Popular Articles

World is getting hotter faster: US lawmakers
Hitting hard at global warming sceptics, powerful US lawmakers have accused them of "engaging in a policy of distraction" by promoting hacked e-mails, which claimed that scientists had exaggerated the crisis and asserted that the world is getting hotter faster.

Chandrayaan-II will be a technical challenge: Mission director
India’s second mission to Moon ‘Chandrayaan-II’, expected to be launched in 2013, has many challenges for scientists and engineers, mission director M Annadurai said today.

News of the day

Intel to pay AMD $1.25 bn, settle all disputes
Intel Corp agreed to pay Advanced Micro Devices Inc $1.25 billion as part of a legal settlement that ends a four-year dispute between the world’s two largest computer-processor makers. AMD stock rose as much as 27 per cent.
Business Ideas

Japan's July-Sept eco growth estimate cut to 1.3%

Japan"s economy grew an annualised real 1.3 per cent in the July-September quarter, much slower than an initially reported 4.8 per cent expansion, the government said today. - Rlys" revenues beat estimates, register strong growth - Surjit S Bhalla: There is no chindia in copenhagen">Surjit S Bhalla: There is no chindia in copenhagen - Destination India, say surging numbers in Japan Inc - Water, water everywhere... - A V Rajwade: Servicing Dubai"s growth">A V Rajwade: Servicing Dubai"s growth - Healthy gains for Smart Portfolios It is the largest downward revision in Japan"s gross domestic product since the April-June quarter of 2002 when the Cabinet Office began releasing data in the current standard. The latest GDP readings showed that the world"s second-largest economy continued to grow for the second consecutive quarter following its worst recession in decades, but the pace of its recovery slowed from the April-June quarter. "The latest data showed anew that companies remain reluctant to make fresh capital investment," Keisuke Tsumura, parliamentary secretary of the Cabinet Office, said at a press conference. "When releasing the preliminary figures, I commented with hope that a path for domestic demand-led recovery may have emerged, but now we need to reexamine that," Tsumura said. The Cabinet Office said GDP expanded 0.3 per cent from the previous quarter through June in real terms, revised downward from a 1.2 per cent rise initially reported on November 16. Quarter-on-quarter, capital investment fell 2.8 per cent instead of a preliminary 1.6 per cent rise, as the office reexamined preliminary figures after incorporating newly available data.


Add your comment:
Name:
Site address: http://
Your message:
Enter today\\\\'s date, 2 digits
(spam protection):