N-bombs to destroy earth-bound asteroids in space!
Space shuttle Discovery heads home after 14-day mission
China, Brazil to launch jointly Satellite 03
Beijing : China and Brazil will launch in September a jointly developed third earth resources satellite, equipped with high resolution cameras for agricultural, mining and environmental use.
According to China National Space Administration, the Satellite 02B, of Brazilian manufacture, will orbit the earth in September or October 2008.
The takeoff will take place in a launching centre in Taiyuan, capital of the northern Chinese province of Shanxi.
Discovery astronauts begin spacewalk for ISS work
Scientists develop tool for quick analysis of water purity
NASA says space shuttle repairs not needed
Why fundamental scientific research has not caught on in India
West must pay for India’s clean technology: UN official
U.S. space shuttle Discovery moved to launch pad
Around the world in 80 days, the Indian Air Force way
Computer virus accuses victims of viewing child porn
Mystery dinosaur may be a new species
Japanese brewery claims to have the world’s first ‘space beer’
Google’s help sought in Koda investigation
Google launches ‘Instant’ service
Mysterious object seen refuelling from sun
India to launch three satellites next month
India discovers 67 animal species, 29 plant species
Indian American develops software to help motorists
By IANS
Los Angeles : A tech firm owned by an Indian American has developed a software that combines speech-recognition and text messaging to provide free directions to motorists.
Dial Directions, a California based firm, began its services early this week in the Bay Area, Los Angeles and New York with the promise of turning a cell phone into a global positioning system (GPS) and search-enabled device.
The software can work on any mobile phone, the online edition of San Francisco Chronicle reported.
Google mania continues amid sense of deja vu
Astronauts finish complicated solar truss instalment
US calls for restraint on n-arms, NSA to visit Pakistan
Infosys to develop IT-enabled application for agriculture
China unveils world’s largest sci-tech museum
Giant ocean found on Saturn’s moon
India’s first moon mission is world’s 68th
Scientists closer to non invasive cancer therapy
An explosion 11 billion years ago, billion times brighter than sun
Researchers calculate how much carbon can be stored underground
NASA launches Endeavour space shuttle to ISS
Midas touch: scientists discover gold nanoparticles
Facebook unveils new tools
Agenda for India: Telecom
India offers space data to manage Asia-Pacific calamities
Astronomers find young exploding star in Milky Way
Molecule that eats carbon dioxide may fight global warming
Twitter reaches another milestone with 20 billionth tweet
Microsoft-Yahoo search deal imminent: Report
‘Cybersquatting’ on the rise: UN agency
Effective way found to produce anti-flu vaccines
Google comes to the aid of Yahoo!
NTPC to hire 6,000 people over five years
German scientists readying Indian Ocean tsunami warning system
Pakistani Scientist invents world’s lowest profile antenna
Mars will not come closer to Earth: UAE astronomers
New technology makes diagnosis of abnormal pregnancy cheaper
New Delhi : Indian scientists have developed a new technology that will help diagnose at a very early stage and at affordable cost abnormal pregnancies that can lead to miscarriages and stillbirths.
Shuttle Discovery lifts off for space station
US to give Iran ‘space’ to mull nuclear fuel deal
Brazil frowns on US control over Internet
Scientists create wonder alloys for aerospace industry
IT investment region to come up around Hyderabad
Japanese bullet train suicide by fire being probed
US-Indian team gets $1 mn for clean coal technology
Scientific community celebrates successful launch of Chandrayaan-1
Microsoft opens Windows 8 in india
NASA to launch Mars rover in November
There is ‘contemporary’ life on Mars: leading space scientist
Comet McNaught closest to Earth next week
NASA’s Phoenix Mars lander commanded to unstow arm
Clouds disappoint people in Hyderabad
Google, Verizon close to deal to end ‘net neutrality’
Kepler telescope finds new planetary system
NASA Destroys Rocket after Launch Failure
Canada to get world’s first supercomputer outside the US
Will the Big Bang test end the world on Wednesday?
NASA schedules final shuttle launches through 2010
Cockroaches which conceived in space under observation
IBM’s Lx86 allows Linux applications run on Unix servers
Malicious software can invade smart phones, warns Indian American
Algae could be a rich, and unusual, fuel source
Virtual crash dummy to make driving much safer
Storage options for the digital generation
NIIT Technologies, British Airways ink three-year deal
Laughing gas threat no laughing matter
Sunlight can damage your eyes
China launches satellites to monitor environment
Computer programmed to read human faces
Russian scientists revive plants frozen for 30,000 years
Microscope for objects 20,000 times thinner than hair on anvil
Nandan Nilekani confident of changing India with ideas
Insat-4CR launch delayed by 50 minutes
Copenhagen aims to be first carbon neutral capital
New experimental HIV vaccine shows promise
Intel, Micron develop new high speed flash memory chips
Plants can effectively tackle global warming
New greenhouse gas 4,800 times worse than carbon dioxide
Cyber attack targeted Chinese citizens with US links: Report
NRI Muslims celebrate first Indian moon mission
Spacewalking astronauts repair Hubble gyroscopes
‘Don’t worry about more lethal version of terror bomb’
Russia to continue Arctic shelf research
Chilean quake was so strong, it shortened days: NASA
New star forming regions found in Milky Way
Microsoft’s Bing search engine aims to rival Google
Passwords for multiple internet services need not be confusing
Research to create bees without stings in Tamil Nadu
IBM creates world’s smallest 3D map
Dubai-based scientists produce region’s first identical twin camels
Researchers overcome kinks in solar energy storage
Iran awaits lift of sanctions to resume crude exports
Facebook named world’s top social networking site
Researchers developing more powerful solar cells
NEC launches world’s fastest supercomputer
NASA’s Fermi telescope sees mother of all gamma-rays blast
IIT Kanpur developing robot for India’s moon mission
By Prashant K. Nanda
IANSNew Delhi : When India sends its proposed moon mission in 2011, it will have a unique robot developed indigenously by student-engineers and their professors at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) at Kanpur.
NASA postpones Endeavour launch
Airbus announced further delays of A380 program
Protein discovery to hasten biofuel production
Kalam endorsed nuclear deal: Manmohan Singh
Manmohan Singh presented Chandrayaan-1, PSLV models
Tiny gold clusters can help clean car exhaust
Nine win funding for rural innovation projects
Solar plane takes off for Hawaii from Japan
Microsoft: surf skies from desktop
Technical tips for buying web and video phones
Phoenix Mars lander examines new soil sample
Spacewalk to mark giant step for China
Tech-savvy British students forgetting how to write
Ocean plankton do their bit to control global warming
Iran says space program poses no threat to peace
Google maps ancient Arctic village
Orbiting space junk passes International Space Station
NASA plans to put man on Mars b 2037
Scientists finds water ice on asteroid’s surface
Khushboo Mirza, member of Chandrayaan-1 team, talks to TCN
Taking hi-tech solutions to poor villages
Bangalore : Ekgaon, a technology and management services firm for independent rural communities, is run by young Indian techies spanning the globe, some of whom are expatriates keen to help their home country.
Iran to launch communications satellites
India needs strong cyber infrastructure: Rajnath
Railways U-turn on offering exclusive women train coaches to men
Astronauts get ready for first spacewalk
Indian-American researchers develop system to ease e-mail overload
Plant roots being modified to be better at finding water
First synthetic tree may facilitate heat transfer, soil technologies
‘Designing Chandrayaan was like writing lyrics to a set tune’
Cisco unveils social network platform for IT community
NASA launches spacecraft to study solar wind
Scientists mine Twitter to discover drug side-effects
Scientists can now control most atoms
China challenging US as scientific powerhouse
Global warming could raise sea level by five metres: Scientist
Eclipse makes driving on Bangalore roads a pleasure
Round-the-world solar plane suspends flight
Birds instinctively pick the healthiest fruit
There’s an ethane lake on Saturn’s moon
New technology makes diagnosis of abnormal pregnancy cheaper
By Prashant K. Nanda
IANSNew Delhi : Indian scientists have developed a new technology that will help diagnose at a very early stage and at affordable cost abnormal pregnancies that can lead to miscarriages and stillbirths.