Friday 30 September 2016

National Voluntary Blood Donation Day: 1st October


“The Blood You Donate Gives Someone Another Chance At Life. One Day That Someone May Be A Close Relative, A Friend, A Loved One—Or Even You.”


About National Voluntary Blood Donation Day

National Voluntary Blood Donation Day is getting celebrated in India at 1st of October every year to share the need and importance of the blood in the life of an individual. It was first started celebrating on 1st of October in the year 1975 through the Indian Society of Blood Transfusion and Immunohaematology. Indian Society of Blood Transfusion and Immunohaematology was first established at 22nd of October in the year 1971 under the leadership of Mrs. K. Swaroop Krishen and Dr. J.G. Jolly.


National Voluntary Blood Donation Day 2016

National Voluntary Blood Donation Day 2016 would be celebrated at Saturday, on 1st of October.
Objectives



  • To make aware the people all over the country about the importance of the voluntary blood donation.
  • To successfully achieve the target of Voluntary Blood Donation to fulfill the urgent need of the needy patients.
  • To store the blood in stock in blood banks for any urgent and serious requirement.
  • To promote and emphasize the self esteem of blood donors through a lot of thanks.
  • To motivate and encourage people who are not interested in donating blood even being a healthy person.
  • To stimulate people to donate blood voluntarily who are interested in donating blood only to their relatives or friends.




Transfusing or donating blood or its components to the needy person has become very important part of the humanity in the modern health care system. It does not matter who is the blood donor or blood receiver, a donor can be a receiver in the future as well as a receiver can be a healthy donor in the nearest future. So donating blood without any expectation is the great humanity and vital part in the life saving process. Do not donate blood only to your relatives or friends, donate blood to voluntarily for any human being is the real humankind as it can save many lives.
In order to prevent the blood transmitting diseases through the blood transfusion, it becomes very mandatory to carefully investigate (through the advanced testing techniques like nucleic acid testing) the every unit of collected blood to prevent the life threatening diseases such as the AIDS, syphilis, Hepatitis-B, Hepatitis-C, malaria and many more. Blood donation should be encouraged by the voluntary blood donors only as their blood is safe instead of professional or paid blood donors. Voluntary blood donors never tells a lie and become agree for advance testing of their blood as they really want to save the precious life of someone.
To make aware the people towards the blood donation, a variety of events, awareness programmes, camps and supplementary promotional activities are organized in all states at the National Voluntary Blood Donation Day. There are various criteria for the blood donors according to the Drugs and Cosmetics Act 1940. The age of blood donors should be between 18 – 60 years, weight 45 kg or above, pulse rate range 60 to 100/ minute, BP normal, Hb 12.5gm/100ml and body temperature should not exceeds 37.5 degree centigrade.


Importance of National Voluntary Blood Donation Day

Blood is vital component of the human life as it provides the crucial nourishment to the body tissues and organs. National Voluntary Blood Donation Day is celebrated to bring the great changes in the society in order to follow the life-saving measures and prevent the serious illness caused by the violence and injury, child birth related complications, road traffic accidents and many more conditions.
Safe blood donation saves many lives of all ages and from all walks of life every year. The states like Tripura, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal and Maharashtra are considered as the national level voluntary blood donors. Tripura, a North Eastern State of the country, is considered as the highest level of voluntary blood donor (93%) in India whereas Manipur is considered as lowest in the country.
It is necessary to celebrate this day at a great level to remove the ignorance, fear and misconceptions of the general public towards the voluntary blood donation campaign. Voluntary organizations of the country are paying their valuable time and using their resources in order to encourage the students/youths, colleges, institutions, clubs/NGOs and etc.

Thursday 29 September 2016

If programming languages were vehicles:

If programming languages were vehicles:


C was the great all-arounder: compact, powerful, goes everywhere, and reliable in situations where your life depends on it.


                                                                   



C++ is the new C — twice the power, twice the size, works in hostile environments, and if you try to use it without care and special training you will probably crash.


                                                                       



C♯ is C++ with more safety features so that ordinary civilians can use it. It looks kind of silly but it has most of the same power so long as you stay near gas pumps and auto shops and the comforts of civilization. A well-known heavily muscular intimidator keeps touting it.




Java is another attempt to improve on C. It sort of gets the job done, but it's way slower, bulkier, spews pollution everywhere, and people will think you're a redneck.





Python is great for everyday tasks: easy to drive, versatile, comes with all the conveniences built in. It isn't fast or sexy, but neither are your errands.




Perl used to serve the same purpose as Python, but now only bearded ex-hippies use it.



LISP is programming stripped down to the bare essence. It's been around since forever. Using it makes you stronger, but only an athlete or a maniac can make a living with with it.






Haskell is like a hipster version of LISP.









PHP is this hand-me-down deathtrap that you only use because you're stuck with it, and when you hit a speed bump the wrong way it sets you and your passengers on fire.





Go is a shiny new toy that tech nerds say will be the way of the future, but it's only practical if you limit everything you want to do to stay within its range.



COBOL probably seemed like a good idea at the time.




MATLAB is what scientists use to do special scientist things.


R is what scientists use when they can't afford MATLAB.




OCaml is this funny shaped thing that Europeans like for some reason.





This is Javascript. If you put big wheels and a racing stripe on a golf cart, it's still a freak golf cart.







If you're wondering about this choice of cars, and if they fit the facts; then repeat to yourself 'it's just a j

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Wednesday 28 September 2016

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Wednesday 21 September 2016

Google ad hints of new smartphones to come on Oct. 4

Google released an intriguing new video on prime time TV Monday that hints of an Oct. 4 announcement of two new smartphones -- the Pixel X and Pixel XL.

The 30-second spot, also posted on Google-owned YouTube, shows a search bar rectangle that morphs into the shape of a smartphone accompanied by the 1974 hit single, “Come and Get Your Love” by the rock band Redbone.

A separate website, madeby.google.com with much the same content shows the smartphone shape with color photos and a place to sign up for email alerts for more information. Fans of the Google Nexus phones will notice the URL refers to “made by Google” as well. Billboards in New York City are also showing the promotion.

The promotion was also backed up by invitations to some media outlets for a Google event in San Francisco on Oct. 4.

Reports suggest that Google will announce two new smartphones that day, the Pixel X with a 5-in. screen, and the larger 5.5-in. Pixel XL. They would presumably run a custom version of the latest Android OS, 7.0 dubbed Nougat. The phones would be manufactured by HTC.

Other reports indicate Google is dropping the Nexus name for Pixel, and plans to announce other products on Oct. 4, such as its Daydream virtual reality device and Google Home, an answer to the Amazon Echo.

The significance of the video and the reports of new smartphones should not be lost on average smartphone users.

Android phones dominate the global smartphone market, with an 85% share that is predicted to continue through 2020, according to research firm IDC. However, Google and even many Android phone makers, are clearly interested in keeping Android users updated with the latest operating system, along with the latest processors, cameras, sleek designs and other updates.

The Nexus line, going back to the Nexus One in 2009, has been one way that Google could show the best designs and uses for pure Android, even as it has served a small group of customers -- mainly tech-savvy users.

“Google’s goal with Nexus, or now Pixel phones, is the same as always: an alternative to Samsung smartphones in the high end which can really show off Android and Google’s ecosystem,” said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at Creative Strategies.


So far, “Nexus devices have not helped because of the limited sales channel,” meaning they are mainly sold unlocked on the web. Google needs wider distribution, but can’t really afford to work with carriers and mass retailers because doing so would increase Google’s costs and upset other Android phone manufacturers, Milanesi said.

Milanesi said another report that’s circulating is that Google will bring its pure Android approach through Nexus in-house completely and close it off to other partner/manufacturers. “Alienating partners no longer seems to be a concern,” she added.

Under that scenario, Google could make its Google Mobile Services (GMS) — including Google Search, Gmail, Chrome and Google Maps — “proprietary,” in order to simplify the process of getting devices updated to the latest version of Android. “That would be so pure innovation actually makes it into consumers’ hands,” she said.

GMS is available only through a license with Google, according to the Android website, although installing it on devices requires no license fee.

More details may be forthcoming on Oct. 4 about a GMS that is more proprietary, expensive or restrictive for licensees. Google CEO Sundar Pichai told The Verge on June 1 that his company would “be more opinionated about the design of the phones,” particularly where Google sees a need to “push the devices forward.”

Pichai said then that Google would not create its own phones from scratch, and said Google’s plan was “still to work with OEMs to make phones.”

While Android already dominates the smartphone market, Google has to make Android evolve to keep up with the market and create interest when a new OS version is released, said Jack Gold, an analyst at J.Gold Associates.

“Google needs to show continued improvements, if not outright innovation, if it wants to maintain its market share,” Gold said. “Google often creates flagship devices that are meant to stimulate the market and get vendors’ creative juices flowing. It will continue to do so.”

Gold said he hopes that Google will announce an evolution of its core search capabilities with artificial intelligence with new interfaces for users.

The latest Google video promotion with TV and billboard ads shows a marketing willingness to take the Nexus concept for innovation to the mass market and beyond the niche of technophiles that have purchased the devices online.

On the other hand, Google faces a balancing act as it enlarges its market reach, said Patrick Moorhead, an analyst at Moor Insights & Strategy.

“Google always needs to be cautious that Android doesn’t get cheapened as a phone platform, especially as Apple gobbles up so much of the premium tier,” Moorhead said. “They should charge as high a price as they can without getting piggish on profits.”

The worst that could happen is if Android smartphones become a “commodity” with little pizazz and innovation.

“Commoditization doesn’t just happen; industries allow themselves to be commoditized,” Moorhead said. “Case in point -- the PC market. The PC market reduced investing then started to get commoditized and had to spend even more to decrease the slide.”
+Web Solution, Web Design and development Company, India

~computerworld

Monday 19 September 2016

JavaOne: Java EE 8 Release Pushed to 2017

The annual Java One conference kicked off on Sunday with a keynote confirmation of the widely expected delay of the release of Java EE 8. Anil Gaur, Oracle Corp. group vice president of engineering with responsibility for Java EE and WebLogic Server, laid out the proposed roadmap for the next version of the enterprise Java platform during the opening keynote presentation on Monday.

According that roadmap, Java EE 8 will be ready by the end of 2017, and Java EE 9 will be ready sometime in 2018.

"Java EE has been the platform of choice for developing and deploying enterprise applications for many years," Gaur told conference attendees. "It provides a very comprehensive set of APIs for applications that require scalable, transactional security. I am pleased to see EE adopted in clouds, and also to see that many vendors have started to use EE APIs to develop microservices applications. But they are doing so in their own way and, lacking a standard in this space, it's impossible to ensure compatibility and portability."

Gaur said Oracle sees Java EE as the platform for standardizing innovation around enterprise Java, and he emphasized that his company is committed to being part of the future of Java EE.

During a pre-conference interview, Gaur highlighted key areas in which Oracle is investing in enterprise Java, including a new programming model centered around distributed data streams and the reactive style of programming. "This is a way to develop apps that are loosely coupled and distributed," he told ADTmag. He added that Oracle is looking for ways to leverage the type of modularity coming in Java SE 9 in upcoming releases of Java EE.

 The Java EE Roadmap

The Java EE Roadmap (source: Oracle)
"We want to see how we can extend support in packaging, so developers can combine multiple artifacts within the configuration," he said. "These concepts are already there; what we're trying to do is bring them to the platform so people can use them as they move to applications from environment A to environment B."

Supporting things like containerization and reactive programming present challenges for the average developer, Gaur said, which is why Oracle is working to expand Java EE functionality to standardize these practices. He added that Java EE 8 will likely include enhanced Security (secret management, support for Oauth, OpenID), an API for self-contained configuration, and an API for health checks.

"We have started to roll out surveys from the product community," he said. "At the end of the day, it's the community, and the expert group that will finalize the scope."

Earlier this year, a group of volunteers doubting Oracle's commitment to enterprise Java formed the Java EE Guardians. The group has petitioned Oracle execs in an effort to get the company to prioritize the continuing evolution of Java EE.

When asked about the Guardians' efforts, Gaur said, "Our plans are not based on what they are doing, but I look at the positive aspect of what they can bring in. We have been working with open communities -- Java User Groups, Java Champions, etc. -- for a really long time, so I'm sure we'll be able to find a way to collaborate with them."

"The modularity work is challenging and important, and so it is better to do it right than meet a deadline," said IDC analyst Al Hilwa. "Most enterprises wait years to put new versions of Java into production. Still, continuous and agile evolution of Java is key to its long-term dominance as a language. The EE delays are a bit more troublesome, because of the longer time-line, and because there are many competing approaches in architecting new applications. I think integrating support for microservices is an important consideration."

+Web Solution, Web Design and development Company, India




Source taken from: adtmag.com 

Thursday 15 September 2016

Which Programming language you like to choose : PHP V/S .Net

Welcome to a battle of two heavyweights. In one corner, we have PHP, the most popular scripting language on the internet with millions of dedicated developers and an even larger legion of fans. In the other corner, we have a ASP.net, a platform backed by Microsoft itself that can use any .NET supported language.

So which is better? In this article, we’ll compare PHP and ASP.net and tell you which platform is better suited for your project. For a more detailed overview of PHP, check out this course on PHP for absolute beginners. If you are partial to ASP.net, take a look at this course to learn ASP.NET MVC.

PHP Overview

PHP stands for Hypertext Preprocessor. PHP originated as a scripting tool that has quickly taken over the internet thanks to its easy learning curve and large developer community. According to one estimate, PHP is installed on over 244 million websites with server support from virtually all major hosts. PHP is also free and boasts a number of frameworks to simplify web development.

Some of the major websites written in PHP include WordPress and Facebook.

ASP.NET Overview

ASP.NET was developed by Microsoft to provide developers with an easy scripting tool for building web pages and web applications. It is a successor to ASP (Active Server Pages), another platform pioneered by Microsoft in the mid-90s. You can code ASP.NET using any .NET supported language, which made it especially popular among .NET developers. Microsoft’s early domination of the web browser market with IE was also responsible for increasing the popularity of ASP.NET.

Some of the major websites that use ASP.NET are PlentyOfFish.com and MySpace.

The question now is: what language should you choose if you are starting out as a programmer?

Costs

This is a no-brainer – PHP is completely free, while ASP.NET is a Microsoft product. This means there are certain costs associated with ASP.NET development, namely:

Buying Windows, since ASP.NET development is possible only on a Windows machine. This shouldn’t be a problem for most people. If you use a Mac or Linux, you can use the Mono project to use ASP.NET on your machine.

ASP.NET requires Windows hosting. Until a few years ago, Windows hosting used to be significantly more expensive than Linux web hosting. This is hardly true today; you can easily find Windows hosts for almost the same price as Linux web hosts.

A development environment. The most popular IDE (Integrated Development Environment) for ASP.NET is Visual Studio. Microsoft also offers a free version of VS called VS Express.

As a beginner, you won’t have to specifically shell out extra for using ASP.NET, but once you upgrade to the professional stage, you will need something like Visual Studio, which can set you back by a few hundred dollars.

PHP, on the other hand, is entirely free, runs on Linux web hosting, can be used on Windows, Mac or Linux, and is supported by a number of free and paid IDEs.

Winner: PHP

Scalability

Both ASP.NET and PHP are highly scalable. Consider that Facebook, the second most heavily trafficked website in the world, was originally built in PHP, while MySpace, the website Facebook dethroned as the world’s favorite social network, was built in ASP.NET. This illustrates that both ASP.Net and PHP are highly scalable, as long as the programmer knows how to scale their application.

Winner: Tie

Performance

Performance for most web applications is a function of the interaction between the script, the database and the server. Most web applications written in PHP follow the LAMP stack – Linux (OS), Apache (server), MySQL (database) and PHP (scripting language). The LAMP stack is extremely popular for web development, and thus, has been optimized extensively for improved performance.

The database used most often with ASP.NET is MSSQL (Microsoft SQL Server), although you can also use MySQL with it. The performance different between a ASP.NET+MSSQL stack and a PHP+MySQL stack are very small with PHP+MySQL edging out ASP.NET.

Another factor that affects performance is the OS and file system used on the server. Most tests indicate that Linux and ext4 file system have better I/O performance than Windows and the NTFS file system. Thus, there’s a good chance a PHP application running on a Linux web host will slightly outperform a similar ASP.NET application running on a Windows host.

Winner: PHP

Support

PHP is free and among the most popular scripting languages online. There’s a huge open source developer community that regularly contributes to PHP development. The open-source community also tends to be very helpful, which is a big bonus for beginners.

ASP.NET, on the other hand, is a Microsoft property. While you’ll find plenty of developer boards run by ASP.NET enthusiasts, the scene is nowhere near as vibrant as PHP’s.

Winner: PHP

Availability of Tools and Editors

Most PHP developers prefer using text editors like VIM and Notepad++ instead of a full-fledged IDE. If you did want to use an IDE, however, you’ll find solid support for PHP in free editors like Eclipse.

ASP.NET is also supported by most IDEs but is mostly used with Microsoft Visual Studio. Microsoft VS is one of the most powerful, feature-rich and flexible IDEs around, even though it is not free. Thus, if you’re willing to shell out the cash, you’ll find that no PHP editor/IDE comes even close to Visual Studio.

Winner: Tie

Using Visual Studio? This course on C# with Visual Studio will help you get started.

Ease of Learning

PHP wins this one, hands down. ASP.NET is usually written in C# (pronounced C ‘Sharp’). C# is built on C which can be difficult to learn for most beginners. Its syntax is complicated and difficult to read, even for experienced programmers. People new to programming will find ASP.NET hard to pick up.

PHP, on the other hand, is very easy to pick up (so much so that most seasoned developers consider PHP coders as ‘newbies’). You can learn a few simple lines of code and start tinkering with WordPress themes almost right away.

Winner: PHP

Language Popularity

According to the TIOBE  Language Index, PHP ranks as the 6th most popular language online. ASP.NET, on the other hand, doesn’t even show-up in the top 20.

Winner: PHP

Conclusion

Unless you are already familiar with the .NET framework or want to stick to Microsoft technologies, there is no discernible need to use ASP.NET over PHP. PHP can do everything that ASP.NET can, and it can do it for free.

Now that you’ve decided to use PHP, take this course to learn PHP programming from scratch.

What do you prefer – PHP or ASP.NET? Let us know in the comments below!

+P and P Infotech : Web Solution, Web Design and development Indore 

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