Welcome to Official Blog of TechnoKriti.
Our Non Profit Student Volunteered Organization at

Manav Rachna College of Engineering, Faridabad.
All are Welcome to Learn, Share and Develop.

Friday, October 30, 2009

Ethical Hacking..!

The list of events organised and supported by TECHNOKRITI, grows even longer with the addition of the 'ETHICAL HACKING' Workshop organized on 29-10-2009...

The main event was headed by KANISK DUDEJA(2nd yr) CSE A and NAVEEN CHAUHAN (2nd yr) IT A.. with all the support provided by TECHNOKRITI TEAM.
It was a short event which dealt with the basics of HACKING. Almost 20 1st yr students came to attend the event and got to learn some simple steps to obtain the ID and PASSWORD of a person using the tricks of INTERNET n HTML. The basic idea of the event was not to encourage them about Hacking but to make them aware of such tricks so that they don't get fooled by someone else.
Information about some websites like "ripway.com' and "bit.ly" were also told by Prashant.


Ethical Hacking..!

The list of events organised and supported by TECHNOKRITI, grows even longer with the addition of the 'ETHICAL HACKING' Workshop organized on 29-10-2009...

The main event was headed by KANISK DUDEJA(2nd yr) CSE A and NAVEEN CHAUHAN (2nd yr) IT A.. with all the support provided by TECHNOKRITI TEAM.It was a short event which dealt with the basics of HACKING. Almost 20 1st yr students came to attend the event and got to learn some simple steps to obtain the ID and PASSWORD of a person using the tricks of INTERNET n HTML. The basic idea of the event was not to encourage them about Hacking but to make them aware of such tricks so that they don't get fooled by someone else.Information about some websites like "ripway.com' and "bit.ly" were also told by Prashant.

Monday, October 19, 2009

Cartoon Contest on Climate Change



Draw a Smile, Save the Planet If you’re creative, funny, care about the environment and know how to wield a pencil, here’s your chance to do something about it. British Council in partnership with the Ken Sprague Fund UK announces a cartoon contest on climate change. The contest is organised as part of British Council’s Low Carbon Futures Project, which focuses on mitigating the effects of climate change in an urban environment


Sunday, October 18, 2009

Ubuntu CLoud Computing with Amazon EC2

Waiting for UBUNTU 9.10!!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Sins of Windows7 exposed here!!

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Ubuntu experience..!

Ubuntu is a community developed, Linux-based operating system that is perfect for laptops, desktops and servers. It contains all the applications you need - a web browser, presentation, document and spreadsheet software, instant messaging and much more.

It is an open source software.. so available for free.. you can either order ur cd on the net or can download the iso..

i recently downloaded ubuntu 9.04 from www.ubuntu.com.. its a bootable iso.. so when u boot it u can run a live session to see how it works.. or you can install it..

If u want to install it.. you will have to make up a backup of all your data because it does not support NTFS or FAT file systems.. its got it own ext3 file system.. backup all ur data and then while installing it.. choose the option "use the entire disk".. it will format it in ext3 file system..

its pretty cool.. no spoonfeeding like windows.. everything needs to be done from the command line( the terminal)..
it cant run exes.. but if u still want to run an exe there is a package named "wine" that lets you run executables..
there are lots of other diverse packages that can be installed..
there are loads of pretty good inbuilt applications.. for eg a screenshot software..

If u use it ur computer knowledge gets enhanced drastically because u will be working with loads of source codes and stuff..id seriously recommend you to give it a try.. its a bit hard for beginners but all information is available on the net.. so if u encounter any problem u can always google it..

I hope u have a good ubuntu experience..!

RadioVerve.net

RadioVeRVe is an internet radio station operating out of Bangalore, India. It differentiates itself from other FM and internet radio stations by focusing exclusively on independent music from India.

It addresses the common problem that independent artistes face all over the world - mainstream radio doesn't play their music, so reach is limited. The RadioVeRVe team decided to pool their talents together and create a one-of-its-kind venture, India's first Internet radio station dedicated wholly to independent Indian music.[1]

First launched on June 1, 2006, RadioVeRVe originally launched as a platform to showcase rock music performed by unpublished bands in India, and to feature music performed by these bands, as well as interviews and news about them. It has since widened its musical scope to rock, heavy metal, easy listening, regional language and Indian classical music.

The station has received interest from both the press as well as the music industry in India, and caters to thousands of listeners across the world 24 hours a day. Artistes featured on the station credit it with being responsible for their reaching audiences that they had not hoped to reach earlier, and getting record label offers, shows and even international tours.

No1 in Energy Management

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

The Nobel Prize in Chemistry Goes to Venkatraman Ramakrishnan,Thomas A. Steitz, Ada E. Yonath

We are proud as other NRI makes it to NOBEL PRIZE this year. Venkatraman got Nobel prize
for studies of the structure and function of the ribosome.

Telephone interview with Venkatraman Ramakrishnan immediately following the announcement of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, 7 October 2009. The interviewer is Adam Smith, Editor-in-Chief of Nobelprize.org
[Venkatraman Ramakrishnan] Hello?

[Adam Smith] Hello. Professor Ramakrishnan?

[VR] Yes.

[AS] Hello, my name's Adam Smith. I'm calling from the official web site of the Nobel Foundation in Stockholm.

[VR] Yes.

[AS] We have a tradition of recording very short interviews with new Laureates. May I offer you my congratulations and speak to you for a few minutes?

[VR] Yes. Thank you.

[AS] You started out as a physicist, and I just wanted to ask what attracted you to biology in the first place?

[VR] Well, I'll be honest with you. I was a theoretical physicist but my Ph.D. work was on a problem that was not particularly interesting to me at the time. And I used to subscribe to Scientific American and I found that there were all these wonderful discoveries happening in biology and I also knew that a number of physicists had gone into biology and been successful. So, I decided to switch.

[AS] Well so many, like Francis Crick, and so many others who moved into molecular biology for instance ...

[VR] Yes, exactly. In fact many from my own lab, you know, where I work.

[AS] That's right. And you do work at the LMB in Cambridge, this marvelous place where so many great ideas have come from. What is it that makes it so special?

[VR] I think it's the ability to tackle difficult problems in a sort of stable and supportive environment. I think that's the real key to it.

[AS] So one is challenged, always, to address the most difficult problem one can think of?

[VR] That's right. And I think, you know, the history of the place means that you don't waste your time doing sort of mundane or routine things.

[AS] And in particular, the problem of the ribosome, this extraordinarily complicated structure. It perhaps seems like a mountain that's too high to climb, but that itself attracted you?

[VR] No, because I started working on ribosomes when I was a post doc, in 1978, when it would have been impossible, really, to solve it. But, it was just a fundamental problem in biology. And we felt, no matter, anything we do to chip away at the problem would be useful. So it was more that that attracted me. And I think the fact that it was large and kind of difficult to come to grips with, yes, it was attractive. Really what was attractive was that it was a fundamental problem.

[AS] And Francis Crick had made this proposal in the 60s, that it might perhaps be the link between the pre-DNA world and life now as we know it.

[VR] Yes. And the structures have definitely shown, or confirmed, earlier biochemical work, mainly by people like Harry Noller, that the key elements of the ribosome that are involved in function are made of RNA. And so a primordial ribosome could very well have consisted entirely of RNA. And, so, yes it does ... But Crick was amazingly, I think, prescient to have thought about it.

[AS] There's a marvelous video on your web site showing the ribosome in action, which indicates that really we understand its workings pretty well.

[VR] Well, only if you don't think of it as chemistry. Because we understand in a sort of fuzzy way that something has to come in, and something has to move, and so on. But, if you really want to understand the detailed molecular interactions that make it go in a particular direction, make certain contacts, break other contacts, hydrolyze GTP, you know, form bonds, etcetera, and do it all amazingly accurately, then you do need a high resolution picture of those states. But, that's not going to be enough. It's going to take a lot of work by biochemists, by computational people who do molecular dynamics and things like that to really, eventually, understand it in the sense that we would understand, say, a more typical reaction.

[AS] And, the three of you who've been rewarded with the Nobel Prize today, have all worked on bacterial ribosomes. Is it the case that bacterial ribosomes are a good model for our ribosomes?

[VR] They are good for certain things, but they're not good for initiation where it's very, very difficult so ... But there are people working on trying to get eukaryotic ribosomes crystallized and trying to study it, but I think that will be a difficult problem for quite a while.

[AS] And just as a last topic, one thing that the committee have emphasized is all three of your work on antibiotics and ribosomes and the structural work on antibiotics interacting with ribosomes. Do you have high hopes that this structural biology will lead to new antibiotics to treat resistant strains of bacteria.

[VR] Yes. So the fact is that ... You know, having a high resolution structure in hand, one of the first things that those of us who were working on it did was to try and determine the structure with antibiotics, with known antibiotics that bind to the ribosome. And those gave us a very good idea of how they interacted with the ribosome. And it also gave us an idea of why certain mutations would cause resistance and how you might design better antibiotics. And, indeed, one of my co-winners, Tom Steitz, founded a company in New Haven and that company is devoted to making new antibiotics based on the structure of the ribosome and they have, actually, new potential drugs in clinical trials. So that's one of the more satisfying things to come out of it.

[AS] OK, well thank you very much. I can hear behind you what sounds like a celebrating lab. What do you think is about to happen?

[VR] It looks like, from the way the phone's ringing, that today's going to be written-off. But I haven't even told my wife yet. I couldn't reach her. She's probably gone for a walk, and she doesn't use a mobile phone, so it will be interesting. And my father lives in Seattle and I don't want to wake him up because it's three in the morning, so ...

[AS] So, you'll be held on the phone for a while more before you can speak to the family. Well, good luck good luck with the rest of today and we look forward to meeting you when you come to Stockholm in December.

[VR] Thank you, bye, bye.

[AS] Bye, bye.

To hear the telephonic interview click here...(media player needed)


Background of Venkatraman Ramakrishnan.

* Born: 1952
* Place of birth: Chidambaram, Tamil Nadu, India
* Nationality: United States
* Residence: United Kingdom
* Affiliation: MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology, Cambridge, United Kingdom
o Address:
Hills Road
Cambridge, CB2 0QH, UK
* Tel: +44 (0) 1223-402213
* Fax: +44 (0) 1223 213556
* E-mail: ramak@mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk
* Education:
o Baroda University, India. B.Sc. (Physics) 1971
o Ohio University, US. Ph.D. (Physics) 1976
o University of California, San Diego, US. Graduate Student (Biology) 1976-78.

What is CCD SENSOR??

A charge-coupled device (CCD) is a device for the movement of electrical charge, usually from within the device to an area where the charge can be manipulated, for example conversion into a digital value. This is achieved by "shifting" the signals between stages within the device one at a time, in a queue like manner. Technically, CCDs are implemented as shift registers that move charge between capacative "bins" in the device, with the shift allowing for the transfer of charge between bins.

Often the device is integrated with a sensor, such as a photoelectric device to produce the charge that is being read, thus making the CCD a major technology where the conversion of images into a digital signal is required. Whilst CCDs are not the only technology to allow for light detection, CCDs are widely used in professional, medical and scientific applications where high quality image data is required.

In a CCD for capturing images, there is a photoactive region (an epitaxial layer of silicon), and a transmission region made out of a shift register (the CCD, properly speaking).

An image is projected through a lens onto the capacitor array (the photoactive region), causing each capacitor to accumulate an electric charge proportional to the light intensity at that location. A one-dimensional array, used in line-scan cameras, captures a single slice of the image, while a two-dimensional array, used in video and still cameras, captures a two-dimensional picture corresponding to the scene projected onto the focal plane of the sensor. Once the array has been exposed to the image, a control circuit causes each capacitor to transfer its contents to its neighbor (operating as a shift register). The last capacitor in the array dumps its charge into a charge amplifier, which converts the charge into a voltage. By repeating this process, the controlling circuit converts the entire semiconductor contents of the array to a sequence of voltages, which it samples, digitizes and stores in some form of memory.

Open Source WORLD

This is how you make animated GIF using ADOBE

Monday, October 5, 2009

Schneider - Electric

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Google Chrome 3.0 Released

Google has released 3.0 version of its famous web browser "Chrome". Here is what the Official Google Blog says:

This release comes hot on the heels of 51 developer, 21 beta and 15 stable updates and 3,505 bugfixes in the past year. For you, that means significant speed improvements for the browser as well as a fresh redesign of some of its most loved features.

We've improved by more than 150% in Javascript performance since our very first beta, and by more than 25% since the most recent stable release.

When you download and fire up this latest release of Google Chrome, you'll notice that the New Tab page sports a new look. We've redesigned the New Tab page so that it's easy to use and easily customizable. Now you can rearrange thumbnails of your most-visited websites by simply clicking and dragging your mouse. Additionally, you can pin thumbnails to a spot so they don't disappear even if your browsing habits change. This way, you can easily get to the websites you care about with just one click.

We've also improved one of the most used and loved features of Google Chrome, the Omnibox. Because it's a search bar as well as the web address bar, the multi-talented Omnibox helps you get to the sites you're looking for with just a few keystrokes. With this release, we've optimized the presentation of the drop-down menu and added little icons to help you distinguish between suggested sites, searches, bookmarks, and sites from your browsing history.

We're very excited about HTML5 becoming standard in modern browsers, and continued to add HTML5 capabilities to this stable release.

After testing out Themes for Google Chrome in the beta channel, we're finally releasing it in this stable release. Themes allow you to deck out your browser with colors, patterns and images. We'll be bringing more Themes for the browser soon, but in the meantime, you can change the theme of your browser by visiting the Themes Gallery.

You can download the new version using following link:

Download Google Chrome 3.0



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