Deep-sea volcano ‘discovered’

Australian scientists claim to have discovered a deep-sea volcano, with unique organisms dated from thousands of years ago.

A team, led by the South Australian Research and Development Institute, discovered the cone-shaped volcano some 100 nautical miles offshore and 2,000 metres deep in the Great Australian Bight Marine Park Benthic Protection Zone.

Organisms living on the feature could be unique to the location and date back “thousands of years,” say the scientists.

While there are similar volcanic features outside the zone, this is significant because it is located in an area now protected from human disturbance, preserving its biological diversity into the future.

Dr David Currie, who led the exploratory expedition through the GAB Marine Park BPZ, aboard marine facility the RV Southern Surveyor, says the 800 metre diameter volcano rises 200 metres out of a generally flat and featureless seafloor. He said:“Previous work by Geoscience Australia mapping volcanic features on seismic data in the region suggests that it is likely to be an igneous build-up formed when molten magma pushed toward the surface thousands of years ago.

“It’s a phenomenal find, and quite remarkable that we passed right over the top of it 100 nautical miles offshore in the middle of the Benthic Protection Zone. We were mapping a strip of seabed less than two nautical miles wide, and it could have taken us hundreds of survey lines to locate it.” Dr Currie said the extinct volcano found within the Marine Park was from the Eocene Epoch dating back 48 million years. It was likely to support a diverse community of long-lived, slow-growing, organisms such as stony corals, hydroids, gorgonians and glass sponges.

“The Southern Surveyor is the only vessel in Australia capable of such deep sea exploratory research. We are now very keen to go back and sample around this volcanic feature and assess the biological community that it supports. There may be some unique aspects to this feature in the GAB that makes its immediate ecological environment important,” he said.

The Aus dollars 450,000 expedition, funded by the Australian Government, swath mapped over 150 square nautical miles of seabed throughout the park, and sampled seafloor biodiversity as well as the water’s conductivity, temperature and nutrient content.

57 Million more men than women globally: UN report

There are 57 million more men than women globally. While much progress has been made in ensuring the equal status of women and men in many areas, much needs to be done in closing the gender gap in areas like power and decision making positions, a UN report said.

The report, “The World’s Women 2010: Trends and Statistics”, was released by the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA) Wednesday on the occasion of World Statistics Day. The UN General Assembly in June proclaimed Oct 20 as World Statistics Day to recognise the importance of statistics in shaping societies.

The report showed that women globally have “benefited” from the gender statistics in the last decade. It said Europe has more women than men. But in some of the most populous countries, there was a “shortage” of women. This included China, where the ratio is 108 men per 100 women.

“We know that statistics are a vital tool for economic and social planning,” Keiko Osaki-Tomita, chief of Demographic and Social Statistics Branch (DSSB) of DESA, said at a press conference.”Statistics are essential for academic research, business planning and budget allocation,” he added.

Published every five years, the statistics covered eight key areas – population and families, health, education, work, power and decision-making, violence against women, environment and poverty. Under power and decision making, the report said that Asia-Pacific trails the rest of the world in the share of women ministers with less than 10 percent of ministers in governments in the region being women .Around the world, only seven of 150 elected heads of state and only 11 of 192 heads of government were women.

The report said: “In the private sector, women are on most board of directors of large companies but their number remains low compared to men.” Furthermore, the “glass ceiling” has hindered women’s access to leadership positions in private companies.

“This is especially notable in the largest corporations which remain male-dominated. Of the 500 largest corporations in the world, only 13 have a female chief executive officer,” it added.Also, earning gaps between women and men are wider in the Asia-Pacific region compared to Latin America and developed countries — women’s average wage in the manufacturing sector being less than 70 percent than that of men’s.

However, the report said that over the years women have entered most of the male dominated fields. From a global perspective, the publication paints a mixed picture of the condition of women in Asia-Pacific.

The report was launched simultaneously in New York, Shanghai and Bangkok.

Almost 200,000 SMSs sent every second

The popularity of text messaging has leapt three-fold in the past three years, with almost 200,000 text messages sent every second, the UN telecommunications agency said.

A total of 1.8 trillion SMSs were sent in 2007, but in 2010, the number sent has jumped to 6.1 trillion, said the International Telecommunication Union.

This translates to revenues of 14,000 dollars (10,050 Euros) every second and 812,000 dollars every minute, said the agency.

Users in the Philippines and the U.S. were among the most prolific, accounting for 35 percent of all text messages sent in 2009.

More than half of world’s most innovative companies are in Asia, Europe

There was a time when most of the top innovative companies were Americans, but that U.S. dominance no longer exists today.

According to a survey done by James Andrew, Senior Partner and Head of the global innovation practice at Boston Consulting Group, more than half of the companies in this year’s most innovative companies list came from Asia and Europe.

As per the report published in Bloomberg BusinessWeek, 80 percent of the respondents were of the opinion that to benefit from the economic recovery, innovation will be a key part of their strategy. While 72 percent of the companies consider innovation as a “top three” strategic priority, 61 percent of them are planning to increase their investment on innovation.

In this year’s list of top 50 innovative companies, 15 Asian companies found their place, out of which, four were there in the top 10 companies. These four Asian companies are – Toyota Motor (5th), LG Electronics (7th), BYD (8th) and SONY (10th). On the other hand, 11 European companies made into the top 50 list including Volkswagen, BMW, Nokia, Virgin Group, Siemens, Nestle, British Sky Broadcasting, Vodafone, Banco Santander, Fiat and HSBC.

The survey showed that in the year 2007 Tata Group (17th) established the Tata Group Innovation Forum, a panel of the company’s senior executives and selected CEOs of its independently run businesses. The purpose behind setting up the panel was to inspire its employees to be more innovative.

A similar move came from Honda Motor (26th), when it promoted its former head of research and development to the CEO spot last year. Samsung Electronics also took a vital step toward innovation by restating innovation’s priority in Vision 2020.

Internet users to surpass 2 Billion this year

Internet users globally has doubled over the pas five years and it will exceed two billion this year, approaching a third of the world population, according to a United Nations agency.

“162 million of the 226 million new Internet users in 2010 will be from developing countries, where Internet users grow at a higher rate,” International Telecommunication Union (ITU) said in a report. ”By the end of 2010, 71 percent of the population in developed countries will be online compared to 21 percent of the population on developing countries,” it added.

But developing countries need to build up high-speed connections. ”Broadband is the next tipping point, the next truly transformational technology,” said ITU Secretary-General Hamadoun Toure. “It can generate jobs, drive growth and productivity and underpin long-term economic competitiveness.”

Access varies widely by region, with 65 percent of people online in Europe, ahead of 55 percent in the Americas, compared with only 9.6 percent of the population in Africa and 21.9 percent in Asia/Pacific, the ITU said.

Access to the Internet in schools, at work and in public places is critical for developing countries, where only 13.5 percent of people have the Internet at home, against 65 percent in developed countries, it said.

A study last week by another UN agency showed that mobile phones were a far more important communications technology for people in the poorest developing countries than the Internet.

U.N. meeting aims to set species-saving goals

Unless steps are taken to reverse biodiversity loss, scientists warn that the rate of extinction will climb and natural habitats will be degraded or destroyed — contributing to climate change and threatening agricultural production, fish stocks and access to clean water.

An international conference aimed at preserving the planet’s diversity of plants and animals in the face of pollution and habitat loss begins on Monday in Japan, facing some of the same divisions between rich and poor nations that have stalled U.N. climate talks.

Seventeen years after the U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity was enacted, it has yet to achieve any major initiative to slow the alarming rate of species extinction and loss of ecosystems despite global goals set in 2002 to make major improvement by this year. Frogs and other amphibians are most at risk of disappearing, coral reefs are the species deteriorating most rapidly and nearly a quarter of all plant species are threatened, according to the convention, which is convening the two-week meeting.

A key task facing delegates will be to hammer out a set of 20 strategic goals for the next decade.Unless steps are taken to reverse the loss of Earth’s biodiversity, scientists warn that the rate of extinction will climb and natural habitats will be degraded or destroyed — contributing to climate change and threatening agricultural production, fish stocks in the oceans and access to clean water.Scientists estimate that the Earth is losing species 100 to 1,000 times the historical average, upsetting the intricately interconnected natural world.

Prominent insect biologist E.O. Wilson at Harvard University argues that a man-made environmental crisis is pushing the Earth toward its sixth big extinction phase, the greatest since the dinosaurs were wiped out 65 million years ago.

However, some battle lines have already formed between developed and developing nations over the convention’s strategic mission statement — whether to take action to halt or simply slow the loss of biodiversity by 2020 — and finding a way to equitably share the benefits of genetic resources, such as plants native to poor countries that have been converted into lucrative drug products in the West.

The convention, which will bring together 8,000 delegates from 193 member nations in Nagoya, 270 km west of Tokyo, was born out of the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro.

So far, the convention has failed to meet a series of goals set eight years ago to preserve the world’s biodiversity against overfishing, deforestation and pollution. Conservation groups attribute part of that to a lack of political will and funding. They also say that some of the goals until now have been fuzzy, and partly blame their own failure to make a convincing case that action is needed — something they hope to change in Nagoya.

“We haven’t been able to successfully get across a message that our society and economies ultimately depend on this biodiversity,” said Bill Jackson, deputy director-general of the International Union for Conservation of Nature. “We have to fix the problem within the next 10 years.”

Host country Japan, meanwhile, will be looking to this conference as a chance to portray itself as a protector of biodiversity after helping kill off many of the measures at the CITES, or Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, meeting earlier this year that would have limited the trade in tuna, sharks and other marine species.Divisions between rich and poor nations over how to fairly share in the access and benefits of genetic resources could undermine the gathering, observers say.

For example, the rosy periwinkle, a plant native to Madagascar, produces two cancer-fighting substances. Drug companies have grown the plants and profited from them, but little of the money has returned to Madagascar.

Developing countries argue they should receive royalties or a share of the benefits of such natural resources. The convention aims to address this problem by setting up a legal framework by which producers and users can negotiate to reach mutually agreeable terms to ensure equitable sharing of resources and their benefits.

“Developing countries are putting pressure on developed countries and saying if we don’t reach an agreement on this issue, we won’t give you what you want on the strategic plan,” said Patricia Yakabe Malentaqui, international media manager at the environmental group Conservation International. “All the parties are at risk of polarising the debate.” Another contentious goal will be setting a percentage of the Earth’s land and oceans that should be protected by 2020.

Currently, 13 per cent of land and less than 1 per cent of open ocean is protected — which can range from a strict nature reserve to an area managed for sustainable use of natural resources. Those percentages need to be raised to 25 per cent and 15 per cent respectively, Conservation International says.

But even if delegates manage to agree to such targets, carrying them out in real life is another matter. Businesses will likely oppose any limits on their activities and population growth means setting aside such protected areas will become increasingly difficult. Furthermore, the U.N. Convention on Biological Diversity has no mechanism for enforcing compliance.

Environmental groups argue that creating protected areas reap huge economic rewards. For example, there is plenty of evidence, says IUCN’s Mr. Jackson, that providing safe havens for fisheries help their populations recover and flourish.

Now, U.S. government uses social networking site to spy on citizens

Claims of the U.S. government using social networks to spy on its citizens have emerged in recent times while an Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) freedom of information request uncovered a memo encouraging agents to try to befriend people on a variety of social networks. EFF says that the government is spying on Twitter, MySpace, Craigslist and Wikipedia.

It is said that the move is aiming at the prevention of Narcissistic tendencies among the people. Through these networking sites users share the link to their pages and many of these people accept cyber-friends that they don’t even know.

Once they have been accepted, these agents take advantage of the user’s readiness to share, and to also spy on them. According to EFF, this memo suggests there’s nothing to prevent an exaggerated, harmless or even out-of-date off-hand comment in a status update from quickly becoming the subject of a full citizenship investigation.

3 Indian cities in world’s fastest-growing list

Three Indian cities: Chennai, Bangalore and Ahmedabad are amongst the world’s fastest-growing cities in the Forbes list.

Most of the ‘fastest-growing’ in the world are mostly in the Asian continent. And four Chinese cities: Chengdu, Chongqing, Suzhou and Nanjing also found a place in list.

Ahmedabad, is defined as commercial hub in Gujarat and also one with the most business-friendly policies. The city’s economy is growing at breakneck speed and it houses major chemicals and pharmaceuticals comapnies. Numerous foreign companies have set up bases in the city. Ahmedabad also boats of a thriving information technology industry.

Chennai‘s growth is defined as sensational in the recent years It is the major hub of automobile industry in India — dubbed the Detroit of Asia. It also houses major electronics and telecommunications equipment firms. In recent times it has also seen a huge boost to its software services and hardware manufacturing sectors. The congestion in Bengaluru has led to many a company moving to Chennai thus providing it with a major growth impetus.

Bangalore is defined as the Silicon Valley of India. Hundreds of major IT corporations, both home-grown giants and multinational majors, have their headquarters in the city. It has the country’s fourth fastest growing FMCG markets, and is home to thousands of millionaires.

Fast-growing cities make life better for citizens as they create good job opportunities and lucrative investment prospects for businesses and investors, as the demand for improved infrastructure and services increases. Interestingly, the Forbes study does not include major recognized global metropolises like New York, London, Paris, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Seoul, Shanghai, Singapore, Beijing, New Delhi, Sydney, Toronto, etc. The study also gives the miss to megacities like Mumbai and Mexico City.

The other cities includes: Santiago (the capital of Chile), Raleigh-Durham (the capital of North Carolina), Tel Aviv (Israel’s second-largest city), Kuala Lumpur (the capital of Malaysia), Hanoi (the highest Human Development Index among the cities in Vietnam), Austin (the capital of Texas), oil rich Abu Dhabi, Campinas (one of the richest Brazilian city), Melbourne (the capital of the Australian state of Victoria), Salt Lake City (the capital of Utah, USA), Cape Town (the second-most populous city in South Africa), and Canada’s Calgary.

India as a global hub: An MNC’s viewpoint

What does a multinational company long for, when it wants to invest for the expansion of its business?

Cost factor, competent manpower, liberalized government regulations pertaining to foreign investments and other factors which can assure a good return on investment.

Probably these were the reasons that lured SanDisk to India from where they can manage their global operations. “Apart from the skilled manpower, the market dynamics is one such reason which makes India a lucrative destination for the company. It has been estimated that, the domestic cell phone market will grow tremendously, out of which most of the cell phones will be facilitated with slots for memory cards,” said Ravi Naik, Vice President-IT at SanDisk.

Seeing the rapid growth of mobile internet in India, SanDisk expects the demand for smartphones and tablet PCs will grow after the advent of 3G in India. For all these products, flash memory is an integral part and the company feels that this is the right time to come to India.

During the time when companies wanted to equip their infrastructure with Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP), SanDisk desired to implement all the modules of SAP. The task seemed to be quite challenging for the flash card manufacturer but the company decided to go for complete implementation of all modules of their ERP.

Crediting the contribution of Satyam, who partnered with SanDisk for a successful ERP implementation, SanDisk feels it makes logical sense for the company to manage its global operations from India.

The discrepancy in time zone is another reason which brings MNCs to India as the companies can balance their global operations from their units established here.

The MNs came to India to cash on this opportunity but slowly they started realizing that the resources in India have everything necessary to manage their operations worldwide. Over the years, MNCs have been assured that the resources employed by them in India will reimburse them more than what they had invested. The company is looking at avenues which can augment their lean team in the U.S. As per the success of their projects, they would further plan to grow their business in Bangalore.

Currently, SanDisk will work on a multivendor strategy where they will hire few people under them, who would be responsible to scrutinize the overall operations carried out by different vendors including Satyam.

There are 35 people looking after the maintenance of their captive sites in India and by 2011, the company will increase its headcount to about 90 employees.

According to Naik, SanDisk’s partners in India understand the finance functions and the behavior of business operations and that makes India a preferable destination for managing their global operations.

Employees’ stolen device is a headache for companies…

In the changing work culture, employees are allowed to use their own IT equipment in the business environment. So the loss their devices like laptops or smart devices has become a cause of concern for the employers.

A 2010 survey on “Millennial Mobile Workforce and Data Loss” launched by Symantec shows that 59 percent organizations worry about employees losing laptops and too.

At risk are financial and enterprise data, customers’ credit card information, employee details, research and other information that, when lost, can mean trouble. For a workforce constantly on the move, the office is carried to home, airports, hotels, cafeterias.

Avenues used to access isn’t a single computer , but a variety of ‘endpoints’ – devices including PDAs (Personal Digital Assistants ), smart phones, virtual endpoints, wireless VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) and POS (Point of Sale) devices – not necessarily company-owned.Ways of data transfer are proliferating but little is done to secure those channels. “It has a big implication on security,” opined Shantanu Ghosh of Symantec. “Earlier you’d work from your office and the IT department kept a close watch – they had to secure only the local position with traditional firewalls. Now important information is floating out and accessible from all over.”

The mobile workforce will grow. IDC forecasts that by 2013, it will be as large as 1.2 billion people globally with a major chunk – about 62 percent – coming from the Asia-Pacific region excluding. All participants in the Symantec survey – 100 enterprises across industries – reported “cyber losses”. The report computed an estimated average loss of about Rs.94.5 lakh in organization, customer and employee data and of Rs.84.5 lakh in productivity for the year 2009.

Mobiles and laptops are lost all the time but there is no knowledge of how much confidential information is being spilt.