Tamil Music from India is an essential thing which can helps us to change our mood and theme for the people’s entertainment and become the peoples out of monotonous. But now music has become one of the best entertainment sectors in the world. We all know that music is an antidote to getting rid of depression. There are many examples we have already seen that music has considerable power to save people’s lives and get a fresh mind. We are thinking and discussing the most viral industry in India now, and its name is the Tamil music industry. Tamil music is the best industry among all the industries in India. Already they gave many hit and viral songs for us. If you want to get the pieces, you have to check out masstamilan , which is the best site for getting the Tamil industry’s best songs. What is Tamil Music? Tamil Nadu is a state of India, and this area people’s language is Tamil. Tamil music is one of the best languages outside Tamil Nadu as well as India. Tamil music is a ... » Learn More about Why Tamil Music from India Becoming Popular Throughout the World
7s technologies avadi tamil nadu
Could fiber-optic technology be used to detect earthquakes?
Image: shulz/Getty Images via ETX Studio If you think that fiber-optic cables are only useful for providing high-speed internet access or cable TV, then think again, because they could also provide valuable information about hazardous events such as earthquakes and flooding. Most often installed via underground networks of cables, fiber-optic technology can be used to monitor ground vibrations. It may sound surprising, but this “hidden function” of fiber-optic technology could prove particularly useful because geophones, the seismic monitoring devices traditionally used by geologists, are often difficult to install in urban areas due to high maintenance costs and risks of theft and vandalism. Using fiber-optic distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) technology and existing telecommunications infrastructure, already in the ground, researchers from Penn State University converted the fiber-optic cable under the faculty campus to 2,300 seismic sensors. The researchers then ... » Learn More about Could fiber-optic technology be used to detect earthquakes?
Deliveroo launches London IPO after business surges in 2020
LONDON (Reuters) - British food delivery firm Deliveroo announced plans to launch its hotly anticipated London listing on Monday after recording a surge in business during the COVID-19 pandemic, although it still posted a loss for 2020. The initial public offering (IPO) is expected to value Deliveroo at more than $7 billion, based on a private funding round it completed in January, and will be one of the largest London listings in several years. The company published a registration document and an expected "intention to float" -- which signals the start of the listing process -- on Monday, capping what has been a busy start to the London IPO season. In an accompanying trading update, the company said it had grown the total number of transactions processed on its online platform, the so-called Gross Transaction Value, by 64.3% last year to 4.1 billion pounds from 2.5 billion in 2019. It also narrowed an underlying loss to 223.7 million pounds ($308.93 million), from 317.3 ... » Learn More about Deliveroo launches London IPO after business surges in 2020
Casting a wide intrusion net: Dozens burned with single hack
BOSTON: The SolarWinds hacking campaign blamed on Russian spies and the “grave threat” it poses to US national security are widely known. A very different – and no less alarming – coordinated series of intrusions also detected in December has gotten considerably less public attention. Nimble, highly skilled criminal hackers believed to operate out of Eastern Europe hacked dozens of companies and government agencies on at least four continents by breaking into a single product they all used. The victims include New Zealand’s central bank, Harvard Business School, Australia’s securities regulator, the high-powered US law firm Jones Day – whose clients include former President Donald Trump – the rail freight company CSX and the Kroger supermarket and pharmacy chain. Also hit was Washington state’s auditor’s office, where the personal data of up to 1.3 million people gathered for an investigation into unemployment fraud was potentially exposed. The two-stage mega-hack in December ... » Learn More about Casting a wide intrusion net: Dozens burned with single hack
Hackers seized on the pandemic, but some US states are fighting back
Covid-19 made its US debut in Washington state, but the virus was only the first of several intruders to attack the state in the past year. Last spring, cybercriminals breached the state’s unemployment system. Washington was one of the states affected by the massive SolarWinds hack, which was discovered in December. And in February, the state auditor’s office disclosed that fraudsters had exposed the personal information of more than a million residents. “We have a serious governance and oversight problem,” said Washington state Sen. Reuven Carlyle, a Democrat who chairs the Senate Environment, Energy & Technology Committee. “The state auditor breach is historically serious, on every level. And we’ve had four or five major cyber incidents in the last year.” Rocked by the massive SolarWinds hack, unemployment system breaches and other attacks, several states are trying to bolster their cybersecurity in the midst of the public health crisis. “If there’s ever been a year to ... » Learn More about Hackers seized on the pandemic, but some US states are fighting back
Exclusive: Google pledges changes to research oversight after internal revolt
(Reuters) - Alphabet Inc's Google will change procedures before July for reviewing its scientists' work, according to a town hall recording heard by Reuters, part of an effort to quell internal tumult over the integrity of its artificial intelligence (AI) research. In remarks at a staff meeting last Friday, Google Research executives said they were working to regain trust after the company ousted two prominent women and rejected their work, according to an hour-long recording, the content of which was confirmed by two sources. Teams are already trialing a questionnaire that will assess projects for risk and help scientists navigate reviews, research unit Chief Operating Officer Maggie Johnson said in the meeting. This initial change will roll out by the end of the second quarter, and the majority of papers will not require extra vetting, she said. Reuters reported in December that Google had introduced a "sensitive topics" review for studies involving dozens of issues, such ... » Learn More about Exclusive: Google pledges changes to research oversight after internal revolt
Tech firms say there’s little doubt Russia behind major hack
WASHINGTON: Leading technology companies said on Feb 23 that a months-long breach of US corporate and government networks was so sophisticated, focused and labour-intensive that a nation had to be behind it, with all the evidence pointing to Russia. In the first congressional hearing on the breach, representatives of technology companies involved in the response described a hack of almost breathtaking precision, ambition and scope. The perpetrators stealthily scooped up specific emails and documents on a target list from the US and other countries. “We haven’t seen this kind of sophistication matched with this kind of scale,” Microsoft president Brad Smith told the Senate Intelligence Committee. Smith said investigators estimate at least 1,000 highly skilled engineers would have been required to develop the code that hijacked widely used network software from Texas-based SolarWinds to deploy malware around the world through a security update. “We’ve seen substantial evidence ... » Learn More about Tech firms say there’s little doubt Russia behind major hack
Google explores alternative to Apple’s new anti-tracking feature
Google is exploring an alternative to Apple Inc’s new anti-tracking feature, the latest sign that the Internet industry is slowly embracing user privacy, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Internally, the search giant is discussing how it can limit data collection and cross-app tracking on the Android operating system in a way that is less stringent than Apple’s solution, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private plans. Google is trying to balance the rising demands of privacy-conscious consumers with the financial needs of developers and advertisers. The Alphabet Inc unit is seeking input from these stakeholders, similar to how it’s slowly developing a new privacy standard for web browsing called the Privacy Sandbox. With more than US$100bil (RM407.30bil) in annual digital ad sales, Google has a vested interest in helping partners to continue generating revenue by targeting ads to Android device users and measuring the performance of those ... » Learn More about Google explores alternative to Apple’s new anti-tracking feature
‘Sex tech’ aims to rise above negative image
Sex toys are for relaxation. For education. For healing after childbirth. For long-term or long-distance relationships. For women's emancipation. And also... for pleasure. But manufacturers aiming for respectability tend to save this argument for last. "Sex toys have an extremely negative connotation," said Jerome Bensimon, president of Satisfyer. "So we've rebranded ourselves as a 'sexual wellbeing company.'" The company has gained attention for its pressure wave technology used for clitoral stimulation, and has plans to launch a smart phone app for controlling sex toys, in particular by using voice commands. At its booth at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, vibrators and Ben Wa balls sit alongside mini vibrators shaped like ice cream cones. After some ups and downs, "sex tech" is testing the waters this year. As recently as last year the display likely would have been banned. At the 2019 show, the Consumer Technology Association, which runs the expo, ... » Learn More about ‘Sex tech’ aims to rise above negative image
Asian Insider, March 8: More deaths in Myanmar protests; US-China rivalry extending to space
Hi all, In today's bulletin: Two people were killed and several others injured when Myanmar police fired on protesters in northern Myitkyina town; American and Chinese spacecraft reach Mars in quick succession last month, sparking talk of a space race between the two major powers; Indonesia eases rules to attract foreign investment; and more. Reading this on the web or know someone who might enjoy receiving Asian Insider? Our sign-up page is here . More killed in Myanmar protests as unions call for economic shutdown Two people were killed and several others injured when Myanmar police fired on protesters in the northern town of Myitkyina on Monday (March 8), witnesses said. This was as shops, factories and banks were closed in Myanmar’s biggest city Yangon on Monday (March 8), after major trade unions called for a shutdown of the economy as part of the uprising against the country’s military rulers who had ousted the civilian government in a Feb 1 coup. ... » Learn More about Asian Insider, March 8: More deaths in Myanmar protests; US-China rivalry extending to space