Samsung to launch Galaxy S4 in Seoul this week

Beijing, Apr. 25 (Xinhua-ANI): Samsung Electronics said Thursday that it will roll out its new flagship smartphone model Galaxy S4 in Seoul this Friday for the first time across the globe.

The latest version of Samsung”s Galaxy series will be available for sale to South Korean customers from Friday through three local mobile operators, including SK Telecom, KT Corp. and LG Uplus, according to an e-mailed statement.

The smartphone giant planned to launch the Galaxy smartphone via 327 wireless carriers, including AT&T, Vodafone and Telefonica, in 155 countries during the second quarter.

Microsoft signs Android patent deal with China”s smart phone maker ZTE

Seattle, Apr. 25 (ANI): Microsoft has signed a patent deal with China’s smart phones maker ZTE linked to its use of the Android and Chrome operating systems

However, both Android and chrome operating systems is Google’s brainchild. Microsoft possesses intellectual property rights to some of the software’s underlying technologies, the BBC reports.

The deal comes weeks after Microsoft had signed a similar deal with Taiwanese manufacturer Foxconn.

The Redmond-based firm has paid out more than 2.6 billion pounds (4billion dollars) as patent rights in the last decade.

Microsoft to reveal next-generation Xbox video games on 21st May

London, Apr. 25 (ANI): Microsoft will unveil the successor to Xbox 360 video game on May 21.

Xbox spokesperson Major Nelson on his official blog promised to give a real taste of the future with the launch of Xbox.

According to The Guardian, much is not known about the new console, not even its name. Gamers have been referring to it as Xbox 720.

It is also probable that the device will support a range of payment methods for content, including in-game micro-transactions and subscription services offering access to a range of content for a monthly fee, the report said.

Partial lunar eclipse to be visible tomorrow night

The first of the three lunar eclipses of the year will occur tomorrow, giving astro enthusiasts all over the country an opportunity to witness the celestial event.

A tiny sliver of the Moon will be covered by the Earth’s umbral shadow at maximum of the partial lunar eclipse, N Sri Raghunandan Kumar of Planetary Society of India said.

This is the third shortest partial eclipse of the Moon for the 21st century, lasting just 27 minutes.

According to NASA, the shortest partial lunar eclipse of the 21st century will be on February 13, 2082, lasting only 25.5 minutes.

‘Leader’ of LulzSec hacking group arrested

A self-proclaimed leader of the LulzSec international hacking group has been arrested in Australia, police said, charging him with attacking and defacing a government website.

The 24-year-old IT professional, who went by the online identity “ozshock”, was seized at his office in a town 76 kilometres (47 miles) north of Sydney on Tuesday.

“The man is a self-proclaimed leader of the group Lulz Security (LulzSec), a computer hacking group that has existed since 2011,” the Australian Federal Police said, adding that he was known to international police forces.

Google may soon provide ‘personalised’ homepage

Internet search giant Google may soon revamp its iconic homepage, personalising it for each user by adding relevant information about weather, traffic conditions and even your favourite stocks.

The current Google homepage comprises a white screen, a search box and a pretty logo.

Google is reportedly working on bringing ‘Google Now’, its personalised homepage feature of its Android phones to the web and to its search page.

The tech giant is testing ‘Google Now’ for its homepage, according to website, Google System.

US returns ‘traveling mummies’ to Mexico

A collection of 36 mummies belonging to Guanajuato, a city in central Mexico, has been sent back from the US, officials told EFE.

The “traveling mummies”, as they are known in Guanajuato, arrived at the Mexico City airport from Chicago Sunday under “extremely tight security to ensure their perfect state of preservation”, an airport spokesman said.

Guanajuato’s Mummy Museum signed a deal in 2009 with a businessman who planned to exhibit the mummies at museums in the US.

Fish feat: Reef predator uses sign language to hunt

The roving coralgrouper, a predator fish of the tropical reef, uses sign language to advise fellow hunters of hiding prey, according to a study published on Tuesday.

It is the first time that a fish has been known to make “referential gestures,” or specific signs that alert a partner to an object of mutual interest, it said.

Reporting in the journal Nature Communications, a trio of biologists at Switzerland’s University of Neuchatel and Cambridge University in England studied how the coralgrouper works with two hunting pals.

Mars colony project aims to preserve life forms on the red planet

The Netherlands-based nonprofit project Mars One, which opened its astronaut-selection process on April 22, plans to land four people on the Red Planet in 2023 as the vanguard of a permanent human colony on the red planet.

New crews will arrive every two years thereafter, Fox News reported.

Human explorers and their trillions of microbes will doubtless contaminate whatever site is chosen for the settlement, Mars One officials said, so the organization will try to pick a place unlikely to host indigenous life.

Private Mars colony project aims to preserve life forms in Red planet

The Netherlands-based nonprofit project Mars One, which opened its astronaut-selection process on April 22, plans to land four people on the Red Planet in 2023 as the vanguard of a permanent human colony on the Red Planet.

New crews will arrive every two years thereafter, Fox News reported.

Human explorers and their trillions of microbes will doubtless contaminate whatever site is chosen for the settlement, Mars One officials said, so the organization will try to pick a place unlikely to host indigenous life.

3 smartphone satellites successfully launched into space

Washington, April 23 (ANI): Three smartphones destined to become low-cost satellites were flown into space Sunday aboard the maiden flight of Orbital Science Corp.`s Antares rocket from NASA`s Wallops Island Flight Facility in Virginia.

The trio of “PhoneSats” is operating in orbit, and may prove to be the lowest-cost satellites ever flown in space. The goal of NASA`s PhoneSat mission is to determine whether a consumer-grade smartphone can be used as the main flight avionics of a capable, yet very inexpensive, satellite.

`Catastrophic` space debris collisions expected to rise

London, April 23 (ANI): Some satellite orbits will become extremely hazardous over the next 200 years if space debris is not actively tackled, a new study has warned.

The research found that catastrophic space debris collisions would likely occur every five to nine years at the altitudes used principally to observe the Earth.

And the scientists who conducted the study for the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee said that the real outcome would probably be far worse, the BBC reported.

BJP to oppose Coca Cola’s proposed plant in U’khand

BJP in Uttarakhand today said it will oppose Coca Cola’s proposed bottling plant at Charba village here expressing apprehensions about the harmful effects of the project on the fragile Himalayan ecology.

Terming the MoU recently signed between the multi-national beverage giant and the state government in this regard as an “over-hurried decision”, state BJP chief Tirath Singh Rawat said the party will oppose it tooth and nail.

Comet smash behind mysterious water on Jupiter

The mysterious traces of water in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter came from a comet that smashed into the largest planet of the solar system in 1994, the European Space agency (ESA) has found.

ESA’s Herschel space observatory solved the long-standing mystery as to the origin of water in the upper atmosphere of Jupiter, finding conclusive evidence that it was delivered by the dramatic impact of comet Shoemaker-Levy 9 in July 1994.

Sun erupted with 3 coronal mass ejections in 2 days

In just two days, the sun erupted with three coronal mass ejections (CME) – a solar phenomenon that can send billions of tons of solar particles into space that can affect electronic systems in satellites.

Images of the CMEs were captured by the joint ESA and NASA Solar Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

A CME erupted off the sun on April 20, 2013, at 2:54 a.m. EDT.

Three smartphone satellites working well in orbit: NASA

The three smartphone satellites sent into space Sunday by the maiden flight of Orbital Science Corp.’s Antares rocket are operating normally in orbit, the US space agency NASA said.

Transmissions from all the three PhoneSats, believed to be the lowest-cost satellites ever put in space, have been received at multiple ground stations on the Earth, said NASA in a statement Monday.

Microsoft working on ‘Windows powered mobile devices’

Software giant Microsoft is working with manufacturers to produce a line of small touch-screen devices powered by Windows.

Peter Klein, Microsoft’s chief financial officer, told investors and analysts on a conference call that the new devices will be available in coming months at competitive prices.

The new device is apparently intended to compete with 7-inch tablets like the iPad Mini and Amazon Kindle Fire, Fox News reports.

Charcoal from wildfires pouring copiously into oceans via rivers

Wild fires not only destroy millions of trees each year but the residue is transported to the sea by rivers which penetrates the carbon cycle, a recent study has revealed.

Team of researchers led by Thorsten Dittgar from the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen and Rudolf Jaffe from Florida International University’s Southeast Environmental Research Center in Miami have proved that the earlier theory that the charcoal from wild fires gets decomposed in the soil is invalid.

Russia to de-orbit space station docking module

Russia plans to de-orbit and sink its Pirs docking module at the International Space Station later this year, a top official with space corporation RKK Energia said.

Alexander Kaleri, head of the company’s scientific technical centre, said undocking and de-orbiting Pirs will take place before a new Russian module docks with the station.

RKK Energia’s deputy chief designer Alexander Derechin said in March that the launch of the multirole laboratory module (MLM) was tentatively scheduled for the end of 2013.

Now, robot hands could be sensitive enough to detect gentle touch

Washington, April 19 (ANI): Researchers at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) have developed a very inexpensive tactile sensor for robotic hands that is sensitive enough to turn a brute machine into a dextrous manipulator.

Designed by researchers in the Harvard Biorobotics Laboratory at SEAS, the sensor, called TakkTile, is intended to put what would normally be a high-end technology within the grasp of commercial inventors, teachers, and robotics enthusiasts.

Microsoft most attractive employer in India: Survey

IT and software major Microsoft has emerged as India’s most attractive employer for the third straight year in 2013, according to a survey by HR service firm Randstad.

The company was followed by Hewlett Packard and Google India in the second and third positions, respectively.

Others in the top 10 most attractive employer list included — IBM (4th), ONGC (5th), Sony (6th), Larsen & Toubro
(7th), Steel Authority of India (8th), SBI (9th) and Tata Consultancy Services (10th).

Hacking collective Anonymous launches ‘citizen journalism site’

Notorious Internet hacking collective Anonymous has launched a citizen journalism site that aims to collect breaking reports and blogs.

The site, Your Anon News, will include feeds for livestream events “as they are taking place instead of the 10-second sound bites provided by the corporate media”.

The group has raised 54,798 dollars to get the site up and running, the BBC reports.

According to the report, the aim of the site is to bring together and expand its Your Anon news (YAN) service that currently runs on Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr.

New keyboard for superfast typing on touchscreens

Texting just got a lot easier!

Researchers claim to have developed a new keyboard for touchscreens that allows superfast thumb-typing, enabling you to type 34 per cent faster than on a QWERTY layout.

The research team used computational optimisation techniques in conjunction with a model of thumb movement to search among millions of potential layouts before identifying one that yields superior performance.

2 new Earth-like planets orbiting Sun-like star found

Scientists have discovered two Earth-like planets in the habitable orbit of a Sun-like star.

Using observations gathered by NASA’s Kepler Mission , the team, led by William Borucki of the NASA Ames Research Center, found five planets orbiting a Sun-like star called Kepler-62.