23 November 2010

Leaking Siberian ice raises a tricky climate issue


In this photo taken on October 27, 2010,
Russian scientist Nikita Zimov extracts
an air sample from frozen soil near the town of Chersky in Siberia


The Russian scientist shuffles across the frozen lake, scuffing aside ankle-deep snow until he finds a cluster of bubbles trapped under the ice. With a cigarette lighter in one hand and a knife in the other, he lances the ice like a blister. Methane whooshes out and bursts into a thin blue flame.

Gas locked inside Siberia’s frozen soil and under its lakes has been seeping out since the end of the last ice age 10,000 years ago. But in the past few decades, as the Earth has warmed, the icy ground has begun thawing more rapidly, accelerating at a perilous rate the release of methane, a greenhouse gas 23 times more powerful than carbon dioxide.

Some scientists believe the thawing of permafrost could become the epicentreof climate change. They say 1.5 trillion tonnes of carbon, locked inside icebound earth since the age of mammoths, is a climate time bomb waiting to explode if released into the atmosphere.

“Here, total carbon storage is like all the rain forests of our planet put together,” says the scientist, Sergey Zimov, “here” being the endless sweep of snow and ice stretching toward Siberia’s gray horizon, as seen from Zimov’s research facility nearly 350 kilometres above the Arctic Circle.

Climate change moves back to centre-stage on November 29 when governments meet in Cancun, Mexico, to try again to thrash out a course of counteractions. U.N. officials hold out no hope that the two weeks of talks will lead to a legally binding accord to govern carbon emissions, seen is the key to averting what is feared might be a dramatic change in climate this century.

Most climate scientists, with a few dissenters, say human activity, the stuff of daily life like driving cars, producing electricity or raising cattle, is overloading the atmosphere with carbon dioxide, methane and other gases that trap heat, causing a warming effect.

Global warming is amplified in the polar regions, however. What feels like a modest temperature rise is enough to induce Greenland glaciers to retreat, Arctic sea ice to thin and contract in summer, and permafrost to thaw faster, both on land and under the seabed.

Yet awareness of methane leaks from permafrost is so new that it was not even mentioned in the seminal 2007 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which warned of rising sea levels inundating coastal cities, dramatic shifts in rainfall disrupting agriculture and drinking water, the spread of diseases and the extinction of species.

“In my view, methane is a serious sleeper out there that can pull us over the hump,” said Robert Corell, an eminent U.S. climate change researcher and Arctic specialist. Corell, speaking by telephone from a conference in Miami, Florida, said he and other U.S. scientists are pushing Washington to deploy satellites to gather more information on methane leaks.

The lack of data over a long period casts uncertainty over the extent of the threat. An article last August in the journal Science quoted several experts as saying it was too early to predict whether Arctic methane will be the tipping point. “Arctic Armageddon Needs More Science, Less Hype,” was its headline.

Studies indicate that cold-country dynamics on climate change are complex. The Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program, a scientific body set up by the eight Arctic rim countries, says overall the Arctic is absorbing more carbon dioxide than it releases.

“Methane is a different story,” said its 2009 report. The Arctic is responsible for up to 9 per cent of global methane emissions. Other methane sources include landfills, livestock and fossil fuel production.

Katey Walter Anthony, of the University of Alaska Fairbanks, has been measuring methane seeps in Arctic lakes in Alaska, Canada and Russia, starting here around Chersky 10 years ago.

She was stunned to see how much methane was leaking from holes in the sediment at the bottom of one of the first lakes she visited. “On some days it looked like the lake was boiling,” she said. Returning each year, she noticed this and other lakes doubling in size as warm water ate into the frozen banks.

“The edges of the lake look like someone eating a cookie. The permafrost gets digested in the guts of the lake and burps out as methane,” she said in an interview in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, en route to a field trip in Greenland and Scandinavia.

More than 50 billion tonnes could be unleashed from Siberian lakes alone, more than 10 times the amount now in the atmosphere, she said.

Still, the rate of defrosting is hard to assess with the data at hand.

“If permafrost were to thaw suddenly, in a flash, it would put a tremendous amount of carbon in the atmosphere. We would feel temperatures warming across the globe. And that would be a big deal,” she said. But it may not happen so quickly. “Depending on how slow permafrost thaws, its effect on temperature across the globe will be different,” she said.

Permafrost is defined as ground that has stayed below freezing for more than two consecutive summers. In fact, most of Siberia and the rest of the Arctic, covering one-fifth of the Earth’s land surface, have been frozen for millennia.

During the summer, the ground can defrost to a depth of several feet, turning to sludge and sometimes blossoming into vast fields of grass and wildflowers. Below that thin layer, however, the ground remains frozen, sometimes encased in ice dozens or even hundreds of metres thick.

As the earth warms, the summer thaw bites a bit deeper, awakening ice-age microbes that attack organic matter, vegetation and animal remains, that is buried where oxygen cannot reach. It in turn produces methane that gurgles to the surface and into the air.

The newly released methane adds to the greenhouse effect, trapping yet more heat which deepens the next thaw, in a spiralling cycle of increasing warmth.

Curbing man-made methane emissions could slow this process, said Walter Anthony.

“We have an incentive to reduce our fossil fuel emissions. By doing so, we can reduce the warming that’s occurring in the Arctic and potentially put some brakes on permafrost thaw,” she said.

The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, in its 2010 Arctic Report Card issued last month, said the average temperature of the permafrost has been going up for decades, but noted “a significant acceleration” in the past five years at many spots on the Arctic coast.

One of those spots would be Chersky, an isolated town on the bank of the Kolyma River at the mouth of the East Siberia Sea.

The ground in this remote corner of the world, 6,600 kilometres east of Moscow, has warmed about 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit) in the past five years, to about -5 C (23 F) today, says Zimov, director of the internationally funded Northeast Science Station, which is about three kilometres from town.

The warming is causing the landscape to buckle under his feet.

“I lived here more than 30 years. ... There are many (dirt) roads in our region which I used or built myself, but now I can’t use anymore. Now they look like canyons,” he says.

Buildings, too, collapse. The school in Chersky, a Soviet-era structure with a tall bronze statue of Karl Marx on its doorstep, was abandoned several years ago when the walls began to crack as the foundations gave way.

The northern Siberian soil, called yedoma, covers 1.8 million square kilometres and is particularly unstable. Below the surface are vertical wedges of ice, as if 15-storey-high icicles had been hammered into the soft ground, rich in decaying vegetation, over thousands of years.

As the air warms, the tops of the wedges melt and create depressions in the land. Water either forms a lake or runs off to lower ground, creating a series of steep hillocks and gullies. During summer, lakeside soil may erode and tumble into the water, settling on the bottom where bacteria eat it and cough up yet more methane.

The process takes a long time, but Zimov has done a simulation by bulldozing trees and scraping off moss and surface soil from 1 hectare (2.5 acres) of former larch forest, rendering it as if it had been levelled by fire.

Seven years later the previously flat terrain is carved up with crevices 10 to 15 feet (3 to 5 metres) deep, creating a snowy badlands.

Gazing across a white river to the apartment blocks on a distant hill, Zimov said, “In another 30 years all of Chersky will look like this.”

List of Best Korean Movies Accepted World Wide

This post About best Korean movie That accepted world wide are listed bellow so please try to watch these type of movies . If any good movies are missed ,so please post me in comment .
  1. Heartly Paws*^
  2. Old boy*^
  3. 3 iron
  4. Joint security area*
  5. Friends*
  6. Taekukgi(the brother wood of war)*^
  7. the classic*^
  8. Cinderella's sister
  9. Herb
  10. Changing Partner
  11. The naked kitchen
  12. She's on duty^
  13. When i turned nine
  14. My girl friend is an agent^
  15. Love So Divine
  16. S Dairies
  17. Spy girl
  18. The island
  19. ll mare
  20. Shadowless sword*
  21. Autumn in my heart
  22. I'm sorry I love you
  23. Attack the gas station
  24. Chiwaseon
  25. Spring summer winter and spring again
  26. Audition
  27. Baby and me
  28. Mundy Thursday
  29. Chingo
  30. Wind struck^
  31. 200 pounds beauty^
  32. Birdcage inn
  33. My tutor friend
  34. Innocent steps^
  35. My little Bride^
  36. A moment to remember* ^
  37. The love tree
  38. Love me not
  39. 100 days with Mr .arrogant
  40. Natural city and guns
  41. A bitter sweet life
  42. Memories of murder^
  43. The host
  44. A millioner's first love^
  45. Daisy^
  46. Two face of my girl friend
  47. miracle on 1 st street
  48. Shiri
  49. More than blue
  50. My girl and I
  51. Little bridge^
  52. Full house
  53. The Chaser^
  54. A Tale of Two Sisters^
  55. Virgin Snow

20 November 2010

Facebook offers new service


NEW FACE: Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook founder and CEO,
speaks at a special event announcing a new Facebook email messaging system
in San Francisco, California, on Monday.

Social networking site Facebook launched a next-generation online messaging service on Monday that included facebook.com email addresses in a move seen as a shot across the bow of Google, Yahoo! and Microsoft.

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg unveiled what he called a ‘convergent' modern messaging system that “handles messages seamlessly across all the ways you want to communicate.'' The messaging service blends online chat, text messages and other real-time conversation tools with traditional email, which Mr. Zuckerberg said had lost favour for being too slow for young Internet users.

“It is true that people will be able to have facebook.com email addresses, but this is not email,” Mr. Zuckerberg said at an event in downtown San Francisco.” It handles email.

Mr. Zuckerberg dismissed reports referring to the messaging system as a ‘Gmail killer' aimed at the heart of free Web-based email services from Google and similar services from Yahoo! and Microsoft. The Facebook messaging service was intended to turn online exchanges into ongoing conversations as opposed to intermittent back-and-forth email missives, according to Facebook director of engineering Andrew Bosworth.

Vettel writes Red Bull into F1 history


The Formula One season closed with another roller-coaster championship fight that saw Sebastian Vettel and the Red Bull team riding into the history books.

The 23-year-old Vettel emerged from F1’s first four-man duel to win the championship in the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, becoming the series’ youngest champion and giving Red Bull its first title only five years after first fielding a team.

Vettel never led the standings during a topsy-turvy season in which five drivers were in contention until the next-to-last race, the Brazilian GP, where the German won to set himself up for Abu Dhabi.

An error in pit-stop strategy by Ferrari at Yas Marina circuit cost Fernando Alonso the chance of becoming the youngest three-time champion, while Red Bull’s Mark Webber saw his own ambitions extinguished by a similar miscue.

Those mistakes appear more glaring given that Vettel’s chances looked dim after he retired from the Korean GP, the race before Brazil.

“I think it’s a typical example of you never know, and just maybe a little similar to what happened in 2007,” Vettel said, referencing how Kimi Raikkonen, then with Ferrari, snatched the title from Alonso and McLaren teammate Lewis Hamilton by a single point.

“Some things are out of our hands and just happen,” Vettel said. “Some people call it destiny, some people are a little bit more looking for explanations, but that’s the way it goes.”

Vettel’s title confirmed Red Bull’s ascension into Formula One’s elite ranks. The Austrian team secured 15 of 19 pole positions, but was often unable to turn that performance advantage into race wins. Still, Red Bull also took the manufacturers’ crown after Vettel’s fifth win - from his record-equalling 10th pole of the season - gave the team nine wins on the season.

“You know it’s always easy after things have happened to say, ‘OK, you did right, you did wrong,’ ” Vettel said. “In the end you need every single point.”

F1’s decision to overhaul its point system to award 25 points for a win and 18 for second place made victories more important than they were in the old system in which the first two cars earned 10 and 8 points, respectively.

Red Bull eventually triumphed behind its decision to back both drivers “equally” even though it favoured Vettel at times, such as at the British GP at Silverstone when a wing was removed from Webber’s car and given to his teammate.

“Of course (Vettel) deserves the world title this year,” the 34-year-old Australian said. “We start again from the first race next year. I think if I’m turning up next year thinking that I’m going to follow Sebastian around then this is not the right way.”

The Red Bull drivers trailed Alonso during the closing stages of the season, when the Spaniard controlled his own destiny. “I will remember this year for a long time and despite the final result,” Alonso said. “I’m very proud of this, the job the team has done and our approach to the last part of the year.”

But Ferrari’s decision to publicly back Alonso over teammate Felipe Massa could have played into the hands of opponents as Massa faded badly after being asked to let Alonso pass for a German GP win in July.

Crew changes could also be imminent at the Italian team after the season-ending gaffe, which saw Alonso finish seventh because he was unable to pass Renault driver Vitaly Petrov for 40 laps. A top-four finish would have been enough to secure the title.

“We are Ferrari, which means we are condemned to having to win, so a second place is a defeat; but this is also part of sport and we have to accept it,” team principal Stefano Domenicali said.

Alonso’s situation also highlighted how a lack of overtaking remains a big problem; the drama in the championship race wasn’t often mirrored in the action on the track.

The season started in the Middle East at Bahrain with much enthusiasm after several driver changes and the return of seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher. But that start turned into a bore like the finale, which demonstrated how the modern circuits commissioned by F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone may be bold and beautiful but often lack bite. And with a new race in India beckoning next season, that seems unlikely to change.

Hamilton stayed in the hunt for the title to the final race for the third time in four years and the 2008 champion expects McLaren to be even hungrier in 2011. Teammate Jenson Button was in contention until Brazil.

“Every driver has moments when he could have done better, or would have done something different, so you just have to accept what you have and make the best of it,” said Hamilton, who lost crucial points when he didn’t finish in Monza and Singapore and retired in Spain and Hungary. “I think we have a very good baseline from which to evolve this car into 2011.”

Schumacher, meanwhile, finished ninth overall in a return from three years in retirement that led to questions over 2011 and whether the 41-year-old German driver’s legacy has been negatively affected by his Mercedes stint.

“Looking back at certain events there are reasons to be happy with certain things,” Schumacher said. “Most importantly I am happy to keep on working together because I have fun.”

Fellow German Nico Hulkenberg is looking for a new seat after Williams released him even though he won the pole in Brazil. Rookie teams Lotus, Virgin and HRT all failed to make any impact on the grid, and Ecclestone even labelled them “cripples” before the close of the season.

Renault, meanwhile, made a strong return in the points after three disappointing seasons. Robert Kubica spearheaded the revival that could see the French team contend in 2011.


16 November 2010

Aung San Suu Kyi walks free


Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar's celebrated pro-democracy leader and a political prisoner of global stature, was set free from house arrest in Yangon on Saturday.

The 65-year-old Ms. Suu Kyi's release was greeted by cheering supporters who gathered outside her house in a show of defiance against Myanmar's military government. Hundreds of other supporters waited for her at the Yangon headquarters of the recently-derecognised National League for Democracy (NLD), which she still leads.

Speaking to The Hindu from Yangon, Ms. Suu Kyi's lawyer and close political associate, Nyan Win, said “no conditions” were imposed for her new freedom. There was no confirmation of this by the junta, the State Peace and Development Council.

World leaders hailed her in comments on the release, which was ordered before the junta could transfer power to an ostensibly “civilian” government following the November 7 general election.

The Association of Southeast Asian Nations expressed relief over member-state Myanmar's action of setting Ms. Suu Kyi free at least now, upon the completion of her latest term of house arrest.

Myanmar's military establishments have subjected Ms. Suu Kyi to four terms of house arrest and at least two spells in prison, for about 15 years in all, since 1989. She led the NLD to a landslide victory in the country's free elections in 1990 but was not allowed to lead a civilian government.

Walking free on Saturday evening, for the first time since 2003, Ms. Suu Kyi covered the distance from her old lakeside bungalow to the gate to acknowledge the greetings of her supporters. As she smiled and waved at them from across the gate, an enthusiast tossed up a bunch of flowers for her. The video-footage of her first public appearance in several years showed her accepting the flowers in a typical oriental style. She was in good spirit.

In a message, Ms. Suu Kyi exhorted the people of Myanmar to act in “unison” to achieve genuine democracy. And, there could be no democracy without discipline, she emphasised.

Promising to address the people on Sunday, she spent the first hours of freedom in talks with fellow-leaders of the NLD. Mr. Nyan Win hinted that the talks covered a strategy to counter the outcome of the “flawed” election, which the NLD boycotted.

Super Nova-a new study

This X-ray image provided by NASA, and captured by the German ROSAT satellite in the 1990s,
shows the remnant of a supernova that was observed in 1572 by Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe.
A new study explores the nature of that star explosion.

A new study has supported the assertion that aboriginal Australians were active observers of the night sky and incorporated significant astronomical events into their oral traditions.

In their paper, astronomers Duane Hamacher and David Frew from the Macquarie University present strong evidence that the Boorong people near Lake Tyrell in northwestern Victoria observed a "supernova-impostor" event in the 19th century, which they incorporated into their oral traditions.

This "supernova-impostor" refers to Eta Carinae, an enigmatic, super-massive binary star system prone to periodic violent outbursts.

"In the 1840s, Eta Carinae underwent a significant outburst, termed the Great Eruption, that released nearly as much energy as a supernova", said Mr. Frew.

During this time, Eta Carinae was the brightest star in the night sky after Sirius, before it faded from view 20 years later.

The Boorong observed and incorporated this event into their oral history and later shared their astronomical knowledge with the Victorian pastoralist and philanthropist, William Stanbridge, who presented a paper on Boorong astronomy to the Philosophical Institute of Victoria in 1857.

The Boorong prided themselves on knowing more about astronomy than any other Aboriginal group and their observations represent the first and only definitive indigenous record of Eta Carinae's Great Eruption identified in the historical and scientific literature to date.

Mr. Hamacher and Mr. Frew concluded that Eta Carinae was not in Boorong oral history prior to its eruption. Instead, the outburst was incorporated in the 1840s, showing that Aboriginal oral traditions are dynamic and evolving and not static, as many people commonly think.

The study was published in the November issue of the Journal of Astronomical History & Heritage

Mangalore boy's work features on Google homepage


Internet users logging on to the Google homepage on Sunday will find a ‘doodle' that showcases what is termed as the ‘New India.' With a scholarly hat perched atop Google's G and a satellite bearing India's name on its way to the moon, the doodle, Google's creative logo that marks Children's Day, is designed by a Mangalore schoolboy, 14-year-old Akshay Raj.

A Class IX student of the St. Aloysius High School, Akshay will find his work displayed on the homepage of the popular search engine throughout Sunday. Titled ‘Technically and Naturally Growing India,' his entry was chosen from over 108,000 doodles submitted by students for the Doodle4Google competition from across the country.

Artistic merit

A statement from Google India said that the selection was based on “artistic merit, creativity, and expression of the theme.” Besides the privilege of seeing his work featured on the page, he will also take home a Technology Starter Package and a Rs. 2 lakh technology grant for his school.

The winners were chosen by Dennis Hwang, the original Google Doodler and graphic artist who is the creative force behind the festive logos that appear periodically on the homepage.

Speaking to The Hindu, Akshay's proud mother, Mamatha Rajesh, said Akshay and his father had left for Mumbai to attend the awards ceremony. “Akshay has always loved drawing. It was only in Class 7 he started learning art formally when he evinced an interest in charcoal drawing.”

Father Melwin Pinto, the school's headmaster, said they are all very happy and excited for Akshay.

It took 90 days to trawl through the entries for India to get its second ‘Made in India' Doodle. Dennis Hwang and Jennifer Hom — the designers of the Google Gandhi doodle — chose the Indian winner from 41 semi-finalists.

The theme provided was ‘My Dream for India.' The submitted doodles were shortlisted by partner art schools from across the country, after which 9051 doodles entered the quarter-final round. Faculty from the Sir J.J. School of Arts then shortlisted the 600 doodles that made it to the semi final round.

Besides the national winner, three group winners were also chosen through an online poll in which Google users participated. Khushi Mahender, of Ryan International, New Delhi, won the Group I prize; Tahera Sohail of Young Horizon School, Kolkata, topped Group II and Chennai's V. Vinoth Kumar of SBOA Matriculation School bagged the award in Group III.

Special Judges' Awards were given to Anwesh Saha from Kolkata, Nishi Bordia from Indore and Sanjali Desai from Mumbai in Groups I, II and III respectively.

BlackBerry’s Playbook to take on the iPad


With co-CEO Jim Balsillie Wednesday announcing that the company’s PlayBook tablet will be priced under $500, shares of BlackBerry maker Research In Motion (RIM) soared on the Toronto Stock Exchange and Wall Street.

RIM unveiled the PlayBook tablet in September to take on Apple’s iPad. It will hit the market early next year.

The price announcement sent RIM stock up 5.68 percent on the TSX to close at $58.61 and 7.53 percent up on Wall Street to close at $59.14.

Balsillie said in Seoul — where he is attending the G20 CEO summit — that the PlayBook tablet will be priced competitively below $500 to challenge Apple’s iPad which has sold millions of copies since its launch in April.

Apple sells iPad Wi-Fi-only for $499 and 3G iPad sells from $699 to $829.

BlackBerry’s PlayBook tablet will stand apart from Apple’s iPad for not only its size — it has a seven-inch display as against iPad’s 9.7 inches, but also its Adobe Flash for running video and graphic works. Apple has shunned Flash.

Even though RIM has posted 20 percent growth in the last quarter and is close to reaching 60 million BlackBerry subscribers worldwide, the outlook for the Canadian iconic company has been clouded as Apple has overtaken it in smart phone sales worldwide.

During the last quarter, Apple sold 14.1 million smart phones while RIM sold just 12.4 million BlackBerry smart phones.

According to IDC, a global IT research firm based in Massachusetts, Apple now controls 4.1 percent share of the global smart phone market, surpassing the BlackBerry’s share of 3.6 percent.

Worse still, both iPhone and Google Android devices have outsold the BlackBerry in the US smart phone market where it was the undisputed leader till now.

In fact, when Apple posted a 70-percent jump in quarterly profits last month, CEO Steve Jobs taunted RIM, saying, “We have now passed RIM, and I don’t see them catching up with us in the foreseeable feature. We are out to win this one.”

The taunt forced RIM co-CEO to retort, ” We think many customers are getting tired of being told what to think by Apple.”

China builds world's fastest supercomputer

A file picture of the 512 CPU Super Computer at the computer centre of BARC, Trombay.
It is being used for various applications including Tsunami and Earthquake detection.

China has built the world's fastest supercomputer, the Tianhe-1A, which is capable of 2.57 quadrillion computing operations per second, pulling ahead of the United States in the global supercomputing race.

The lead of the China-made system was confirmed by the 36th edition of TOP500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputers, which was released Monday on the TOP500 list website.

Tianhe-1A was followed by the former No. 1 system, the U.S.-made Cray XT5 "Jaguar" at the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility in Tennessee.

The Jaguar system performs at 1.75 quadrillion per second, 92 percent slower than Tianhe-1A, running Linpack, the benchmark used to officially determine the speed of supercomputers.

The Tianhe-1A is installed at the National Supercomputing Center (NSCC) in the north China port city of Tianjin, which specializes in super computing outsourcing services for complex work like the surveying of mines, the forecasting of weather, the design of high-end machinery, bioinformatics and large-data animation design.

Tianhe-1A's chief designer, Yang Xuejun, said in an exclusive interview with Xinhua, "The interconnect between CPUs and GPUs is key to the system's high performance."

"As there has been rare precedent to integrate GPUs into a system for high-performance computing, we made much effort to improve the performance and efficiency of those GPUs," Mr. Yang said.

Besides Tianhe-1A, another China-made supercomputer, Nebulae, which is a 1.27 petaflop-per second system, holds the third place on the TOP500 list.

Nebulae, developed by Dawning Information Industry Co., is equipped in a Shenzhen NSCC.

Jack Dongarra, a member of the U.S. National Academy of Engineering and supervisor of the TOP500 list, said in an email interview with Xinhua, "It's more of a sign that China is serious in pursuing high performance computing to aid the growth of science, engineering and economic competitiveness."

"The long-term implication for the U.S. is that China is seriously interested in high performance computing, and is developing and deploying computing resources," said Mr. Dongarra, who leads research at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Li Nan, the project manager for Tianhe-1A, told Xinhua, "We managed to upgrade key technologies, such as large-scale integrated chips, node computers and cutting-edge circuit boards. We also made a few breakthroughs in hybrid architecture and high-speed interconnection."

Among the world's most powerful 100, China holds five seats while the United States takes up 42 percent. Out of the 500 list, China-made systems occupy at least 40 slots.

Tianhe-1A, is estimated to have cost 600 million yuan (90.4 million U.S. dollars) and was developed by the Changsha-based National University of Defence Technology. It employs 14,336 Intel Xeon X5670 CPU and 7,168 NVidia Tesla M2050 GPU, as well as 2,048 home-grown Feiteng 8-core CPUs.

Zhang Yunquan, a lead computing scientist at the Chinese Academy of Science, told Xinhua, "The international supercomputing competition is extremely fierce and it's very difficult for China to hold the top position for more than one year."

Zhang Zhe, a researcher who works at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, said, "Although the computing power of Tianhe-1A has surpassed Jaguar, its storage is not keeping the pace."

Jaguar adopts an external file system with 10 petabytes, or 10 quadrillion bytes, of information storage capacity, while Tianhe-1A is only two petabytes.

The U.S. National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) is now developing the IBM latest chip-powered Blue Waters system, which is widely believed to take over again the world's No. 1 by 2012.

Asian Olympics:Scintillating start to Guangzhou Games

GUANGZHOU: China painted a memorable canvas on the sky, as lithe girls danced on water and strong men jumped around high in the air, in front of four huge sail-boat screens that towered above the arena to mark the opening ceremony of the 16th Asian Games here on Friday.

The city was lit up beautifully — the Canton tower stood majestically on one side and the skyscrapers with colourful lighting formations provided a brilliant backdrop.

From an arena on the Pearl River that had speed boats whizzing past, spraying water all around and fountains rising into the sky, the stage turned into a platform.

White horses galloped across it and eventually it turned into the stage for the athletes to march. And then the cauldron emerged.

Gagan Narang carried the flag for India and the contingent was almost in strength to imbibe the energy of the electrifying atmosphere.


Novelty

In another novelty, the cauldron was lighted like a firecracker by Olympic diving champion He Chong.

A flower pot threw sparks so high that it lit the cauldron that was 26-metres high.

And then it was time for massive fireworks. The 600-metre tall Canton tower, the tallest TV tower in the world, had fireworks from the top to bottom.

The president of the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah aptly said, “we are proud of the opening ceremony.''

It was a ceremony that surpassed everything that has been performed in all the Olympics including the Beijing Games. In taking the opening ceremony away from the limitations of a stadium, Guangzhou turned the whole area into an amphitheatre. It was art and craft at its best.

With 45 floats, depicting 45 Asian countries and regions in a fabulous spectacle on the river, it was time to set sail on the wings of imagination.

A boy floated from the sky on a leaf, and poured water from a bottle, and that stretched into the venue.

Then it was time to set the Pearl River on fire at the Haixinsha island.

The Chinese did it in great style, in a spell binding programme that did not lose momentum through two-and-a-half hours.

Beautifully painted

It was tough for the 100 television cameras to capture the huge mosaic that was so beautifully painted.

Words fail, and one is not ashamed of it, for it was a spectacle that was beyond imagination, let alone description.

The Chinese told the story of the Maritime Silk Road, and a dozen others, with dance and energy. Their energy showed why they win so many gold medals at the Olympics or Asian Games.

The dance of the red Kapok petals threw up a charming Canton girl who danced with water. That was followed by 180 girls in light-emitting skirts.

The ship from the ocean made a round in front of the audience with sailors at their robust best, and the fisherwomen bidding them adieu, providing a captivating picture. It set out on a voyage, carrying the red lanterns along with hope.

Mermaids then lit up the water with their antics, and eight motorboats swept across the water, enacting difficult stunts to wow the audience into silence.

Another high

Another high point was when 180 performers presented a four-dimensional show on the huge sail-shaped screens, with 1320 operators on the ground moving them into various patterns by pulling the strings.

The sight of the gymnast on roman rings, rising from the water and jumping from a height was indeed stunning.

The Chinese Premier, Wen Jiabao, declared the Games open.

Badminton star Fu Haifeng took the oath of honour on behalf of the athletes while gymnastics referee Yan Ninan took the oath on behalf of the referees.

Soderling wins Paris Masters


Soderling trashed the home title dream of Frenchman Gael Monfils 6-1, 7-6 (7-1) to win the first Masters 1000 title of his career at Paris Bercy.

The Swede who has lost the last two finals on clay across town at Roland Garros, finally came good in the capital, hammering out his dominating victory in a mere 77 minutes and handing Monfils his second consecutive defeat at the indoor event after a loss to Novak Djkovic in 2009.

Soderling put over a winning volley to end the brief final, which contrasted with a pair of semifinals the day before, which each stretched to nearly three hours.

The Swede now stands 3-0 against Monfils without the loss of a set and beat the Frenchman heavily only last week in the Valencia quarterfinals.

Monfils saved five match points in his heroic semifinal win on Saturday against Roger Federer but has little left in the tank against the on-fire Soderling.

Soderling claimed his second title of the season after Rotterdam — also indoors — nine months ago. He struck his ninth ace for a 5-1 lead in the tiebreak and clinched victory on the first of five match points.

He becomes the first Swedish winner at Bercy since Thomas Enqvist in 1996.

Vettel wins Brazilian GP


Sebastian Vettel won the Brazilian Grand Prix from Mark Webber on Sunday as Red Bull shook off recent disaster to send the Formula One championship battle against Fernando Alonso down to the wire.

The Ferrari driver Alonso failed to secure a third career title on the Interlagos course, but finished third on the day to take an eight-point lead into next Sunday’s season-ender in Abu Dhabi.

Alonso has 246 points, Webber stands on 238 and Vettel on 231 as the remaining three realistic championship contenders. A victory is worth 25 points.

Lewis Hamilton also has a mathematical chance at 222 points while his McLaren teammate Jenson Button, the defending champion, is out of contention on 199 points.

It is the fourth time in five seasons that the world title will be decided in the final race.

The one-two finish from Vettel and Webber saw Red Bull clinch the constructors’ title for the first time in team history with 469 points to McLaren’s 421. It came two weeks after Alonso won in Korea after Webber crashed out and Vettel’s engine blew.

Nico Huelkenberg of Germany had stunned all the favourites by claiming a surprise pole for Williams on Saturday, but the pecking order was swiftly restored as the race got underway.

Vettel won the start and it was a Red Bull one-two up front as Webber also squeezed past the Williams halfway through the opening lap.

Alonso, meanwhile, immediately pressured Hamilton and got past the former champ in the second lap. But it took him another six to pass Huelkenberg as well, which allowed the Red Bulls to pull some 10 seconds clear after 10 laps.

The first round of pit stops did nothing to change the order and Alonso conceded defeat long before the halfway mark via team radio, saying that “we can’t touch them.” But the Spaniard was also safely ahead of Hamilton and Button, the latter working his way up from 11th place on the grid and racing the day after having a narrow escape from an armed gang during his return from qualifying to the hotel.

Webber appeared desperate to make up a small gap on Vettel but had to back off again after being told that his front tyres were overheating.

A little spice was added later in the race when the safety car had to come out after a crash from Vitantonio Liuzzi in the 52nd lap. But Vettel won the restart in the 55th and Alonso stood no chance at all to threaten as he was separated from the Red Bulls by several lapped cars.

Vettel comfortably drove home after his engine blew in Korea in leading position with 10 laps left. He took the chequered flag after 71 laps in 1 hour 33 minutes 11.803 seconds for his fourth season victory and ninth overall. Hamilton was fourth and Button fifth while Huelkenberg eventually finished eighth.