Aiita news december 2013

Page 2

2

10 December 2013

NEWS

aiita welcomes all new members SECRETARY VIEW CONGRATULATIONS...! NEW FEATHERS ON aiita’s CAP

Sandeep Singh Punjab

Vivek Rohela Uttar Pradesh

Akash Sharma Himachal Pradesh

Rahul Sharma Himachal Pradesh

Neha Bharti Chattisgarh

Dr. Rajeev Shrivastav info@aiita.org

Gaurav Singhal Chattisgarh

Rita Nagar Madhya Pradesh

Manish Kamti West Bengal

aiita Monthly Seminar Series November-2013

Mobile Cloud Computing becomes milestone of latest trends

INDORE: Study Centres of aiita had recently conducted aiita monthly seminar series topic for which was Mobile Cloud Computing. Centre Head Shri Titus Mukhia told that the seminar was successful. There were more than 90 students. He gave expertise knowledge on Mobile Cloud Computing. He congratulated aiita staff for co-operating and guidance. aiita monthly seminar series started by aiita for last 15 months has been

getting a huge response across the country with exiting zest of centre heads and their faculties to conduct it. This is informed by the President of aiita Shri Santosh Shukla, Advocate. Shri Shukla further told that the seminar on Mobile Cloud Computing got positive response from student community as well as faculties. aiita got number of snaps and reports of Mobile Cloud Computing seminar across the country.

Chander Kant Himachal Pradesh

Kulsum Ara Jammu & Kashmir

vk;Vk lsUVj xksgkuk ¼gfj;k.kk½ ij nhikoyh ds dk;ZØe dk vk;kstu

xksgkukA vk;Vk ds xksgkuk ¼gfj;k.kk½ lsUVj] ,DLVªhe ,twds'kuy lkslk;Vh o Mªhe esdlZ lks'ky osyQs;j Dyc }kjk la;qDr :i ls nhikoyh feyu lekjksg dk vk;kstu fd;k x;kA og mRÑ"B dk;ksZa ds fy, laLFkk ds lnL;ksa dk lEeku dj mUgsa c/kkb;k¡ nhA lekjksg dh v/;{krk laLFkk ds v/;{k Jh Hkkjr ywFkjk us dh o eq[; vfrfFk laLFkk ds laLFkkid Jh jes'k ywFkjk FksA mUgksaus lHkh

lnL;ksa dks Le`fr fpUg nsdj lEekfur fd;kA v/;{k Jh Hkkjr ywFkjk us lkslk;Vh ds bfrgkl o miyfC/k;ksa ij çdk'k MkykA lekjksg esa lHkh lnL;ksa us fofHkUu çfr;ksfxrkvksa esa fgLlk fy;kA lekjksg lekiu ds ckn laLFkk ds lHkh lnL;ksa }kjk us >qXxh&>ksifM+;ksa ds cPpksa ds lkFk Hkh nhikoyh eukbZA bl vk;kstu ij vk;Vk ifjokj ds leLr lnL;ksa ,oa inkf/kdkfj;ksa us Jh ywFkjk dks c/kkb;k¡ nhA

Ties with India different from Need more American investment into India, says Sibal that with China, says Japan

NEW DELHI: Japan said its ties with India were warm and friendly and unencumbered by any "pending issues to resolve", unlike with China, and New Delhi has now replaced Beijing as the largest recipient of Tokyo's Official Development Assistance (ODA). Sakutaro Tanino, press secretary to visiting Japanese Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko, made clear that Japan's relations with China and with India were "totally different" and should not be viewed together. Tanino said India-Japan ties are marked by "mutual warm sentiments for each other" and there are "no big pending issues to resolve, unlike with China ... and with no territorial disputes or problems". Japan and China are locked in a territorial dispute over a group of islands in the East China Sea. Japan had increased its ODA to China following the 1992 visit by the

Emperor and Empress to Beijing. Aid has, however, declined following their conflict over the islands, which are believed to be rich in hydrocarbons and other minerals. Tanino also said that the visit of the imperial couple to India had been thought of four years ago, but the decision was "postponed". "Some idea (for the visit) was entertained four years ago, but was postponed," he said. "India is now the biggest recipient of Japanese ODA... Earlier, China was No.1, now India is No.1," said the official, adding that Delhi Metro rail was a symbol of the development aid. The assistance in the form of grants-in-aid and soft loans was for development projects in India, including the Mumbai-Delhi Freight Corridor and the Delhi-Mumbai Industrial Corridor. The ODA would also benefit Japanese businesses, he added. "The relationship with China is strained and difficult due to territorial problem," he said, adding that Japan had its "doors open" for dialogue to resolve the issue. "The relationship with China and with India are two totally different issues... should not be seen to be linked," said Tanino. The imperial visit "should not be interpreted as a measure to counter our relationship with China", he clarified.

NEW DELHI: Communications Minister Kapil Sibal Monday called for greater investments from US-based companies in India to create jobs and buying capacity for the local population. "You need to invest in agriculture, medical (sector), electronics and education. Unless you help Indian economy, you won't be able to increase buying capacity of Indian consumers," Sibal said at the the ninth Indo-US Resurgence Summit held here. "The (US investors) are interested in selling their aircraft, defence equipments, but that is not the way to converge in this partnership." According to Indian government estimates, the Indo-US trade in merchandise goods for the calendar year 2012 stood at $62.85 billion with balance of trade surplus of $18.18 billion in favour of India.On the other hand, civilian and military orders placed by India with American companies have created thousands of jobs in the US. Notwithstanding the growing trade ties, the US under its strategic partnership wants to co-develop new systems for civilian and military purposes with India. The minister, who was speaking at the event organised by the Indo-American Chamber of Commerce (IACC), also attacked the US government policy of restricting visas to Indian information technology (IT) professionals. "You are a country that talks about liberalisation of global economy and yet you are increasing cost of our IT sector by trying to impose restriction on our people trying to go to US. I don't think this is the right attitude for partners," Sibal said. Sibal added that the trade between the two countries can rapidly expand, and pointed at the enormous opportunity for the companies of two sides to collaborate in areas like manufacture of consumer durables as there is exponential demand in India.

India's Mars mission enters second stage; outpaces space rival China India's first mission to Mars left Earth's orbit early on Sunday, clearing a critical hurdle in its journey to the red planet and overtaking the efforts in space of rival Asian giant China. The success of the spacecraft, scheduled to orbit Mars by next September, would carry India into a small club, which includes the United States, Europe and Russia, whose probes have orbited or landed on Mars. India's venture, called Mangalyaan, faces more hurdles on its journey to Mars. Fewer than half of missions to the planet are successful. "While Mangalyaan takes 1.2 billion dreams to Mars, we wish you sweet dreams!" India's space agency said in a tweet soon after the event, referring to the citizens of the world's second-most populous country. China, a keen competitor in the space race, has considered the possibility of putting a man on the moon sometime after 2020 and aims to land its first probe on the moon on Monday. It will deploy a buggy called the "Jade Rabbit" to explore the lunar surface in a mission that will also test its deep space communication technologies. China's Mars probe rode piggyback on a Russian spacecraft that failed to leave Earth's orbit in November 2011. The spacecraft crumbled in the atmosphere and its fragments fell into the Pacific Ocean. India's mission showcases the country's cheap technology, encouraging hopes it could capture more of the $304-billion global space market, which includes launching satellites for other countries, analysts say. "Given its cost-effective technology, India is attractive," said Rajeswari Pillai Rajagopalan, an expert on space security at the Observer Research Foundation think-tank in Delhi. India's low-cost Mars mission has a price tag of 4.5 billion rupees, just over onetenth of the cost of NASA's latest mission there, which launched on November 18. "BIG ACHIEVEMENT" Homegrown companies - including India's largest infrastructure group Larsen & Toubro , one of its biggest conglomerates, Godrej & Boyce, stateowned aircraft maker Hindustan Aeronautics Ltd and Walchand Nagar Industries - made more than two-thirds of the parts for both the probe and the rocket that launched it on November 5. India's probe completed six orbits around Earth before Sunday's "slingshot," which set it on a path around the sun to carry it toward Mars. The slingshot requires precise calculations to eliminate the risk of missing the new orbit. "Getting to Mars is a big achievement," said Mayank Vahia, a professor in the astronomy and astrophysics department of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.