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Friday, April 17, 2015

How Google can help you find your lost smartphone?


Using Google search on a desktop, users need to type in ’Find my phone’ and an approximate location of the device will be shown.

Misplaced your phone or left it somewhere around the house? Fret not! Search engine giant Google can now help locate the smartphone.
Using Google search on a desktop, users need to type in ’Find my phone’ and an approximate location of the device will be shown, Google said in a blog post.
“We’ve all been there — you’ve searched under your car seat, tossed around the sofa cushions and you still can’t find your phone. If you know where your computer is, you can now ask Google to find your Android phone from your desktop,” it said.
The Android Device Manager will allow users to ring their device, using which they can locate their device. The phone will ring for five minutes, once the ring option is chosen.
Users would also have to ensure that the smartphone’s location services are on so that Google can locate it.
The feature also allows users to lock and erase data off the device in case of theft or loss of the handset.
The users need to ensure that they have the latest version of the Google App on their registered device.

A tale of two countries


The IMF’s forecast that India’s growth will overtake China’s this calendar year and the next is cause for neither surprise nor euphoria. China is deliberately cooling off, after more than two decades of high growth. Meanwhile, India’s purported shift away from consumption-driven growth towards investment is expected to generate the conditions for sustained high growth. But the ‘elephant’ has a long way to go before it can catch up with the ‘dragon’. China’s compounded annual growth rate was over 10 per cent between 1990 and 2013, while the best that India achieved was about 9 per cent, between 2003 and 2009. China’s double-digit growth helped it emerge as the world’s manufacturing hub and enabled it to bring about major reduction in poverty levels, besides ensuring a far higher level of literacy and better health and living standards than India’s. India needs to grow at 7 to 8 per cent for at least a decade to create jobs for the 12 million people entering the market each year and generate resources to improve physical and social infrastructure. A quarter of India’s households have no electricity, whereas China has full coverage. India’s literacy level at 74 per cent is way below China’s 95 per cent: India’s so-called ‘demographic dividend’ is thus in question. India’s infant mortality rate of 43 per thousand live births is thrice that of China’s. And, China’s per capita income, at about $3,500, is more than three times India’s levels. India will not be able to sustain its investment thrust and reach China’s levels unless its present savings rate, at about 30 per cent of GDP, against China’s 51 per cent, improves. India must boost household savings by improving employment and financial inclusion, and keep inflation in check. A policy environment that encourages ‘Make in India’ can help.
Yet, in trying to become a manufacturing hub, it is important for India to learn from China’s experience. China’s investment-to-consumption transition (or from exports to domestic demand) has been prompted by a prolonged slump in the advanced economies. But the shift is proving slow and painful because of a manufacturing model that has relied on keeping wage costs unduly low. A domestic demand impulse would entail a shift towards high-value, high-wage manufacture, as in Japan. China’s investment in human capital and scientific research is what works here. The second cause for the government not pushing growth aggressively is a real estate bubble that needs to be deflated slowly. And finally, China can no more afford to ignore the environmental effects of unbridled industrialisation. Its air and water pollution levels are alarming. India shares many of China’s vulnerabilities, but not its strengths. It should lift domestic demand, go for a ‘growth-plus’ approach – and, above all, not be swayed by those who reduce development to a game of numbers.
THINK POST-MILLENNIUM - Legal Identity for All is Necessary for Good Governance


Corruption last year cost the world more than $1 trillion. That is a trillion dollars we can't use to get better healthcare, education, food and environment. A study shows that corruption in India costs each citizen $87 each year. And corruption is only part of the problem of poor governance--many countries are run ineffectively , lacking accountability , transparency and rule of law.Running countries better would have obvious benefits. It would not only reduce corruption but governments would provide more services the public wants and at better quality. It is also likely that economic growth would increase. In a recent UN survey of 7 million people around the world, an honest and responsive government was fourth in the list of people's priorities, with only education and healthcare and better jobs being rated higher.Survey participants from South Asia even placed it third.
But how should we get better governance? This is an important question as the world is considering what goals to set. At the turn of the century , the international community agreed on a far-reaching set of targets to improve the lives of the world's poorest people by 2015: the Millennium Development Goals. They focused on health, poverty and education and did a great deal of good. But they didn't mention governance.
This September, the world's 193 nations aim to set the next set of targets for the year 2030. They want to look across all major areas, and they want to include some targets on good governance. Without it, tackling problems like nutrition and environment becomes harder--if there is corruption, most of the money for food may go elsewhere, and if there is little institutional control, ambitious environmental rules may just be flouted.
It is vitally important that we choose the best targets for 2030. To help the world's governments pick the best targets, my think tank, the Copenhagen Consensus Center, has asked 60 teams of experts to do an economic analysis of the more promising proposals, showing which targets will cost little and do much good--and which ones will cost lots but do little good, essentially providing a level playing field to compare widely different targets.
Mary E Hilderbrand of the Center for International Development at Harvard has written the main paper on improving governance. As she points out, it is obvious that wellgoverned nations are better than illgoverned ones. But there is one major problem: we don't know much about how to get good governance. A study of 80 countries where the World Bank had programmes to improve governance showed that governance improved in 39% of coun tries but worsened in 25%--what could look like a moderate success.However, all the countries the World Bank didn't help had similar success and failure rates--suggesting that the World Bank programmes had made no difference.
The simple point is that while everyone can agree it would be great to get rid of corruption and have more transparent and accountable government, we often know very little about how to achieve it. That is why proposed targets like “Substantially reduce corruption and bribery in all its forms“ sound great, but are essentially well-meaning slogans with little content.
Indeed, Hilderbrand finds that many proposed targets are too generalised and some even a poor use of resources. However, she does find one target that would do a lot of good for each dollar spent. “By 2030, provide legal identify for all, including birth registration.“ This may sound like a very unambitious step to those of us lucky enough to live in prosperous democracies where such things are taken for granted, but it would be a major step forward for many developing countries.
Importantly , this is a measurable outcome, so progress can be monitored. It also means that there must be functioning public services to provide registration facilities and maintain records. Building this capacity in a single well-defined area would provide a clear model for how other services can be provided effectively . It is also unlikely in any case that a registration service would exist in a vacuum; an effective one would almost certainly be a sign of an emerging public service competence.
There are also real benefits to each citizen of having a proper legal identity. It helps them to claim their legal rights, for example, and would certainly also help to establish property rights, which are vital to allow individuals to prosper and the economy to grow. Elections become less vulnerable to corruption when voters are properly registered. And, as an economy grows, a proper legal identity is essential for opening a bank account or getting a driving license.
Good governance is important.But instead of platitudes we should focus on measurable, attainable targets that will actually make a big difference for the next 15 years.
The author is Director of the Copenhagen Consensus Center NEXT WEEK: Health systems

Who Needs a Tech Neck to Look Older?


Proof of damage to looks could deter excessive use of smartphones
The contention that smartphones and tablets may be injurious to health has predictably had precious little effect on people, given the increasing prevalence of these gadgets.Carpal tunnel and eye problems, fears about radiation and worse -nothing has really put off people from their dinky handheld machines. But the argument that these devices can have an effect on personal appearances is a good new spin that could stop the narcissistic generation in mid-click and make them think. After all, the notion that technology causes premature ageing is not outré. As if people did not already have crows feet and laughter lines to worry about, recent studies aver that wrinkly tech necks are now possibly a bigger phenomenon than turkey necks.Worse, judging by the rise in such neck-related problems among populations with high usage of these gizmos, the onset of this ailment is not hindered by age or diet. And eventually, the bent backs and hunched shoulders that go with the tech necks have the potential to make heavy users end up looking perilously akin to the fictional old crones of fairy tales way before their chronological age deems it necessary . While creams and other `treatments' are on offer, surely , a better alternative is to embrace the life beyond gadgets, if only for aesthetic reasons.
Vedanta - Peace More Than No War


Most world leaders, international organisations and so-called peace summits tend to define peace in the shadow of war, as `a situation where there is no war' between nations. By doing so, they are actually taking a negative view. By viewing the positive element in contrast to the negative, we will end up underrating the former's potential.By defining light as the `absence of darkness' or life as the `absence of death', we assign greater importance to the powers of darkness and death, or in the case of peace, to war rather than peace. It is easier to appreciate what is good when one has already experienced the `bad'.
But the question today is not of `experiencing'; the challenge today is in creating peace, and not in appreciating peace as a concept. And this cannot be done if we keep concentrating on destruction.
It's time now to literally construct peace. But peace is intangible -it is not just a feeling or a state of being; nor is it something that one would achieve only during long hours of prayers or meditation. And it is certainly not end of war alone. Peace is life itself. It is our original religion. It is like an eternal spring within us.
Peace, therefore, is a natural instinct, and if we wish to construct a peaceful world, then all we've got to do is to let it manifest in our lives. Whatever a peaceful mind comes in contact with undergoes a positive change.
Scientific reasoning? Over 50% of IIT-B grads don't believe in god
Mumbai


In-House Study Also Throws Light On Love Life, Attitudes Of 2014 Batch
Less than 50% of graduates from the 2014 batch of IIT-Bombay believe in the existence of God.While 22% of the IIT graduates surveyed revealed that they are atheists, 30% claimed to be agnostics. The survey, conducted by the institute's media body for their in-house magazine, Insight, revealed other interesting facts about the students' personal, academic and campus life during their four-year stay at the institute.
A BTech student from the campus said that atheism primarily stems from the fact that a good number of students on the campus believe in scientific reasoning. “The IITs are engineering institutes and engineering is derived from science. Many students who believe in scientific reasoning will doubt the existence of God. But many who are not believers also do not completely discount his exist ence,“ said the student. The comprehensive survey carried out with a sample of 260 students from the 2014 batch gives an insight into students' attitude towards academics, career, their love life and their background (see graphic).
Almost 36% just wanted to get a decent cumulative performance index (CPI) in their exams. Only 14.8% of the batch claimed that performance in academics was their first priority and 16.8% of the students said they just wanted to sail through.
“An IIT degree has so much value that even if you are a moderate performer, your degree can take you plac es. But these students sacrifice academics a bit to develop other ideas, for entrepreneurship, for all-round development. As a faculty member, I would prefer them to focus on academics, but I would not feel discontented for this trend either,“ said a senior professor from the campus.
A final-year student from the current batch said that the scorecards are correlated to so many important things that students' focus remain on getting a decent CPI.

Slum' tour operator bags global award
Madrid


Does poverty sell?
Ask one-time waiter Krishna Pujari. On Wednesday night, Mumbai-based Pujari's Reality Tours and Travels was honoured by the global travel body for running a sustainable tourism business while contributing to the community .Reality tours received the “Tourism for Tomorrow“ award instituted by the World Travel and Tourism Council for its controversial slum tourism, “showcasing“ Asia's largest slum Dharavi for tourists.
The tour, which has completed 10 years, has a Delhi edition in Okhla's Sanjay Colony . An ecstatic Pujari said, “This was a totally unexpected win. We faced so much hostility when we started. But thanks to the people of Dharavi, their spirit, we have been able to do so much.“
Reality Tours runs a school, youth empowerment and vocational training classes and boasts of 2500 beneficiaries in Dharavi where 80% of the company's profits go. Films like Slumdog Millionaire haven't hurt either and business is doing well with over 18000 tourists taking the “slum tour“ in a year. But Pujari has come in for criticism from several quarters for “marketing poverty“.