Nov 14, 2011

Creepy Gigantic structures seen from google maps in CHINA!!


There are some weird gigantic structures seen at many places in China from Google maps. They are suspected to be China's military experiments. Let us take a look at these structures. Follow the steps:

1.Go to maps.google.com
2.Make sure you are viewing the satellite view of the map. You can toggle it from the option at top right of the map.(TIP:The map looks green in this mode.)
3. At the searchbox write the following locations and see yourself(zoom in for more clear view):  

   i.  40.452107,93.742118  You can see structures resembling huge metallic road tracks.
   ii. 40.458148,93.393145  Similar kind of structure as above.
  iii. 40.458679,93.31314  This one's the most weird and creepy one. This looks like some target point for something.....maybe for aliens its some signal!
  iv. Click here  You can see lots of lines and grids here.
  v.  Click here  Here you can see vehicles destroyed and looks like some kind of experiment.

Nov 7, 2011

Hands On: India’s $35 Aakash Android tablet lands in America (exclusive)

The Indian government thinks the $35 Aakash Android tablet has the power to change the world. After testing one out, we’d tend to agree.
An Aakash tablet was brought to the VentureBeat office on Tuesday by Vivek Wadhwa, a visiting professor at the University of California at Berkeley and Duke. Wadhwa, who is researching the Indian education system, and is a columnist with the Washington Post, was given the tablet by Kapil Sibal, the Indian minister of human resources and development, who has been the driving force behind the tablet project. The device (whose name means “Sky” in Hindi) was produced entirely in India — a point of pride for the Indian government.

The 7-inch Android-based device will be distributed at a government subsidized price of $35, making it the world’s cheapest Android device. The general retail price will be $60, which is still remarkably cheap for such a powerful device. A contract between the Indian government and Canadian development partner DataWind, should put between 10 and 12 million devices in the hands of students across India by the end of 2012, according to Computer World.

Aakash stats at-a-glance:

Screen: 7-inches; 800-by-400 pixels; Resistive touchscreen

Operating system: Android 2.2, Froyo

Processor: 366 MHz Connexant; HD Video co-processor (both with graphics accelerators)

Memory: 256MB RAM (internal); 2GB Flash (external)

Storage: 2GB card included, expandable up to 32GB

Ports: Two USB 2.0; 3.5mm audio out jack; 3.5mm audio in jack (No built-in speakers)

Connectivity: GPRS; Wi-Fi 802.11 a,b,g

Power: Up to 180 minutes on battery; AC adapter, 200-240 volt

Weight: 350 grams


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