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Google Glass runs on Android: Larry Page

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 April 2013 | 08.10

Apr 19, 2013, 06.50 PM IST

Source: Tech2.com

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Google Glass runs on Android: Larry Page

Google Glass runs on Android. Googles CEO, Larry Page, confirmed that the latest gadget that is on every geeks must-have list runs on the same

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Google Glass runs on Android: Larry Page

Google Glass runs on Android. Googles CEO, Larry Page, confirmed that the latest gadget that is on every geeks must-have list runs on the same

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Google Glass runs on Android. Google's CEO, Larry Page, confirmed that the latest gadget that is on every geek's must-have list runs on the same OS that powers 70% of the world's smartphones. To a question regarding the transportability of Android, Page replied that "Glass runs on Android, so it's (Android) been pretty transportable across devices, and I think that will continue." 

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08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Google's One Today app will let you donate $1 daily for a good cause

Apr 19, 2013, 06.20 PM IST

Source: Tech2.com

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Google's One Today app will let you donate $1 daily for a good cause

Being generous? There is an app for that! Google is testing its new app called One Today that brings together people and nonprofits through the simple

Like this story, share it with millions of investors on M3

Google's One Today app will let you donate $1 daily for a good cause

Being generous? There is an app for that! Google is testing its new app called One Today that brings together people and nonprofits through the simple

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Being generous? There is an app for that! Google is testing its new app called One Today that "brings together people and nonprofits through the simple act of giving $1." The app displays one good cause each day and urges you to make a simple donation of $1 towards it. Built on the back of Google's not-for-profit arm Google.org, One Today is an Android app that will get users to donate towards organisations and charities daily. The app is available for the US only currently and also has an invite-only status to it right now.The best part about this app is the complete transparency it keeps about where your money is going. Google has listed a few examples

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Tags: Google One Today, One Today, One Today App, Google One Today Android App, Android App, Google.org, Google not-for-profit, Google Non Profit, Non-Profit Organisations, Charities, Google Person Finder, Google Person Finder Tool, Boston Marathon, Boston Marathon Blasts, Boston Police, Google Person Finder Tool Boston, Google Person Finder Tool Boston Marathon

08.10 | 0 komentar | Read More

Govt unveils SEZ revival package; ignores MAT waiver demand

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 April 2013 | 08.10

The government today unveiled a package of reforms including easing of land norms to revive investments in SEZs, but refrained from accepting a major demand of developers for MAT waiver due to fiscal constraints.

"The SEZ scheme has not been able to realise its full potential so far. We have undertaken a comprehensive review of the SEZ Policy... I am happy to announce a package of reforms for reviving investor interest in SEZs," Commerce and Industry Minister Anand Sharma said.

The package includes reducing the Minimum Land Area Requirement by half for different categories of SEZs, an exit policy by allowing transfer of ownership of SEZ units including sale and doing away with minimum land requirement criteria for ITITES zones.

While the Export Promotion Council for EOUs and SEZs welcomed the steps, it said the initiative "may not result" in a substantial investments in the sector due to the levy of Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT). "This issue needs to be addressed very seriously for attracting investments," it said. To a query on MAT, Sharma said it is beyond "my purview and jurisdiction" to do away with MAT, but concerns of the SEZ developers and promoters have been duly communicated to the ministry concerned.

"There has been discussions, but because of constraints, the Finance Minister was not inclined to review the measures introduced earlier," Sharma said, adding that the reforms will help the sector. SEZ, once an attraction for investors, lost the sheen following imposition of MAT and DDT, certain provisions in the proposed direct tax regime (DTC) as well as global slowdown. The Council said several notified zones are awaiting waiver of MAT to operationalise their export hubs. The 170 functional SEZs have attracted investment of over Rs 2.36 lakh crore and exports from them totalled Rs 4.76 lakh crore in 2012-13.



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What Lagarde Subbarao said in IMF-World Bank meet

IMF managing director chief Christine Lagarde has called for a full speed global recovery. Speaking at the IMF-World Bank spring meeting in Washington, she said emerging markets face new risks from excesses. RBI governor D Subbarao, who was also present at the IMF Spring meeting stressed that it is important to make forex intervention successful. CNBC-TV-18's Gopika Gopakumar reports.

What Christine Lagarde  said...

It was her first press briefing at the IMF World Banks Spring Meeting. She clearly stressed for the need for a full speed recovery going forward. Currently, countries are going through a three-speed recovery, meaning that there are three types of countries which are going through global recovery at this point in time.

The first is countries like India where recovery is currently has started and is on the way. The second are countries where recovery is on the mend and the third is where recovery is still about to take off.
Emerging markets need to be cautious of risk from financial excesses. This was also mentioned in the world economic outlook report which was released two days ago.

She also said that policymakers or regulators must look at unconventional tools for ensuring global recovery. The role of the European Central Bank (ECB) was stressed on. She said that ECB has more space for monetary easing going forward. The banking structure the banking system in the euro area must look at restructuring and reform at this point in time. So, those are the clear words from Christine Lagarde at this point in time.

What RBI governor Subbarao said...

Subbarao stressed on quantitative controls on capital flows are distorting and inefficient, but effective in the short term. Quantitative capital controls, in the form of the quantity of external commercial borrowings (ECBs) that India allows into the country, are effective only in the short term, but they are distorting and inefficient. Therefore, he said that we should look at other kinds of capital controls.

He also mentioned about the kind of price controls which are currently available. These are issues he raised like whether there is the need to look at capital controls for countries going forward. Also, he said that India is currently grappling with the twin problem of lower forex reserves and rupee depreciation. In a sense, India is now grappling with this problem of forex intervention and the challenge of rupee depreciation. So, therefore there is a need to ensure that if the regulator intervenes in the market, it must be successful.

So, the regulators must be careful when it comes to forex intervention. However, a lot of questions raised by the RBI governor at the session on the issue of capital account management.



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India's own Disneyland 'Adlabs Imagica' opens on Thu

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 April 2013 | 08.10

Six years since the project was first conceptualised, Adlabs Imagica, positioned as South Asia's largest amusement theme park, will open to the public on Thursday. CNBC-TV18's Farah Bookwala reports.

Also read: Disney to begin layoffs in studio, consumer products

Spread across 110 acres near Khopoli on the Mumbai-Pune expressway, Manmohan Shetty's Adlabs Imagica is touted to be South Asia's largest theme park. It has 21 tourist attractions and sophisticated technologies, such as the 4D simulation technology. Sixteen of these attractions are ready to use, and the rest will be ready by June.

The rides are designed to recreate experiences from around the world, and will include rides with Indian themes. The park can accommodate 20,000 visitors at a time.  Adlabs Entertainment had purchased a total of 300 acres of land for Imagica.

Future plans include developing a 300-room hotel and a water park. The hotel is expected to be operational by December, and the waterpark by June 2014.

The company says it will begin developing the remaining 190 acres only if the response to the current 110 acres is overwhelming. Manmohan Shetty, chairman, Adlabs Entertainment says, "If this works well, we'll expand into an adventure park and other entertainments park only."

Over time, Shetty wants to take his theme park to other cities. As per current plans, hyderabad should get one in 2014. But further expansion will again depend on imagica beaking even in the stipulated 5-6 years

Shetty says, "The expectation is (footfalls of  30 lakh people a year...anywhere between 2 million to 3 million people will see the project through. On paper, this project should dwarf rivals like Mumbai's Esselworld, which has held sway for years now. But experts say Imagica has a tough road ahead.

For one, in times of an economic slowdown, luxury and entertainment spending are the first to go. This will be critical, considering tickets are priced at around Rs 1,250 per person - twice as much as a ticket into Esselworld. 



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Letter to Obama tested positive for deadly poison ricin

A letter sent to US President Barack Obama has been tested positive for the deadly poison ricin, federal investigating agencies said today. In a statement, the FBI said the letter containing a granular substance that preliminarily tested positive for ricin was received at an offsite mail screening facility.

"The envelope, addressed to the President, was immediately quarantined by US Secret Service personnel, and a coordinated investigation with the FBI was initiated," it said. `This was the second letter - the other being sent to a Senator - which have been tested positive for ricin, federal investigating agencies said. Obama has been briefed on the matter, White House Press Secretary Jay Carney told reporters at his daily news conference.

Operations at the White House have not been affected as a result of the investigation, the statement said adding that filters at a second government mail screening facility preliminarily tested positive for ricin this morning. Mail from that facility is being tested. "There is no indication of a connection to the attack in Boston," the FBI said.

The Secret Service White House mail screening facility is a remote facility, not located near the White House complex, that all White House mail goes through.

"The Secret Service is working closely with the US Capitol Police and the FBI in this investigation," the Secret Service said in an earlier statement. The White House has been put under heightened security alert after Monday's bomb blast in Boston that killed three person and injured more than 170. The security perimeter around the White House has been increased. "For a long time now there have been long-established procedures and protocols. Any time a suspicious power is located in a mail facility, it is tested.

"And I would underscore that the mail sent here is screened and that these tests are undertaken at remote sites to mitigate the risk both to those recipients and to the general population," Carney said. A day earlier, Senator Carl Levin, Chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said that he too received a suspicious letter at his Michigan office.



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It's the economy stupid: Why UPA-3 can't be ruled out

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 April 2013 | 08.10

R Jagannathan
Firstpost.com

The political economy signals are now becoming more favourable for a turnaround in Congress fortunes, and one cannot any more write off the possibility of a UPA-3 in 2014.

Luck more than policy pluck has played a part, and the two important signs we received this week validate the above statement: the growing hiatus between Nitish Kumar and the BJP can only benefit the Congress politically; the smoke signals on inflation are getting whiter.

Of the two, it is the economic signals that are material. After all, when people feel better about the economy, they tend not to want to upset existing political arrangements.

Before we get to analysing the current situation, it is worth harking back to 2008-09 another election year. We know the result: the Congress not only won, but obtained a huge improvement in mandate. That it squandered the mandate is another story, but there is no doubt it won handsomely.

The credit for that win is given to Manmohan Singh's nuclear deal and Sonia Gandhi's huge social spends and the two together brought in both the urban vote and the rural vote.

But this is at best a half-truth. People didn't vote Congress because one man staked his reputation on the nuclear deal, a deal which did not directly benefit anyone in particular.

What people actually voted for in 2009 was five years of high growth from 2003-08. The growth began in the last year of the NDA, and continued for four more years. The global financial crisis crashed growth in 2008-09, but this is where conventional wisdom deserts us. That crash was a nightmare for the west, but for the Congress it brought a bonanza. Here's how:

In 2008, inflation was heading for 13 percent. The post-Lehman global turmoil brought all commodity prices down, and by next year Indian inflation was turning negative just around the time people were about to cast their votes.

In 2009, everybody had fresh memories of five years of growth, which they credited the Congress with, and then there was good short-term news on inflation due to sheer luck on global commodity prices. As a net importer of oil, a global crash is always good for India's external deficit and inflation in the short run.

Moreover, let's not forget that first P Chidambaram, and then Pranab Mukherjee, unleashed tremendous fiscal stimuli (farm loan waivers, duty cuts, etc) that sent waves of good feeling in both urban and rural areas. That this benevolence was to create problems later in UPA-2 (high inflation, slowing growth) did not matter to politics in 2009.

In short, 2009 was won due to sheer economic luck and huge spending that the government could not afford. LK Advani got the blame for the BJP's second successive defeat and Manmohan Singh for the unexpectedly huge Congress victory.

But it was really the economy, stupid.

Will 2014 be the same as 2009? No two elections are ever the same not least because at least some factors are significantly already altered.

One, the BJP, under the new leadership of Rajnath Singh and Narendra Modi, is looking more like a fighting force.

Two, the Congress faces anti-incumbency, having ruled for 10 years. The sheer number of scams tumbling out of Manmohan Singh's closet we can't blame anyone else for ultimate responsibility, since 2G, CWG, and Coalgate have happened under his watch will make it tough for the Congress to pretend everything is hunky-dory.

Three, the economic mismanagement of the last five years has taken a toll, but as we head towards 2014, some of the signals are turning positive. The Wholesale Price Inflation for March, for example, has fallen below 6 percent. Gold, crude and global commodities are in decline which is good news for an economy which just reported a current account deficit of 6.7 percent in the December 2012 quarter. If the trend continues, by election time the Congress can claim anti-inflation success and blame past failures on global events as it does usually. The electorate does not know the difference anyway.

To be sure, the fall in inflation is largely the result of tumbling growth, which too is a Congress legacy, but this won't matter if the Congress now inflates the economy with freebies and fresh social spending.

This is exactly what happened in 2008-09, and though the government has less money to throw around this time, there's enough to make and song and dance of it.

Now, this is where the Congress can start changing the script in its favour. Here's the scenario that could unfold.

#1: As growth tumbles, the government will force the Reserve Bank to cut rates faster. Remember, the present RBI Governor retires in September, well before the next elections. D Subbarao anyway will start cutting rates from May again, now the inflation is looking more benign.

#2: A few months before the elections, the Congress can unleash huge stocks of rice and wheat into the market, and artificially depress market prices of food items. It will also put money in bank accounts by transferring cooking gas subsidies before the election. That's a promise of Rs 4,000 per household for nine subsidised cylinders.

#3: Slowing growth is a problem, but fiscal savings created by falling oil subsidies can now be used to spend on all kinds of social sector schemes food security, right to healthcare, homesteads, whatever.

Not all of this will get Congress the kind of victory it got in 2009, but it could be enough to leave it at least in a UPA-1 kind of situation.

Failure to keep correcting the fiscal deficit will lead to problems after 2014, but if the idea is to win an election first, who cares about tomorrow. The Congress certainly didn't bother about minor things like fiscal deficit in 2009.

Of course, nobody can predict the course of the economy or politics so far ahead, but one thing is clear: we cannot write off UPA-3.

The writer is editor-in-chief, digital and publishing, Network18 Group



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Thatcher's legacy: citadel of finance atop docks

Where a maze of derelict warehouses and old cranes once testified to Britain's decline, glass skyscrapers teeming with traders now dominate London's docks, a metaphor - for good and ill - for Margaret Thatcher's free-market revolution.

Thatcher called the dockside development one of the most exciting projects she had ever known. Its aim: To transform a virtual wasteland into a cluster of towers that would, combined with her 'Big Bang' reforms of the City of London, become the spine of the only financial capital to threaten New York.

"One of the things she would have put on her CV (resume) was that she was the mother of Canary Wharf," said Sue Street, a guide at the Museum of London Docklands, referring to the area where London's mini-Wall Street is centred.

"There was nothing here. Cobbled streets, darkness, no shops and only one bus route on and off the island," said Street, who drove its desolate roads in the 1970s. "Look what it's like now. There are lots of bus routes, no graffiti and no rubbish."

Built in the face of bitter opposition from locals and finished after its Canadian-owned developer went to the wall, Canary Wharf reflects the contradictions of Thatcher's 11-year attempt to arrest half a century of British economic decline.

Now one of the most powerful financial citadels on earth, its gleaming Manhattan-style skyscrapers soar above some of London's poorest social housing blocks.

For Thatcher's foes, Canary Wharf is also a morally bankrupt celebration of mammon: they say its financiers played a major role in fomenting the 2008 financial crisis, for which taxpayers across the Western world have had to pay.

Lehman Brothers' staff left the bank's building in Canary Wharf with their belongings in cardboard boxes after the investment bank filed for bankruptcy on September 15, 2008.

Three decades earlier, the wharfs, which had once been the centre of British imperial trade in everything from tobacco to sugar, were also gripped by despair as the sclerotic economy ground to a halt and the containerisation of cargo shipping pushed work downstream to deeper ports.

"If you want a physical reminder of the change under Thatcher, Canary Wharf is a very good example: when she came along they were derelict docks," said Charles Moore, the author of Margaret Thatcher's authorised biography and former editor of the Daily Telegraph.

"There is a certainly a criticism to be made about the effects of Big Bang leading to some of the problems we have had more recently. But it was basically a great success story of a very Thatcherite kind: it does something new but also reinvigorates something that Britain was good at before."

In 1870, Britain was the world's richest economy, but by the late 1970s it had become the sick man of Europe.

Its ambassador to Paris was so concerned that he sent a confidential despatch to London entitled "Britain's decline" documenting the loss of influence since the days when Winston Churchill was able to speak to Josef Stalin and Harry Truman on relatively equal terms at the Potsdam Conference in 1945.

"Today we are not only no longer a world power but we are not in the first rank even as a European one," Nicholas Henderson wrote in the 1979 despatch.

"Our decline is shown not simply by the statistics but by the look of our towns, airports, hospitals, local amenities," he said.

After being forced to beg the International Monetary Fund for a bailout during the 1976 sterling crisis, the Labour government faced the strikes of the 1978-79 "winter of discontent" which left Britons struggling with piles of uncollected rubbish and even backlogs at mortuaries as grave diggers demanded higher wages.

"Decline isn't good enough for Britain," Thatcher told a Conservative rally in the northern city of Newcastle on the eve of the 1979 election which brought her to power.

British gross domestic product per person was 40 percent lower than in the United States and even France and Germany were 10-15 percent ahead.

"If you look at the raw numbers, for 100 years Britain was in a relative decline compared to the United States, France and Germany so although we were improving our standard of living, relative to other countries we were falling further behind," said John Van Reenen, director of the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics.

Van Reenen, born in 1965, stood on the streets protesting against Thatcher when he was a student at Cambridge in the late 1980s, but said the data showed Thatcher had helped turn Britain round economically, albeit at a human cost.

"The century of relative decline was arrested and to some degree turned around by the policies she had. But it is not all rosy in the garden - there were costs to that strategy. The main one is inequality which also increased hugely over her reign."

By 2007 on the eve of the financial crisis, GDP per capita had overtaken both France and Germany and the gap with the United States had been reduced to about 33 percent, according to Van Reenen's calculations.

The flipside of that was that unemployment on her watch rose and old industries such as coal mining began to shrivel up as she focused on privatisation and boosting the service sector and home ownership.

If London's docks epitomised the national decline she was trying to reverse, Canary Wharf would come to symbolise the international capitalism she helped create.
Part of what was once the world's largest port, it processed imports from the British Empire such as rum and sugar before being used to land tomatoes and bananas from the Canary Islands.
By the time Thatcher came to power in 1979, it was a semi-derelict ghost town that still bore the scars of bombs dropped by Hitler's Luftwaffe in the Second World War.
Wrongfooted by the introduction of containers, the docks couldn't accommodate the new generation of larger cargo ships which needed deep-water ports. Over 150,000 port-related jobs were lost in East London between 1967 and 1981.
Pictures of the time show crumbling red brick warehouses and signs defaced with graffiti. Under Thatcher, the government seized direct control of the area, declared it an enterprise zone, and offered generous tax breaks to attract investment backed by a promise to extend the London underground.

"Look for yourselves what is happening in London's Docklands. Canary Wharf is remarkable," Thatcher said in a 1988 speech inaugurating the development.
"In a few years we have begun to transform Docklands from a wasteland of industrial dereliction into a lively varied new centre of employment, housing and leisure for London."

Construction began two years after Thatcher's sweeping 1986 'Big Bang' reforms of the City of London which were aimed at ensuring London stayed at the top table of global finance.

By allowing outside ownership of member firms of the London Stock Exchange, Thatcher gave Wall Street's most powerful companies a ticket to the City of London. U.S. giants like Goldman Sachs and Salomon Brothers beefed up their presence.

The abolition of exchange controls in 1979 granted British residents the unrestricted right to buy and sell currencies for the first time in 40 years, cementing London's position as undisputed leader of the global foreign exchange market.

According to figures quoted in a book about the history of the London market by John Atkin, a former adviser to Citibank, daily foreign exchange volumes doubled to $49 billion in 1984 from $25 billion in 1979, then soared to $184 billion by 1989, $504 billion in 2001 and $1.85 trillion in 2010.

By then, London accounted for 37 percent of the global trade, more than double the market share of the United States. "Margaret Thatcher made London an attractive destination for financial firms," Anil Prasad, head global head of foreign exchange and local markets at Citi, told Reuters by email.

"Banks and financial institutions flocked to London, and FX thrived. The market grew even more when the physical capacity for it to do so was created in Canary Wharf," said Prasad.

The reforms brought Wall Street to London, a culture clash that former bond salesman Michael Lewis helped document in his book "Liar's Poker": out went the boozy lunches and gentlemanly capitalism as U.S. banks bought out smaller British rivals.

The month Thatcher was deposed as leader by her own party, a steel pyramid was installed to crown One Canada Square, Canary Wharf's 235-metre (770 ft) centrepiece tower. Canary Wharf welcomed its first tenants in 1991 but the collapse of billionaire Paul Reichmann's developer Olympia & York the following year threw the project into jeopardy and triggered a decade-long battle for control.

As a symbol of British power, Canary Wharf became a target of Irish republican militants: in 1996 the IRA planted a half-tonne bomb there, killing two people and causing 100 million pounds worth of damage.

Today it is thriving. Home to Barclays, Citi, Credit Suisse, HSBC, JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, State Street and Thomson Reuters, it hosts more than 100,000 people working in an area that is as powerful as the traditional City of London.

The 50-floor One Canada Square, whose lobby contains 90,000 square feet of Italian and Guatemalan marble, houses offices of Coutts, Moody's, NYSE Euronext, Deutsche Boerse, BNY Mellon and even the Chinese Communist Party's online newspaper.

Estate agents nearby advertise a 3-bedroom, 3-bathroom flat with its own bar and access to a swimming pool and gym for 5000 pounds a month. A 201-square metre flat at West India Quay is on offer for 1.75 million pounds.

Some of the most memorable images of growing inequality under Thatcher were of City of London traders talking on absurdly large cellular phones or downing champagne after work. The phones are smaller, but in the noisy bars of Canary Wharf the champagne flows unabated.

For residents of the rundown social housing in its shadow, it is still an island of prosperity far removed from life. "They trade their billions and I live here on 100 pounds a week sick (benefit)," said John, who lives in a flat just a few hundred metres from Canary Wharf.


 



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Citigroup profit rises 31% as investment banking grows

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 16 April 2013 | 08.10

Citigroup Inc reported a higher-than-expected 31 percent rise in first-quarter profit on Monday as revenue from its securities and investment banking business swelled.

The No 3 US bank said on Monday that net income rose to USD 3.8 billion, or USD 1.23 per share, in the period -- the first full quarter under chief executive Michael Corbat -- from USD 2.9 billion, or 95 cents per share, a year earlier.

"During the quarter, we benefited from seasonally strong results in our markets businesses, sustained momentum in investment banking, continued year-over-year growth in loans and deposits in Citicorp, and a more favorable credit environment," Corbat said in a statement.

Under Corbat Citigroup partly recovered from its embarrassing failure last year under former CEO Vikram Pandit to win approval from the Federal Reserve after a stress test for its plan to distribute capital.

The company scored higher capital levels on a new test and received approval in March for its cautious application to spend USD 1.2 billion on stock buybacks. Citigroup has not asked to raise its quarterly dividend from its nominal level of one cent per share.

Excluding certain accounting adjustments, net income rose to USD 4.0 billion, or USD 1.29 per share, in the latest quarter, from USD 3.4 billion, or USD 1.11 per share, a year earlier.

Analysts on average had forecast earnings of USD 1.17 per share before the certain accounting adjustments.

Total revenue rose 6 percent to USD 20.5 billion. Expenses fell 10 percent to USD 12.4 billion from the fourth quarter.

The bank said its net interest margin for the first quarter was 2.94 percent, up marginally from 2.93 percent in the fourth quarter.

Citigroup, which is reviewing some of its weaker operations around the world, said revenue from its securities trading and investment banking business rose 31 percent to USD 6.98 billion.

The results were also lifted by the release of  USD 652 million in loss reserves, of which USD 351 million was from the Citi Holdings portfolio that is largely composed of mortgage assets. These assets are tied to US house prices, which have been rising.

Under Corbat, who took over October, Citigroup took a more cautious approach on loan loss reserves in the fourth quarter, releasing just USD 86 million. The profit contributed to an increase in Citigroup's Basel III Tier 1 common equity ratio, a key regulatory measure of capital, to 9.3 percent at the end of March from 8.7 percent three months earlier, the company said.

"All they have to do is a get a little better, and they can get back to a valuation closer to their competitors," said Mark Mandell, portfolio manager at Dalton Investments in Santa Monica, California, which owns Citigroup shares.

Citigroup's adjusted results exclude the impact of changes in value of debt and obligations of its trading partners.

Citigroup shares rose 13.2 percent this year through Friday. In the same period, the KBW Bank stock index rose 9.6 percent and Standard & Poor's 500 stock index rose 11.4 percent.



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India to set up regulators for coal, road sector: FM

Finance Minister P Chidambaram today said the government will set up independent regulators for coal and road sectors in four months and vowed to bring down fiscal deficit.

Beginning his campaign in North America for wooing foreign investments, he said India sees no difficulty in concluding a free trade pact with Canada.

"There will be a road regulatory authority and a coal regulatory authority within two to four months," he said at the Canada India Business Council meeting here. The visiting Indian minister said the regulatory authorities would become effective mechanisms to address problems being faced in implementation of road and coal projects.

The meeting was attended by over 100 CEOs of top North American companies. Referring to the fiscal position of the Indian government, Chidambaram said that the government was committed to bring down the fiscal deficit.

"We are committed to fiscal consolidation. Right now the fiscal deficit is 5.3 per cent (of GDP) and we want to reduce it by 0.6 per cent every year till it comes down to 3 per cent (by 2016-17)...We have drawn the red line to implement our target," he said.

Projecting India as an attractive investment destination with stable fiscal regime, he invited Canadian investments in sectors like infrastructure and food processing.

India, he said, wants both foreign direct investment as well as FII inflows. Later replying to a query on the proposed India-Canada comprehensive economic partnership agreement (CEPA), Chidambaram said the two countries are keen to sign the free trade pact in the near future. "I do not see any impediment to CEPA... I see no difficulty in negotiating CEPA," he said.

f prices continue to remain weak, there is likely to be up to 15 per cent growth in demand, he added.  India and Canada had launched CEPA negotiations in November 2010 to further boost bilateral trade and investment. Both sides expect that bilateral trade between the countries will triple to USD 15 billion by 2015 from USD 5 billion at present.

On the Foreign Investment Protection and Promotion Agreement (FIPPA), Chidambaram said there are certain legal issues which were being sorted out. The agreement once implemented will fulfil a key demand of businesses in the two countries, especially from Canada which has been eyeing India's growing market.

Referring to the Indian oil and gas sector, Chidambaram said that his government was reviewing the policy. "...we want to move from production sharing model to revenue sharing model," he said.

Chidambaram is on a week-long visit to Canada and the US with an aim to attract foreign investments in India. Recently, he had visited other major global financial hubs including Japan, Hong Kong, Germany and Singapore, to sell the India growth story. In the US, he will also participate in the World Bank/IMF spring meetings in Washington.



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Justin Bieber takes heat for hoping Anne Frank would have been fan

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 April 2013 | 08.10

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Teen pop star Justin Bieber is taking heat on social media after the Anne Frank House reported he visited the Amsterdam museum and wrote in the guest book he hoped the young Holocaust victim would have been a "belieber," the popular term for his fans.

A post on Saturday on the Facebook page of the museum said Bieber had visited the previous night and stayed over an hour, along with a group of friends and guards as fans waited outside to "see a glimpse of him."

"In our guestbook he wrote: 'Truly inspiring to be able to come here. Anne was a great girl. Hopefully she would have been a belieber,'" the museum said in the Facebook post.

Regarding that last sentence in the guest book, a large share of the hundreds of commentators on the museum's Facebook post reacted negatively to Bieber's choice of words.

"Anne Frank a belieber? That is by far one of the most self-serving things I've ever read, like ever," Facebook user Tania Saez Pinto wrote.

Media commentators also joined in the fray.

Scott Simon, host of U.S.-based National Public Radio, said on Twitter, "Anne would be wise enough to just laugh."

Anne Frank, who died at age 15 at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945, is one of the most well-known and celebrated Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

Readers around the world have read her diary, which was first published in 1947 and details the deprivations and personal triumphs she and her family experienced in hiding during the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands.

A representative for Bieber did not return calls or an email on Sunday regarding the controversy over his comment in the guest book.

Some commentators on social media sites commended Bieber for caring enough about Anne Frank's story to visit the Amsterdam museum, which is built into the house where she and her family hid before their arrest.

And the museum itself in its post about the visit from Bieber, a Canadian-born sensation whose hit songs include "Baby" and "U Smile," did not expressly criticize him and made mention of his Saturday night concert in Arnhem, the Netherlands.

Bieber is on tour in Europe.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Todd Eastham)



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Thatcher "witch" song 2nd in UK charts in death protest

By Michael Holden

LONDON (Reuters) - A campaign by opponents of late Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to get the song "Ding Dong! The Witch Is Dead" to the top of the British pop charts to celebrate her death failed on Sunday although it did manage to reach second place.

Thatcher, who died aged 87 on Monday, deeply divided Britons and while some have paid warm tributes to the achievements of her right-wing Conservative governments, others said her privatisation of swathes of industry had destroyed communities.

That opposition was manifested in a Facebook campaign to propel the witch song, from the 1939 film "The Wizard of Oz", to number one in the charts, provoking anger from politicians of all parties, right-leaning media, and members of the public.

The Official Charts Company said 52,605 copies of the song had been sold, but that was about 6,000 shy of the chart-topping track "Need U" by British DJ Duke Dumont and singer A*M*E.

The top 40 best-selling singles are played weekly on BBC Radio but the broadcaster said on Friday it would only pay a five-second clip of the song as part of a news item, leading to accusations it had caved into political pressure.

"I understand the concerns about this campaign. I personally believe it is distasteful and inappropriate," BBC Director-General Tony Hall said in a statement.

"However, I do believe it would be wrong to ban the song outright as free speech is an important principle."

Meanwhile, a rival campaign by the former premier's supporters to promote the 1979 single "I'm In Love With Margaret Thatcher" by punk band the Notsensibles fared less well, debuting in 35th place after sales of 8,768.

Since the death of the "Iron Lady", many of the divisions which characterised her time in office from 1979 to 1990 have resurfaced.

LONDON "PARTY"

In addition to the witch song campaign, several hundred people held a "party" to mark her death in central London, chanting, drinking champagne, and waving an effigy of the leader they despised.

More protests are expected on Wednesday when a ceremonial funeral with military honours is held at St Paul's Cathedral after her coffin is taken on a procession through central London - a tribute usually reserved for senior royal family members.

"This needs to be a fitting event for a very great lady," Francis Maude, a minister who served under Thatcher and is responsible for the ceremony's arrangements, told Sky News.

"It's a free country and people must obviously be free to express their views. I would simply ask that they respect the wishes of the mourners of which there will be very many for this event to take place in a dignified and seemly way."

But the cost to the public purse of the ceremony, estimated by commentators at 10 million pounds, has been widely criticised at a time the Conservative-led coalition government is making deep spending cuts to cut a budget deficit.

According to a poll, 60 percent of those surveyed thought it should not be funded by taxpayers. Tim Ellis, the Anglican Bishop of Grantham, the eastern English town where Thatcher was brought up, said the grand ceremony was unwise.

"In a context where there is great ill-feeling ... about her legacy, to then actually have a situation where we seem to be expecting the nation to glorify that with a 10 million pound funeral, I think any sensible person would say that's asking for trouble," he told BBC TV.

Police have said they are prepared for any trouble which could come from anti-capitalists and anarchists with a long record of violent protest in the British capital.

David Ison, the Dean of St. Paul's who will officiate at the ceremony, said he could understand "the hurt and the anger that people want to express about the legacy" but said her funeral should be respected.

"Mrs Thatcher is not a witch or a monster," he told BBC TV. "She's a human being like the rest of us and part of what of we need to do in a funeral is put things aside."

(Editing by Jon Hemming)



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BlackBerry refutes reports claiming Z10s being returned by buyers

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 14 April 2013 | 08.10

Apr 13, 2013, 06.55 PM IST

Source: Tech2.com

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BlackBerry refutes reports claiming Z10s being returned by buyers

BlackBerry has reacted sharply to claims by an investment housethat the Z10 is being returned by buyers at an alarming rate...

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BlackBerry refutes reports claiming Z10s being returned by buyers

BlackBerry has reacted sharply to claims by an investment housethat the Z10 is being returned by buyers at an alarming rate...

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BlackBerry has reacted strongly to claims by an investment house that the company's brand new Z10 handset is being turned back in by buyers after being dissatisfied with its performance. Issued earlier this week, the report by Detwiler Fenton & Company in Boston, USA, says that the BlackBerry Z10 phone is being returned by buyers at an above-average rate. However, the Waterloo, Ontario-based company has refuted these claims and has suggested that the report is an attempt to manipulate the company's share price. Going one step further, BlackBerry has even said that it would ask the Securities and Exchange Commission to investigate Detwiler Fenton's report. BlackBerry claims that Detwiler Fenton refused to hand over the report to BlackBerry's investors or the methodology behind it to the Canadian company, even after they were said to be "absolutely false."

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Kawasaki Ninja 300: India First Ride

We've already told you everything that's in the Kawasaki Ninja 300, so lets see what its like to ride on Indian roads.

What's it got?

The Ninja 300 is closer to an all-new motorcycle than an update to the 250R. The changes are visible in every area - be it styling, performance or handling. The engine now displaces 296cc versus the previous 249cc thanks to the increased stroke, and the engine is now lighter thanks to the extensive use of aluminium. Engine revisions are exhaustive, justifying the all-new tag. The pistons are lighter and get flat crowns, the connecting rods are shorter and thicker, and the cylinders lighter. The intake ports and valves have both grown in size. The redline remains the same at 13,000rpm, but all these changes help the 300's engine rev quicker than the 250. Power output is up to 39PS from the previous 33PS, while torque too has gone up to 27Nm from the earlier 22Nm. Also, the engine is now rubber mounted, which makes it silky smooth.

How is it to ride?

The biggest change between the 250R and the new Ninja 300 is the power delivery. While the 250R was more peaky, the 300 offers a meatier midrange, not to mention stronger top-end performance. This, in effect, means that the 300 is a lot more rideable in the city. For those of you who own the 250R and have been using it for their regular commute, the lack of bottom-end and midrange grunt will have been apparent. The 300 changes that, as it offers a lot more pull even as low as 4000rpm. This eliminates the need for constant downshifts and offers quicker acceleration at all times be it overtaking or pulling away from a traffic light. The engine is a lot smoother throughout the rev range, and even when revving hard, there's no vibration anywhere. It sounds more or less similar to the 250R, and is the sweetest when revving past 10,000rpm. The pull at high revs matches the stronger midrange, making the power band feel more linear than the 250R's. The gearbox is butter smooth, offering precise shifts at all times, with minimal effort.

The slipper clutch is something we have seen previously only on larger super sport machines and while we did not really feel the need for it while riding the 300, it does work well. Aggressive downshifts are a lot smoother and in turn less scary if accidental. Kawasaki's claim of the clutch being lighter to use at the lever is true, as the 300's clutch feels extremely light. Straight line acceleration is impressive, and the 300 should accelerate to 100kmph from standstill in no more than 7 seconds. Top whack should be higher than the 250 as well, and we expect it to be in excess of 170kmph.

Given the improvements to the engine we expect the 300 to return better fuel efficiency numbers too, despite the increase in performance.

On open highways, the 300 is a beast waiting to be unleashed. Performance is impressive, and the 300 loves being pushed. If conditions permit, the Ninja 300 should have absolutely no trouble in cruising at well over 100kmph all day.

Ride and handling

The 250R was an impressive machine in terms of handling and the 300 only improves that. It feels confident slicing through traffic, aided by the improved midrange performance, making it a slick commuter. This is aided by the able suspension ever so slightly on the stiffer side, while soaking up undulations impressively. The riding position, with the comfortable two-piece handlebars and lower seat, makes for great comfort, and riding the 300 all day long in the city or on the highway should not be a problem. Around corners, it feels confident. Quick direction changes are never a problem, as isn't leaning the bike over around a fast corner. The IRC tyres provide ample grip at all times, and the larger 140mm rear tyre adds to one's confidence. Importantly, the 300's brakes are not as ferocious as the 250R's in terms of bite, and feel more progressive, while providing ample stopping power.

Is it worth the money then?

The Ninja 300 is clearly a motorcycle for the passionate and well-informed motorcyclist who knows what he is getting. The 300 gets a host of technical updates which make it a highly desirable motorcycle. It certainly takes the entry-level performance game to a higher level, though at a significant premium over the 250R. It is a great motorcycle to look at with the ZX-10R inspired twin headlights, and feels like a much larger mount. It boasts of top notch build quality and fit-finish, and is without doubt a high-end product. That said, the price of Rs 3.50 lakh ex-showroom New Delhi does sound steep, but the 300 with its design, performance and snob value should make for an ownership experience like none other in its class.



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