Thursday, May 22, 2008

The sound of music...

ISC topper has music on mind

Jaskiran Chopra | TNN

Dehradun: Gaurav Sood, a student of Doon School, loves western music and wants to have a band one day. Incidentally, Sood topped the national charts of ISC exams by scoring 99%! Clearly not a bookworm, Sood, who scored 100% in Maths and Chemistry and 98% in English and Physics, was in Mumbai jamming with some friends when the results were declared on Tuesday. This is the first time that a student of the region has topped.

“He is expected back home soon and we will give him a grand reception,’’ say proud parents Amar and Jyoti Sood. “He plays the guitar extremely well,’’ says younger brother Rishi, also a student of Doon School. Though Gaurav wants to be an engineer, he will be a musician at heart always, add his parents. They say he is still contemplating whether to do Economic Hons or Engineering.

In Mumbai, Gaurav and his friends were meeting with var
ious musicians including ones from Bollywood. Jyoti says the group had last year recorded an album called Hiatus.

Skand Goyal, another Dosco, topped the school in the Commerce stream by scoring 97.83%. Skand says he is
not yet sure about the career he should pursue but it would definitely be something that will contribute to the knowledge economy. He writes poetry in Hindi and was the chief editor of the school’s Hindi journal.

Despite being in boarding school, Skand says he got a lot of support from his entire family.

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Third generation Solar cells

Cheaper solar cells from fruit dyes


WASHINGTON: Chemistry students at Rowan University (RU) in the US are developing a process by which dye from fruits can be used to create solar cells to capture the energy from the Sun.
The team plans to use dyes from fruits like blackberries, blueberries, oranges and grapes to create the solar cells, under guidance of Dr Darius Kuciauskas, an assistant professor of chemistry at RU.
Currently, commercially available solar cells are efficient and robust, but expensive to produce.
“To develop efficient and inexpensive solar cells, scientists are following the design of photosynthetic systems,” said Kuciauskas. “We are researching on the so-called ‘third-generation’ solar cells.”
The Rowan researchers are working to refine a process in which they extract dye from a range of fruit and blend it into a kind of scientific ‘smoothie’.
The process leaves the researchers with
sugar and a dye. The components are then separated to obtain pure, brightly coloured dyes in an acidic solution.
From there, they place the dye on a conductive glass coated with a porous film of titanium dioxide, which bonds the dye to the glass.
Finally, they add iodine and potassium iodide electrolyte for dye regeneration.
When light hits the processed fruit dye on the glass, it “excites” the electrons, which mobilises or “frees” them. The electrons then travel to a conductive glass electrode, which, in turn, produces electricity.
According to Green, though there is less output from these organic solar cells than a traditional silicon cell, the production from fruit is quite cheap.
“Construction of the cells is so simple and inexpensive that anyone can build his or her own using fruit, white paint, iodine and glass,” said Antonelli. ANI

The latest Indiana Jones....

Secret of skulls: Story behind latest ‘Indiana Jones’

Cannes: A tale of archeological intrigue as captivating as any Indiana Jones plot is behind his new deathdefying adventure in the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, premiered at Cannes on Sunday ahead of its release on May 22.
“We always find an artifact that is real, that people believe in, that archaeologists have looked for or already found and that has a supernatural aspect to it,” George Lucas told journalists at Cannes.
The story began in 1924 when famed British banker-turned-adventurer Frederick Mitchell-Hedges, then on a search for the lost continent of Atlantis in the Central American jungle, turned up a sculpted human skull carved in a block of translucent quartz crystal.
His daughter, who toured the
world with it until her death at 100 in 2007, claimed experiencing strange sensations on touching it and having dreams of ancient Mayan rituals at night.
Dubbed the “Skull of Doom” due to its supposed supernatural power to bring misfortune, the artifact , Mitchell-Hedges said, was close to 3,600 years old. Subsequently other crystal skulls turned up, some finding their way into prized museum collections, others privately owned — and all giving rise to speculation on their origins and use.
“All of the artifacts that have been looked for have never been proven to exist or have been proven to have the powers that have been ascribed to them,” Lucas added. “But there are a lot of people who believe in it.”
But over the past decade experts
voiced growing doubts over the Aztec origin of the crystal skulls, one of which is in the British Museum, another at Washington’s Smithsonian Institute. And last month, a Paris museum acknowledged its own star exhibit crystal skull was not what it was cracked up to be.
One of only a dozen such skulls known to exist, the Quai Branly museum’s piece was acquired in 1878 from another Indiana Jones-type explorer, Alphonse Pinart, as an Aztec masterpiece believed to be hundreds of years old, the remnant of an ancient and mysterious civilisation. The museum now says that rather than dating from the Aztec period, it was probably made in the 19th century.
From May 20 the Paris skull goes on view to coincide with the world release of the fourth installment in
Harrison Ford’s archaeologist’s adventures. Legend has it that the Paris skull represents the Aztecs’ Mictlantecuhtli, who reigned over the land of the deceased, Mictlan. Reuniting all 12 existing skulls plus a supposedto-exist 13th could prevent the earth from tipping over, according to fable.
The Quai Branly said results of an analysis of its skull in 2007-2008 by the country’s C2RMF research and restoration centre “seem to indicate that it was made late in the 19th century.” The London skull was examined twice, in 1996 and 2004, and both studies tended to prove it was a fake, though the final conclusions have not been made public. But though no crystal skull yet found at archeological digs has proved to be authentic, the 12 located around the world continue to arouse interest and speculation. AFP

SKULL OF DOOM: A sculpted skull carved out of a block of translucent quartz crystal. The Aztec masterpiece is believed to be the remnant of an ancient and mysterious civilization

Different people different views...

‘Giraffe’ women on show at Thai ‘human zoo’

Bangkok: Thai provincial officials have allowed a new “human zoo” featuring “longnecked” or “giraffe” women to open in Sattahip near Bangkok despite mounting international criticism of the exploitative tourism practice, media reports said on Monday.
The residents are part of an ethnic group whose women wear brass rings around their necks as status symbols and for beauty enhancements. They are called the Padung or long-necked Karen in Thailand, but they consider those terms denigrating and call themselves Kayan.
Seven Kayan villages are already marketed as tourist attractions in Thailand’s northern provinces of Mae Hong Son and Chiang Mai, where there is a sizeable population of Kayan, some of whom are refugees from neighbouring Myanmar. But for the first time, a new “village” of Kayans was recently opened in Sattahip in Chonburi province, 100 km south-east of Bangkok and a few kilometres from Pattaya beach resort, the Daily XPress newspaper said.
It charges an entrance fee of 25 baht for Thai visitors and 250 baht for foreigners, the newspaper said. Sattahip district chief Narong Thirachantarangkoon brushed off accusations that he had allowed the establishment of a “human zoo” in his district.
“I don’t think so because
the Karen are willingly living here,” he said. “This is better than staying in their home region and starving.”
The rings worn by the Kayan women can weigh 10 kg or more, and over the years, the weight pushes down their collar bones and shoulders, making their necks appear longer and giving the women their nicknames of “long-necked” women. The women, who had originally come to Thailand as refugees, were reportedly lured to a border camp where Thai businessmen created a village to serve as a tourist attraction, or “human zoo”. AGENCIES

HUMAN EXHIBIT: The residents of the province opened for ‘human tourism’ are part of an ethnic group whose women wear brass rings around their necks as status symbols and for beauty enhancement.

Re-evolution

Dramatic reverse evolution found among fish species

Washington: Scientists have discovered a process of “reverse evolution” among tiny fish species living in Lake Washington, a finding that is being linked to a pollutioncontrol effort in the United States.
The study showed that evolutionary process was taking place in relative warpspeed reverse in the case of the threespine stickleback fish, which live in Lake Washington. Thanks to a $140 million cleanup effort in the mid-1960s today the lake’s transparency has reached a depth of 10 feet.
Lacking the cover of darkness they once enjoyed, about half of the lake sticklebacks have evolved to become fully armoured, with bony plates protecting their bodies from head to tail. Experts at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Centre found that while in the late 1960s, only 6% of sticklebacks were completely plated, today 49% are fully plated and 35% are partially plated.

Get Real!

A ‘Second Life’ avatar gets a mind of his own


Troy (New York): Edd Hifeng barely merits a second glance in “Second Life”. A steel-gray robot with lanky limbs and linebacker shoulders, he looks like a typical avatar in the popular virtual world.
But Edd is different.
His actions are animated not by a person at a keyboard but by a computer. Edd is a creation of artificial intelligence, or AI, by researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, who endowed him with a limited ability to converse and reason. It turns out “Second Life” is more than a place where pixelated avatars chat, interact and fly about. It’s also a frontier in AI research because it’s a controllable environment where testing intelligent creations is easier.
“It’s a very inexpensive way to test out our technologies right now,” said Selmer Bringsjord, director of the Rensselaer Artificial Intelligence and Reasoning Laboratory. Bringsjord sees Edd as a forerunner to more sophisticated creations that could interact with people inside three-dimensional projections of settings like subway stops or city streets. He said the holographic illusions could be used to train emergency workers or solve mysteries.
But first, a virtual reality check. Edd is not running rampant through the cyber streets of “Second Life”. He goes only where Bringsjord and his graduate students place him for
tests. He can answer questions like “Where are you from?” but understands only English that has previously been translated into mathematical logic.
“Second Life” is attractive to researchers in part because virtual reality is less messy than plain-old reality. Researchers don’t have to worry about wind, rain or coffee spills.
And virtual worlds can push along AI research without forcing scientists to solve the most difficult problems — like, say, creating a virtual human — right away, said Michael
Mateas, a computer science professor at the University of California at Santa Cruz.
Researching in virtual realities has become increasingly popular the past couple years, said Mateas, leader of the school’s Expressive Intelligence Studio for AI and gaming. Operators of “Second Life” don’t seem concerned about synthetic agents lurking in their world. John Lester, Boston operations manager for Linden Lab, said the San Francisco-based company sees a “fascinating” opportunity for AI to evolve. AP

www.posornot.com

An online game that debunks HIV myths

Brian Stelter

Hot or Not, a website where people submit photographs of themselves so that strangers can rate how attractive they are on a scale of 1 to 10, has spawned many imitators (plus a fair number of critics who view it as a sign of the end of civilization as we know it).
One new spinoff, Pos or Not, has a serious purpose (tasteful or not). The site, www.posornot.com, introduced in late April, is an HIV education effort disguised as a game.
It shows photographs and brief biographies of men and women ages 21 to 30, and asks visitors to decide whether each is HIV positive or negative. The message is that you can’t judge someone’s virus status by looks, occupation or taste in music.
The site is sponsored by MTV’s college network and the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit group that focuses on health policy. “We feel it’s another kind of activist tool to get out the word about HIV protection,” said Stephen Friedman, the general manager of mtvU, the college and university offshoot of Viacom’s MTV network.
The first trial by mtvU of what Friedman calls “games for change” was Darfur Is Dying, an online simu
lation of a refugee camp that has logged more than 1.5 million plays since 2006. Other companies have sponsored games about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the immigration debate and the world’s water resources.
The network wants the word about its HIV site and its message to be spread like a video on a popular videosharing website. It enlisted celebrities like Wyclef Jean, a musician, and Rosario Dawson, an actress, to make promotions for the game, which are playing across MTV’s networks.
The game — if it can really be called that — was played about 5.1 million times by 400,000 people in its first three weeks, according to mtvU. Entertainment Weekly’s website suggested it might be the “most depressing use” of an internet trend ever, but suggested that any HIV outreach effort could be beneficial.
Friedman said that in a media-saturated climate, maybe young people have to be shocked into paying attention. “Looking at the statistics that one in four people who are HIV positive in the US don’t know it, it’s pretty staggering,” he said. “We hope that something like this will get under their skin.” “If it makes some people uncomfortable,” he added, “that’s not necessarily a bad thing.” NYT NEWS SERVICE

Been readin n watchin a lot!

I recently saw Al Gore's movie The Inconvenient Truth [should have watched it 2 yrs ago] ...neways, the movie really rings a bell and takes a good look at human behavior over ages revealing the laid back attitude. Al Gore makes a point when he says we need to be proactive and not reactive. The Earth is at a tipping point and we can't go on with our lives, without make the right changes and decisions. We at The Magic Tree fight against the same kind off situation, although not in the field of environment; we work towards improving education on the whole. I don't know whether we will bring a revolution or not...but we intend to do so.


We are into the second month now, after creating The Magic Tree. We completed three summer programs in Mumbai with around 40 kids. The experience was great, specially with kids at Thane. Didn't make much profit, but i guess that's okay as long as we are growing in the right direction and constantly improving and upgrading our products and services.

Since december 07, i have started reading a lot about technology, inventions and discoveries, unknown physical phenomena and unexplained but true theories. Science has never been so interesting. one of the books that i liked is Bill Bryson's The short history of nearly evertyhing - must read.

rest later!

PIQUANT SITUATION IN SCHOOLS IN MUMBAI

Only science teachers qualified to teach environment studies

Anahita Mukherji I TNN

Mumbai: Here’s a contradiction of sorts. According to a recent circular from the state education department, while a junior college teacher in any subject can teach environmental education part time, only a qualified science teacher with an MSc and BEd degree can be appointed to teach the subject full-time.
Sharwaree Gokhale, principal secretary, school education, refused to speak to this reporter or respond to SMSes on the issue.

“This is bizarre,’’ says Arundhati Chavan, principal of Aishabai College of Education, Byculla. “Environmental education is an integrated subject that affects every aspect of life. Several junior colleges have appointed geography teachers for environmental education. How can the department say that only science graduates are qualified to teach the subject fulltime?’’ she asks.

While environmental science is a compulsory 100-mark subject in Std XII, a junior college with under 12 divisions cannot appoint a full-time teacher for the subject, and has to make do with the existing staff. Currently, the subject is taught by a crosssection of teachers from various fields, including Hindi and mathematics. Teachers who take less than 26 periods a week are asked to teach envi
ronmental education.

“I have taught mathematics all my life. While bouncing math problems off students is my forte, I am clueless when asked to teach environmental education,’’ a college lecturer told TOI. A Hindi teacher who could barely string together a few sentences in English, said she found it rather hard to teach environmental education.

A college principal said the state had made a mockery of environmental studies. He said most colleges were shortstaffed and it was tough on the existing staff to juggle environmental education alongside their regular curriculum. What’s more, he felt the recent circular was discriminatory, as only science teachers were allowed a full-time appointment for environmental studies.

A changing syllabus for changing times

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Mumbai: Not so long ago, ICSE and ISC schools were among the city’s most elite of the elite, with the who’s who of Mumbai opting for them. But with international boards making in-roads into the education market, ICSE schools are now reinventing themselves as affordable options for an English-speaking middle-class that wants quality education.

English happens to be the ICSE board’s forte. Not only is the level of English high at ICSE schools, but ICSE is the only national board that certifies only English-medium schools.

The ICSE board insists that it in no way feels threatened by international boards. “How can a regular Indian family afford a school that charges Rs 1 lakh a year?’’ asked Gerry Arathoon, additional chief secretary and officiating chief executive of the ICSE board, when talking of fees at international schools.

Arathoon pointed out that of the 52 ICSE schools in and around Mumbai, only seven have opted for the IGCSE (Cambridge examination) and three for the International Baccalaureate (IB) alongside the ICSE course.

The ICSE board regularly revamps its curriculum. Four months ago it announced plans to revamp the ISC syllabus. The new syllabus will be tested in the 2010 board examination. Most of the changes are in physics, chem
istry and mathematics.

While the old syllabus gave students a choice between JAVA and C++, the revised syllabus will only offer JAVA. In ISC chemistry, the board has reduced the portion that deals with rote learning. The board has also done away with business maths as it overlaps with a section of the regular math. In economics,
there will be more focus on the international arena.

The changes are aimed at preparing students for competitive exams to courses like medicine and engineering. “Several students from our board have topped the list in a number of competitive exams, including the IIT-JEE,’’ said Arathoon.

While principals say that a number of students from elite ICSE schools are opting for international boards, the ICSE board has not run out of takers.

ICSE GETS JUNIOR COLLEGE BOOST

With Results Being Announced Today, A Look At How A Growing Number Of Schools Are Offering The ISC Curriculum

Anahita Mukherji | TNN


Mumbai: While the Indian Certificate of Secondary Education (ICSE) exam is widely known across the country for Class X, the Indian School Certificate (ISC) for Class XII, which is conducted by the same board, is not so well known but rapidly gaining steam. In the last six months alone, 50 schools have introduced the ISC.
Of the 1,600-odd ICSE schools in India, Dubai, Sharjah, Singapore and Indonesia, 800 now offer the ISC for students in classes XI and XII. While 97,303 students appeared for the ICSE in 2007, there were 45,293 who took the ISCs. The board is
expected to announce the number of
2008 candidates on Tuesday when it
releases the ICSE and ISC results.
In Mumbai, though, the number of ISC schools is minuscule. Only seven out of the 52 ICSE schools in and around the city offer the ISC. “We hope that, eventually, all ICSE schools offer the ISC as well,’’ said Gerry Arathoon, additional chief secretary and officiating chief executive of the ICSE board.
And here’s some good news for students from other boards. A student who has cleared Class X from any board—including the SSC, CBSE or IGCSE—is eligible for the ISC and can switch boards. This means that an SSC student from Mumbai need not simply apply to a junior college that offers the HSC, but can also give the ISC a shot as well.
“We have had a few SSC and CBSE students joining our ISC course for classes XI and XII,’’ said Meera Isaacs, principal of Cathedral and John Connon School, Fort. “Though they were very bright, some found it tough to cope with the curriculum, especially in science and English literature,’’ she added.
Another ISC school, Lilavati Podar School at Santa Cruz, also takes in students from other boards for its ISC course.
“ISC is the natural progression from the ICSE board. But for those who switch over from other boards, we provide counselling to help them choose their stream,’’ said Norina Fernandes, principal of Lilavati Podar.
The admissions procedure for the ISC is decided by the schools and not the board. While there are five ISC schools in Mumbai city, there’s one in Thane and one in Navi Mumbai.
The Council for the Indian School Certificate Examinations, which conducts the ICSE and ISC exams, is the only national board that has only English-medium schools as affilites.
anahita.mukherji@timesgroup.com

KNOW YOUR SCORE The ICSE and ISC results are expected to be out by 3pm today. They can be accessed via the internet as well as through SMS.