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Father foolishness cost her baby life die in hot car.

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In Florida, a 14-month-old girl named Kimberly James, died after being left in a baking hot car for over more than three hours while her father was busy attended church, a media report said on Tuesday.

It is said that Kimberly James is believed to have been in the vehicle local temperatures in Florida reaching over 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees C), Daily Mail reported on its website.

Her father Odane, discovered that her daughter is no more when returned to his car after the church service in Miramar near Miami.

The girl's father is believed to be a pastor at the Holiness Born Again Church and had been taking part in the morning service.

Saudi prince accepts killing his servant but denies murder, Now can any one tell will there be any royal punishment?

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We all know what Saudi is famous for?

The Royal family, wealth, standard of living and the most well know thing the HARSH punishment given, if the crime is committed in the country....

It is said the Saudi prince murdered his servant Bandar Abdulaziz, 32, in an attack which had a "sexual element".

Bandar Abdulaziz, 32, was found beaten and strangled in the Landmark Hotel, Marylebone, central London, on 15 February.

Microsoft sues Motorola for infringment of nine patents in its Android phones.

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Tech giant, software maker Microsoft said that some of the Motorola's android smart phones uses similar tech which is based on Microsoft technology, which include synchronizing e-mail, calendars and contacts.

Microsoft filed its lawsuit in a federal court as well as filing one with the International Trade Commission.

Microsoft said Motorola licensed some of its mobile technology from 2003 to 2007 but continued to use the technology without renewing the license.

Its court filing specifically mentions the Motorola Droid 2 and the Motorola Charm smartphones, but Microsoft claims that the infringements were not limited to those devices.

Geotag Tech SMS will help you trace your friend's pinpoint location.

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"Studies have shown that 'Where are you?' is the single most commonly sent SMS," said doctoral student Matthew Kwan from the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology University's school of mathematical and geospatial sciences in Australia.

Techies have developed a method for embedding Global Positioning System coordinates in an SMS message.

The technique, known as geotagging, can transmit a mobile phone's position.

It works by placing location identifiers in the text, for example - I'm at the pub geo:-37.801631,144.980294.

India's Sprint queen, PT Usha not invited for 2010 Delhi Common Wealth Games(CWG)

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(ibnlive) Sprint queen, PT Usha - one of the finest sports personalities that India has ever produced and the first indian women who raised Olympic  has not been invited for the opening ceremony of the biggest sporting carnival of the country.

Though Usha, who is coming to Delhi for the Games on October 5 as coach of athlete Tintu Luka, is learnt to be upset from the snub she has received.

"They have not invited me for the inauguration function, Usha said, adding, "Many other sports persons, who made India proud, have also not been invited."

Indian Auto driver to donate blood for 100th time.

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Amdavadi rickshaw puller Rohit Upadhyay will, on October 1, donate blood for the 100th time - making him the first rickshaw driver in the city to accomplish this record.

Upadhyay will join the club of centurion blood donors on the All India Voluntary Blood Donation Day this Friday, when he will make his 100th donation.

He will also be the 66th member of the Ahmedabad Red Cross Centurion Blood Donors' Club.

Ironically though, when this man had donated blood for the first time, it was because he wanted to commit suicide and he thought the donation would take his life!

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to address public in London

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(AP) The founder of WikiLeaks, the controversial online organization set up to reveal government secrets, will address the public for the first time on Thursday since Swedish prosecutors began investigating allegations of sexual misconduct against him.

The rape and molestation allegations against Julian Assange have cast a shadow over WikiLeaks at a time when the website is already under pressure for publishing a huge cache of leaked documents about US military activity in Afghanistan.

Assange's appearance at London's City University later Thursday also comes amid reports that WikiLeaks is unraveling from internal turmoil and power struggles. Key staffers at the website have reportedly deserted the organization out of anger that Assange unilaterally decided to publish tens of thousands of classified documents before enough work was done to protect the names of informants.

Magnet may influence your brain to turn a left-hander to a right-hander

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(PTI) A powerful magnetic field can temporarily confuse the brain and alter our hand preference, a new study has found.

In an extraordinary experiment by researchers at the University of California found that volunteers' hand choices were changed when they were subjected to a powerful magnetic field.

Although the effects lasted till the magnet was switched on, the study threw light on the origin of hand choice in the brain, the researchers said.

It also highlighted that how it is easy to change people's behaviour with magnets, they added.

Dr Flavio Oliveira, who led the study, said: "We are not really looking at handedness, but at hand choice. We found that in situations where people are almost equally likely to use their left or right hand we can make them use their left hand more by stimulating this part of the brain."

Again, China owes a high speed train record.

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Previously on June 24, 2008, China had also set a world record with the Beijing-Tianjin high-speed train reaching a max speed of 394.3 km per hour.

Now, again a high-speed train in China has set a new world speed record during a trial run.

The train touched a maximum speed of 416.6 km per hour on its journey on Tuesday between Shanghai and Hangzhou, capital of Zhejiang province, Xinhua reported.

The train is designed to run at a speed of 350 km per hour on the 202-km-long track between the two cities. A one-way journey previously took two hours. But the new train would lessen that to around 40 minutes, officials said.

Sikhs with Turban now joins US Army

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(AFP) Growing up near the air force base in Dayton, Ohio, Mr Tejdeep Singh Rattan, knew he wanted to serve in uniform. When he was turned away the third time from serving in the military, Mr Rattan became suspicious.

“I was, like, I don’t know what’s going on,” he said. “I was very introverted at the time. But I said I really want to do this, and you guys are sending me out again and again.”

The 31-year-old is now US Army Captain Rattan and since July the head dentist at the Fort Drum base in New York. In what appears to be a quiet shift, the US military has allowed Mr Rattan and two other Sikhs to serve while retaining their turbans and beards, which are required by their faith.

Google chief sees Bing as its main threat.

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Finally Google founder Eric Schmidt see Microsoft as potential threat to its Google search engine, never considered Facebook or Apple as competitors to Google

"While it's true Web search is not the only game in town, searching information is what it is all about," Schmidt said in Wall Street Journal interview video posted online yesterday.

He described Apple as a well-respected competitor and Facebook as a "company of consequence doing an excellent job in social networking," but said that Microsoft's latest-generation search engine was Google's main competition.

"We consider neither to be a competitive threat," Schmidt said, referring to Facebook and Apple. "Absolutely, our competitor is Bing. Bing is a well-run, highly competitive search engine."

City life may help you boost your immunity.

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(IANS) Researchers discovered that such people are more likely to have a genetic variant that protects them from tuberculosis and leprosy.

They analysed DNA samples from populations across Europe, Asia and Africa and compared rates of genetic disease resistance with urban history.

Poor sanitation and heavy population densities provided an ideal breeding ground for infections in built-up areas in previous generations, reports the journal Evolution.

Past exposure to pathogens led to disease resistance spreading through populations because ancestors passed it on to their descendants, a Daily Mail report quoting scientists, said.

Three meals per day will be help to shed weight.

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(IANS) Researchers from the Purdue University in Indiana, US, found overweight and obese men on low-calorie, high-protein diets felt more satisfied and less hungry when they ate three times daily compared to eating six times a day.

In popular perception it is better to eat little meals more often.

However, lead researcher Heather Leidy, now at the University of Missouri in Columbia, US, said: "These mini-meals everyone is talking about don't seem to be as beneficial as far as appetite control."

Studies on whether eating frequency affects appetite control have had "conflicting" results, according to the journal Obesity.

Japan's vending machines sells umbrellas, flowers,cooked meals and try to read minds.

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(AFP) Tokyo: They sell umbrellas, flowers and cooked meals, cough up cool drinks after earthquakes and even try to read your mind. They are Japan's five million vending machines.

Scattered across the country, the automated stores are about as ubiquitous as traffic lights and offer an ever-widening, dizzying palette of goods.

Thanks to Japan's low crime rate, companies have placed them everywhere, from neon-lit city centres to the icy summit of Mount Fuji, with little risk of them being burgled and relieved of their rich coin vaults.

“They are so convenient, I wish I had one in my room,” said 18-year-old Tokyo resident Hibiki Miura, who like many Japanese finds it hard to imagine modern civilisation without the handy helpers.

YouTube wins Spain intellectual property case.

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(IANS) YouTube, the Internet portal for videos, won a legal battle in Spain as a judge dismissed a suit brought by Telecinco television contending that the publication of its content on the web violated intellectual property protections.

Search engine giant Google, which owns YouTube, announced the verdict handed down by a commercial court in Madrid.

The court decision accepted YouTube's position that it is a mere intermediary offering services of content accommodation and cannot therefore be obliged to previously check on videos to be uploaded by users.

Prithvi-II India's short range nuclear missile fails to take off.

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(NDTV) A user trial of the nuclear weapons capable, surface-to-surface Prithvi-II ballistic missile in Orissa ended in an embarrassing failure as the missile failed to take off.

The nine metre-long, single stage liquid propelled missile with a maximum range of 350 kilometres was fired from a mobile launcher at 10.03 am from the Interim Test Range at Chandipur-on-sea. Sources in the Defence Research and Development Organisation confirmed the failure and said the missile just did not launch while the launchpad was enveloped in smoke.

There was no clear word on what caused the failure. The test was being conducted by the Strategic Forces Command.

The missile was last tested on June 18 this year, but for a shorter range of 150 kms.

Billionaire Mark Zuckerberg facebook architect but not so flashy lifestyle.....

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(IANS) Multi-billionaire Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg likes to wear worn jeans, cheap T-shirts and lives in a rented house. To relax, he likes drinking beer and eating fast food with workmates, it was reported in London Friday.

The man responsible for connecting over 500 million people across the world through social networking site Facebook could easily pass off as an ordinary 26-year-old.

The Sun Friday reported that Zuckerberg, who is said to be worth 4.3 million pounds, he wears jeans, cheap T-shirt and flip-flops.

In fact, he does not own the four-bedroom house where he lives in Palo Alto, California. He pays a relatively modest 3,500 pounds a month as rent. He doesn't even have a posh sports car, instead driving a Japanese saloon.

By 2015, e-books expected to generate 50% of revenue.

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With rise in PC Tablet Era, publishers say by 2015 e-books could represent 50 per cent of their revenue.

And as novelist Stephen King says he's been ahead of the pack publishing a book online years before the Kindle took off.

Novelist Stephen King author of 'The Shining’, ‘Carrie’ and ‘Misery' was first to publish his work online. It shocked the industry and got him a lot of attention.

“I got on the cover of Time Magazine. For once in my life, I got noticed at airports by the guys who wear suits and ties. They would come up to me and say, ‘How did that work? How did that sell?’ They were fascinated by the business aspect. That was a decade ago. Today, the e-book industry is on fire,” he says.

Internet Explorer 9 had crossed 2 Million Downloads in just two days.

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On 15th of September 2010 Microsoft unveiled Internet Explorer 9 Beta and now a hot seller as it has received 2 million downloads in just 48 hrs as compared to the 1.3 million downloads received by Internet Explorer 8 Beta over a period of 5 days in August 2008.

IE9 is a combo of HTML 5 and a hardware accelerated browser making a tough contender to the competitors. Only Windows 7 user can use IE9.

World Media criticizing Common Wealth Games Preparations

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Here's what some of them say:

The Guardian talks about the foot overbridge collapse and its headline reads 'Bridge collapse threatens Games.'

The Daily Telegraph says 'Commonwealth Games 2010 in chaos as 23 injured in stadium footbridge collapse'.

The Australian says 'Crisis hits Delhi Games preparations'