Includes All The Information For Education And Career Guidance,Entertainment,Business,Travels.
27 February 2009
22 February 2009
12 February 2009
11 February 2009
10 February 2009
Microsoft Layoff
Microsoft employs more than 91,000 professionals in all development centres.They are going to reduce 10% from the total, that is 9,100 employees are going to send off
09 February 2009
University's in India
Acharya Nagarjuna University (ANU), Guntur, Andhra Pradesh
Acharya Nagarjuna University - Center for Distance Education (ANU-CDE), Guntur, Andhra Pradesh
Acharya N G Ranga Agricultural University, Andhra Pradesh
Adikavi Nannaya University (ANU), Rajahmundry, East Godavari, Andhra Pradesh
Alagappa University, Karaikudi, Tamil Nadu
Alagappa University - Directorate of Distance Education
Aligarh Muslim University (AMU), Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh
Allahabad Agricultural Institute Deemed University, Allahabad, Uttar Pradesh
AMET University Chennai, Tamil Nadu
Formerly Academy of Maritime Education and Training
Amity University, Delhi
One of the India's largest private university with centres in New Delhi, Noida and Lucknow
Amravati University, Amravati, Maharastra
Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham, Coimbatore
Annamalai University, Annamalainagar, Tamil Nadu
Annamalai University - Directorate of Distance Education, Annamalainagar, Tamil Nadu
Andhra University (AU), Visakhapatnam, Andhra Pradesh
Andhra University School of Distance Education (AU SDE)
Anna University Chennai
Anna University Chennai - Centre for Distance Education
Anna University Coimbatore
Anna University Coimbatore - Directorate of Online & Distance Education
Anna University Trichy, Tiruchi, Tamil Nadu
Assam University, Sichar, Assam
Assam Agricultural University, Jorhat, Assam
Atal Behari Vajpayee Indian Institute of Information Technology and Management, Gwalior
Avinashilingam University for Women, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
The University is also popular as Avinashilingam Institute for Home Science & Higher Education for Women
Awadhesh Pratap Singh University, Rewa, Madhya Pradesh
Mumbai - World's costliest Properties
Mumbai properties among world's costliest, Bangalore cheap :
While Mumbai is 10th costliest city for properties, Bangalore, India's so-called technology capital, is the second cheapest place - just ahead of Cairo in a list of 120 cities, according to a study published Monday. The costliest city for properties is Monte Carlo, where a top-end apartment costs around $47,578 per square metre, followed way behind by Moscow ($20,853 per sq m) and London ($20,756), according to property research group Global Property.
The research, which was based on the average price of a 120 square metre, high-end apartment in the centre of 110 cities around the world, found Tokyo ($17,998) to be the fourth most expensive city in which to buy property, followed by Hong Kong ($16,125). New York ($14,898), Paris ($12,122), Singapore ($9,701), Rome ($9,166) and Mumbai ($9,163) made up the rest of the top 10 most expensive cities. At the other end of the scale, Cairo was found to be the cheapest city in the world, with a high-end apartment there costing an average of only $574 per square metre, followed by Bangalore in India at $657 per square metre.
Source - //in.news.yahoo.com
Indian Banks in Critical Stage
'There is a stark difference between the scenarios in India and other countries,' said a joint study by global consultancy Ernst and Young and an industry lobby, the Associated Chambers of Commerce and Industry of India (Assocham). While one branch was servicing 16,129 people in India, the report said this was 4,484 in Britain, 2,720 in the US, 3,968 in Japan, 4,545 in Hong Kong, 1,945 in Germany, 1,587 in France, 6,410 in Canada, and 10,101 in Singapore.
'The Indian banking system requires to widen its branch base to serve masses,' the paper said.
Indian banking institutions consist of more than 61,000 commercial bank branches, 100,000 cooperative credit institutions and 12,000 non-banking financial companies, besides a number of niche players such as micro-finance institutions and financial institutions. At the same time, the study said, only 59 percent of the adult population in India has bank accounts compared to around 92 percent in Britain.
Source - //in.news.yahoo.com
Mr.Obama says
U.S. President Barack Obama arrived at his first White House news conference on Monday with a message to sell: government has the keys to fix the economy. With that declaration, the president defended the most important piece of legislation to emerge from his young administration. Pushing hard for passage of a stimulus package of more than $800 billion, Obama, a Democrat, fended off Republicans who have criticized the bill and he offered struggling Americans hope that Washington could solve their problems. Wearing a red tie and an American flag pin, the president otherwise largely avoided breaking new ground on his economic proposals during an hourlong back-and-forth with reporters.
He deferred to the planned announcement on Tuesday by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner for details on how the administration would administer the remaining $350 billion of a rescue fund for the financial system. On foreign policy, he signaled his expectation a new relationship with Iran could begin within months. His responses were smooth but generally long, which limited the number of questions journalists could lob at him. Mostly he hammered home his position that government -- and, as an inherent result, his stimulus proposals -- had the answers to lifting the United States out of recession. "It is absolutely true that we can't depend on government alone to create jobs or economic growth," he said.
"That is and must be the role of the private sector. But at this particular moment, with the private sector so weakened by this recession, the federal government is the only entity left with the resources to jolt our economy back into life." He took issue with people who criticized President Franklin D. Roosevelt for his famous "New Deal" policies that were used to help lift the country out of the Great Depression. "They're fighting battles that I thought were resolved a pretty long time ago," Obama said. He said he did not really want to spend billions of dollars of taxpayers' money, but that was what was required. "I would love not to spend money right now," he said. "That wasn't how I envisioned my presidency beginning. But we have to adapt to existing circumstances." Part of his sales pitch included an emphasis on job creation. The president has said repeatedly the package would save or create between 3 million and 4 million jobs. On Monday, he dropped that range and focused on the latter number.
"My initial measure of success is creating or saving 4 million jobs," he said. "That's bottom line number one."
Source - //in.news.yahoo.com/
07 February 2009
06 February 2009
05 February 2009
03 February 2009
01 February 2009
C.A. New Batch by Parveen Sharma
Admission starts on 1/2/09 at 12Noon.
Visit http://www.issclasses.com/