Jan 19, 2007

Researchers Developing Single-Pixel Camera

"According to the BBC, researchers in the US are developing a single-pixel camera to capture high-quality images without the 'expense' of traditional digital photography. The idea behind such a device is that traditional digital photography is wasteful. Most of the information taken in by the camera is thrown away in the compression process. From the article: 'The digital micromirror device, as it is known, consists of a million or more tiny mirrors each the size of a bacterium. "From that mirror array, we then focus the light through a second lens on to one single photo-detector - a single pixel." As the light passes through the device, the millions of tiny mirrors are turned on and off at random in rapid succession. Complex mathematics then interprets the signals assembling a high resolution image from the thousands of sequential single-pixel snapshots. '"
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Source : slashdot.org

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Jan 14, 2007

Becks isn't getting big bucks ($250M!) just for soccer

Soccer star David Beckham will reportedly earn $250 million in a five-year deal to play in the United States -- but at least 80 percent of that money has nothing to do with his kicking a ball for the Los Angeles Galaxy.
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Source : cnn.com

Sachin (in his sleep): Maro, maro, that’s a four

NEW DELHI: Did you know that ace batsman Sachin Tendulkar's sleepwalking gives others sleepless nights, or that Javagal Srinath once had reached the field wearing skipper Kapil Dev’s pair of trousers?

These and many more anecdotes, on and off the field from cricketers form part of a book Caught and Told by Sandeep Patil and Mid day Sports Editor Clayton Murzello.

"My habit of sleepwalking has given others a lot of sleepless nights, but nothing more than my habit of talking while in my sleep," writes batting maestro Sachin Tendulkar.

As his roommate during his debut tour of Pakistan in 1989, Kiran More heard him shout more than once in his sleep: "Maro, maro, that’s a four." What shocked him more was that during one these spells, "I even broke my bracelet," Tendulkar writes.

If Tendulkar writes about his habits, Sourav Ganguly recalls the bullies Tendulkar and Vinod Kambli were. "At the national under-15 camp in Indore, there were no greater bullies than Sachin Tendulkar and Vinod Kambli," writes Ganguly.

He recalls how his room in the stadium, where they were staying, was flooded and realized that Sachin and Kambli were at it again, taking revenge for a minor argument.

His first Test with the Australian accent ended in a disaster, admits Anshuman Gaikwad. Taken aback at the unusual query from an Australian official at the Melbourne Cricket ground when he reached as replacement for Surinder Amarnath in 1977-78, Gaekwad said a firm "No".

"Have you come here to die?” The Aussie, however, asked the same question again and it was captain Bishen Singh Bedi who came to the rescue and told Gaekwad that what the officer was asking was, "Have you come here today?", Gaekwad recalls.

The great thing about cricket is that it produces so many characters and so many funny moments, says Greg Chappell in his foreword. While cricket has become more of a game of statistics these days, it has really been more of a game of stories, he says. "I think the folklore of the game has survived and the game is richer because of its characters and stories," Chappell says.

Former India coach John Wright recalls how he was embarrassed when he once asked Harbhajan Singh during a camp in Chennai in 2001 to run a few laps on the ground and rushed to the pavilion to take a call from the Board of Control for Cricket in India. "When I returned to the nets, I started looking for Bhajji and was told that he was still running. That was nearly 90 minutes after I got that telephone call!" Wright says.

Gideon Haigh had this to say on introduction of Sunil Gavaskar when his team was honoured by the West Australia Cricket Association in 1980-81. The master of ceremonies began by saying, “I would now like to welcome a man small of stature but a giant among crickets. India’s greatest batsman, perhaps the best player in the world at the present time" Ladies and gentlemen, could you please put your hands together for "Sir Neil Gavaskar!"

Virender Sehwag recalls when Harbhajan Singh found a nice way to beat boredom on the tour to Sri Lanka in 2002 as he went around wearing a dreadful mask to every room on his floor. Sourav Ganguly and his wife Dona screamed at the sight while Rahul Dravid almost dropped dead in fear!

Tendulkar also remembers when he challenged Vinod Kambli to wear a skirt during one of the Cooch Behar trophy tours and how the irrepressible Vinod did not think twice and was all over the streets of Ahmedabad wearing a skirt. He removed it only when they returned to the hotel at 11 pm!

And beat this, one of the best fast bowlers India has ever produced, Sanjay Manjrekar, once asked Gavaskar, "Sir, when you faced the fast bowlers from the West Indies, did you ever see the ball?" Gavaskar's reply is not mentioned, but the statistics state that by then he had scored 13 of his 34 centuries against the West Indies!

(Caught & Told, Humorous Cricketing Anecdotes, by Sandeep Patil and Clayton Murzello, Roli Books, pages 120, price Rs 195)
Source : greatandhra.com