Friday, March 23, 2012

The India smoking laws

We know that US is the largest cigarette consuming country..
In 1970, in the US, President Nixon signed the law that placed warning labels on cigarettes and banned television advertisements for cigarettes. The last date that cigarette ads were permitted on TV was extended by a day, from December 31, 1970 to January 1, 1971 to allow the television networks one last cash windfall from cigarette advertising in the New Year’s Day football games.
U.S. cigarette manufacturers now make more money selling cigarettes to countries around the globe than they do selling to Americans.

It took almost 40 years for us to bring this law in India...


The Indian Poverty line

The Hindu cartoon on the Indian Poverty line Vs The Government officers Vs the politicians..




Sunday, March 11, 2012

Beware of frauds-BBB-Top 10 Scams of the year 2011

Click on the picture to maximize. Top 10 Scams of 2011 [Infographic]
Top 10 Scams of 2011 [Infographic] compliments of Better Business Bureau

Henrik Jonsson - Visual Effects / CG animator

Do you like animation effects. Here is introductory animation video from henrikjonsson.com 
Henri is a well known animation professional from Sweden.
Player will show here

Saturday, March 10, 2012

Comments on the Draft Approach to the 12th Five Year Plan of India



Rajendra K. Bera, Sunish Raj, Hiten Balsari


Full paper published on Dec 2011 in Journal of Social Science Research- -http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1968313&


We believe that higher education and creation and protection of intellectual property [IP] are critical for economic growth and are keen to know where the country is headed.

China, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong, have all spent years building their education and R&D institutions and IP system in a planned manner. In India, the education system has been declining rapidly over the years and there is no robust IP system in place.

The critique also points to other areas to which the authors argue that Planning Commission has not given adequate focus. For instance, the need for job creation at the high end, such as positions for researchers, innovators and professors whose knowledge and skills now drive the global economy, and the need to retain and also attract back to the country high-caliber talent that has gone overseas.

Planning Commission has a “blind spot” toward the information technology sector. They contend that while this industry has put India on the global map by offering high salaries for low-tech jobs, it has “systematically siphoned off the top layer of the educated young population … thus depriving all other sectors of the economy in desperate need of talent.”