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wah Indians so brilliant!

DerekLeung

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DerekLeung

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2lanu

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Condoms 'too big' for Indian men

There is a "lack of awareness" over condom sizes
A survey of more than 1,000 men in India has concluded that condoms made according to international sizes are too large for a majority of Indian men.
:eek::biggrin::biggrin::biggrin::biggrin:

God is fair to give Indian a bigger head up there and make it smaller down there. Hahaha:biggrin::biggrin:
 

2lanu

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I wonder if Indian is so good, how come they dun build up their own place and economy instead of building and "give the world" their knowledge??? :confused:
 

newyorker88

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IS IT TRUE THAT IT IS MADE IN SINGAPORE? THis professor a director in NTU only. Singapore got such lab facilities for such research? He is a good FT that the gov wants, not those who come here as construction wokers.






Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story
Feb 9, 2009
S'pore-made super chip
It uses a fraction of the power to do seven times the job of other models
By Chua Hian Hou

Smaller than a 5 cent coin, the chip heralds a big revolution in high-tech devices. -- PHOTO: NTU

A SINGAPORE-American brain trust has made a new microchip they claim is seven times more powerful than its existing cousin.
The icing on this cake: This new chip consumes 30 times less power.

Mobile phones that could need re-charging just once every two weeks and surgically-implanted devices lasting several lifetimes could be a reality a few years down the road, once this 2mm-by-2mm chip finds its way into the heart of electronic devices.

The chip, unveiled at the International Solid-State Circuit conference in San Francisco yesterday, can make such a leap over current chip technology because of its design, said Associate Professor Yeo Kiat Seng, who heads the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering's circuits and systems division at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

Traditionally, to get better performance out of a microchip, more power is required.

The additional power is used to drown out the interference generated by the chip. This interference is known in engineering parlance as 'noise'.

Over time, it has become harder and harder to make microchips any more powerful than they already were, especially since smaller chips - which are in demand for portable devices like mobile phones - generate more noise than larger ones.

Instead of passing more power through the chip to boost its performance, Prof Yeo and his co-researchers harnessed the interference generated to do this.

This out-of-the-box concept for the microchip, which was invented back in 1947, came in 2005 from Rice University computer scientist Professor Krisna Palem, who is also the director of NTU's Institute of Sustainable Nanoelectronics.
Since then, 'thousands of man hours' have been burned to develop the idea, said Prof Yeo.

When the first batch of microchips was delivered last December, it had to be put through repeated test runs because no one on the NTU or Rice teams could believe it worked so well.

Intel Microprocessor Technology Lab director Shekhar Borkar called the 'energy and speed advantages' of the new technology a 'significant achievement'.

Prof Yeo reckons it will take about four years for actual products to appear, since chip-makers will need time to design chips tailored to specific products.
 

ahleebabasingaporethief

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IS IT TRUE THAT IT IS MADE IN SINGAPORE? THis professor a director in NTU only. Singapore got such lab facilities for such research? He is a good FT that the gov wants, not those who come here as construction wokers.






Home > Breaking News > Singapore > Story
Feb 9, 2009
S'pore-made super chip
It uses a fraction of the power to do seven times the job of other models
By Chua Hian Hou

Smaller than a 5 cent coin, the chip heralds a big revolution in high-tech devices. -- PHOTO: NTU

A SINGAPORE-American brain trust has made a new microchip they claim is seven times more powerful than its existing cousin.
The icing on this cake: This new chip consumes 30 times less power.

Mobile phones that could need re-charging just once every two weeks and surgically-implanted devices lasting several lifetimes could be a reality a few years down the road, once this 2mm-by-2mm chip finds its way into the heart of electronic devices.

The chip, unveiled at the International Solid-State Circuit conference in San Francisco yesterday, can make such a leap over current chip technology because of its design, said Associate Professor Yeo Kiat Seng, who heads the School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering's circuits and systems division at the Nanyang Technological University (NTU).

Traditionally, to get better performance out of a microchip, more power is required.

The additional power is used to drown out the interference generated by the chip. This interference is known in engineering parlance as 'noise'.

Over time, it has become harder and harder to make microchips any more powerful than they already were, especially since smaller chips - which are in demand for portable devices like mobile phones - generate more noise than larger ones.

Instead of passing more power through the chip to boost its performance, Prof Yeo and his co-researchers harnessed the interference generated to do this.

This out-of-the-box concept for the microchip, which was invented back in 1947, came in 2005 from Rice University computer scientist Professor Krisna Palem, who is also the director of NTU's Institute of Sustainable Nanoelectronics.
Since then, 'thousands of man hours' have been burned to develop the idea, said Prof Yeo.

When the first batch of microchips was delivered last December, it had to be put through repeated test runs because no one on the NTU or Rice teams could believe it worked so well.

Intel Microprocessor Technology Lab director Shekhar Borkar called the 'energy and speed advantages' of the new technology a 'significant achievement'.

Prof Yeo reckons it will take about four years for actual products to appear, since chip-makers will need time to design chips tailored to specific products.


Krisna Palem and Shekhar Borkar both sounds like Ah Nehs. Got kelong bo? Abang adik ah!
 

DerekLeung

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<embed src="http://www.metacafe.com/fplayer/yt-zQRpdvyEO3M/singapore_worst_accident_superphantom4.swf" width="400" height="345" wmode="transparent" allowFullScreen="true" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"> </embed><br><font size = 1><a href="http://www.metacafe.com/watch/yt-zQRpdvyEO3M/singapore_worst_accident_superphantom4/">Singapore Worst Accident (SuperPhantom4)</a> - <a href="http://www.metacafe.com/">A funny movie is a click away</a></font>
 

Jah_rastafar_I

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<embed src="http://www.metacafe.com/fplayer/yt-zQRpdvyEO3M/singapore_worst_accident_superphantom4.swf" width="400" height="345" wmode="transparent" allowFullScreen="true" pluginspage="http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflashplayer" type="application/x-shockwave-flash"> </embed><br><font size = 1><a href="http://www.metacafe.com/watch/yt-zQRpdvyEO3M/singapore_worst_accident_superphantom4/">Singapore Worst Accident (SuperPhantom4)</a> - <a href="http://www.metacafe.com/">A funny movie is a click away</a></font>




So he took the covering of a very good bike and put it over a lao ya bike????

Something like using a ferrari's chasis over a toyota interior for eg?
 

khunking

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Sage of the Himalayas (天山)

Gautama Buddha's portrait at the age of 41, painted by his follower. (The original painting is in the British Museum)

e1b1002.jpg


In the north of India, near the foot of the Himalayan mountains, there was a kingdom of yellow-skinned people - the Sakyans. Their complexion, according to the Lakkhana Sutta, was like bronze; their skin was delicately smooth; their eyes and hair were black.
 

khunking

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Justice My Foot (審死官)

Justice Radhabinod Pal (27 January 1886 – 10 January 1967) was an Indian jurist. He was the Indian member appointed to the International Military Tribunal for the Far East's trials of Japanese war crimes committed during the second World War.

450px-Radha_Binod_Pal_in_Yasukuni.JPG


Japan's Prime Minister meets son of Indian judge on Tokyo war crimes' trials

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/08/23/news/japan.php

Japan PM Meets Son of War Crimes Judge

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/08/23/AR2007082302463.html
 
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