in mobile technology. It is best optimized for superb web and entertainment.

The N96 can store up to 18,000 songs, around 20,000 effigies at 5 mega pixel, upto 60 hours of video or full length movies. With multifunctional media keys and a 2.8" screen, music, movies and games and will be available at the touch of a button.

The phone also packs in turn-by-turn voice navigation with geotagging and N-Gage gaming back up with Ovi to share up images online.

Other amazing features of the phone include built-in 3D stereo speakers, MPEG-4, Windows Media Video and Flash Video. Moreover, it is also compatible with USB 2.0 connection, WLAN and 3G HSDPA support. The phone comes along with a Bluetooth headset and a special wrist- band.

The original Nokia N96 is available at a price of about $840, but this 'Bruce Lee Edition Nokia N96' is priced little higher for about $1,300.

http://www.topnews.in/nokia-n96-bruce-lee-edition-phone-launched-hong-kong-291831

Sunday 23 November 2008

2 New XpressMusic Handsets launched by Nokia

Nokia has added two more devices to its music range of handsets: the 5220 and the 5320 XpressMusic. "Today's additions to the XpressMusic range up the ante with new ways for consumers to access their media, as well as interact and share content with friends and communities anytime, anywhere," said Jo Harlow, Vice President, LIVE category, Nokia.The 5320 features 3G social entertainment capabilities with Web 2.0 access. A new voice-controlled Say and Play feature lets you say the name of an artist or song to play it. Like other XpressMusic handsets, the 5320 also has dedicated music keys, and thankfully a 3.5mm audio jack. According to Nokia, the handset can deliver up to 24 hours of playback time.Other features include an audio chip for hi-fi sound quality, extendable memory up to 8GB, HS-USB for fast music transfer, and HSDPA for fast access to data. This loaded handset has a full-featured Internet browser, access to Ovi, and Nokia Search 4.1, which allows users to find and share media content and information. It also allows for N-Gage gaming in the convenient landscape mode.

The other handset (Nokia 5220 XpressMusic) seems to have a bit of a lopsided design. No, it's not your eyes playing tricks; the phone is actually designed that way. It has a built-in lanyard that makes it easy to carry around. Other features include dedicated XpressMusic keys, a 3.5mm audio jack, and support for external memory via microSD cards.

These handsets are equipped with 2 megapixel cameras and FM radios. Both are compatible with the recently launched Nokia Music Store, where consumers can choose from more than 2 million tracks and browse, download, stream and sync, either to a PC or side-load directly to a mobile device.Nokia 5320 and 5220 XpressMusic are expected to begin shipping in the third quarter of 2008 with estimated retail prices of Rs 13,980 (€220) and Rs 10,166 (€160) respectively, before taxes and subsidies.

http://bestinfo4u.blogspot.com/2008/04/2-new-xpressmusic-handsets-launched-by.html

Explore Bolywood Movies

Explore Movies

http://in.movies.yahoo.com/index.html

Weekend Bollywood Box Office

Nov 14 - 20, 2008 Week

Rank   Movies                     Collections (Rs)          Total (Rs)
1        Dostana                    17,27,81,520            17,27,81,520
2        Fashion                    1,71,55,769              15,10,58,117
3        Golmaal Returns       1,16,39,585               38,62,49,387
4       Dasvidaniya                69,34,671                  69,34,671
5       Ek Vivaah... Aisa Bhi  30,57,899                    1,01
 
 

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