Saturday, January 26, 2013

Institute of Digital Marketing: Internet Marketing Delhi


With as many as?6.2 claimed users and 5 million active Internet users?Internet in Delhi (As per the survey of 2011 of IAMAI), more and more businesses here are going online as the most cost effective and viable option for their products and services to generate considerable sales in a quick and easy manner. With Increased Awareness and younger ?generation has lead to a growing trend of Internet marketing in India.?

Internet marketing helps a business in enhancing its presence on the web, boosting its online existence and helps it to rank higher in the search engines. Top search engine rankings allow a business to attract increased traffic to there website and thereby improve the likelihood of sales of its goods and services.?

There are a large number of companies in?Delhi?that offer Internet marketing services. These Internet marketing ?firms possess wealth of knowledge and expertise in online marketing and help their clients enjoy incredible online reputation. Based on the nature of their client?s business and their individual internet marketing needs and requirements, professional online marketing experts devise a successful internet marketing plan.?

The best part about online is that there is something for everyone and one need not be restricted to a few or ?their own limited Geographical area. The WORLD is the marketplace and Customers are there Globally so fasten your seat belts and Get a Roaring start by Announcing your Presence Powerfully into the Wired world.

?Here you can find Internet marketing services that best suit your budget. So, whether you are a small business or a top multinational company, you can find Internet marketing services to achieve your online business goals and objectives.?

To enjoy the best internet marketing services in?Delhi, please visit websites of the companies given below and Get ready to Grow Online when you have SEM Experts that will help you with Website, SEO, PPC, User Experience, Email marketing etc

  1. Omlogic
  2. Guru Infoways
  3. Rich Purple
  4. The Web Conz Technologies
  5. WebisDom
  6. Wings IT Solutions
  7. Grapes Software Pvt Ltd.
  8. YngMedia
  9. Fourtek IT Solutions Pvt Ltd.
  10. HindSoft
  11. Global seo web Technology
  12. I Marketing Advantage
  13. swaran soft
  14. Internet Moguls

Source: http://blog.digitalmarketing.ac.in/2013/01/internet-marketing-delhi.html

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Netflix shuffles the TV deck with 'House of Cards'

NEW YORK (AP) ? In Netflix's bid for a flagship original drama of its own ? a "Sopranos" to its HBO ? the subscription streaming service is presenting a high-class adaptation of a British political thriller offered up all at once, with its first season immediately ready for TV-viewing gluttony.

The show, "House of Cards," is a bold attempt to remake the television landscape with the kind of prestige project cable channels like HBO, AMC and Showtime have used to define themselves. But "House of Cards," produced by David Fincher and starring Kevin Spacey, won't be on the dial of that refuge of quality dramas ? cable television ? but streamed online to laptops and beamed directly to flat-screens through set-top boxes and Internet-enabled devices.

"It's sort of like we're the new television series that isn't on television," says Spacey.

On Feb. 1, all 13 hours of "House of Cards" will premiere on Netflix, a potentially landmark event that could herald the transition of television away from pricey cable bundles and toward the Internet ? a process well under way at YouTube, Hulu, Yahoo and others, but not yet tested to the degree of "House of Cards."

The show is no low-budget Web series, but an HBO-style production for which Netflix reportedly paid in the neighborhood of $100 million for two seasons.

"When we got into original programming, I wanted it to be loud and deliberate," says Ted Sarandos, head of content at Netflix, who only will say the cost was in the "high end" for a TV show. "I wanted consumers to know that we were doing it and I wanted the industry to know that we were doing it so we could attract more interesting projects. Doing it in some half way, some small thing, it wasn't going to get us there."

The revered British original aired in three seasons from 1990 to 1996 and was adapted from the books by Michael Dobbs, a notable politician and adviser to Margaret Thatcher. It starred Ian Richardson as a scheming, manipulating politician who shared his power-hungry strategies directly into the camera. With a darkly comic antihero as protagonist, it was a forerunner to characters like Walter White of "Breaking Bad" and Dexter Morgan of "Dexter."

Independent studio Media Rights Capital, a producer of films like "Ted" and "Babel," purchased the rights to "House of Cards" and paired Fincher with the project, along with Beau Willimon, the Oscar-nominated screenwriter of another political drama, "The Ides of March."

When MRC approached different networks (HBO, Showtime and others), it reached out to Netflix about adding the show to its digital library following a run on TV. But Netflix wanted "House of Cards" as a statement show to launch a crop of original programming.

Sarandos says their wealth of data on user viewing habits proved there's a large audience for Fincher, Spacey and political thrillers. As licensing rights have gotten pricier and harder to land, and the streaming business has grown more competitive, Netflix has focused on adding exclusive programming to entice viewers.

"When you look at 'The Sopranos' or 'Sex and the City' on HBO, or 'Mad Men' on AMC or 'The Shield' on FX or 'Weeds' on Showtime, if you have the opportunity to earn your way into becoming that sort of anchor flagship show that defines a network, it's a very special thing," says Modi Wiczyk, co-CEO of MRC. "I'm sure going in, all of those folks that produced all of those shows said, 'This is not an incumbent. What's it going to look like?'"

A general spirit of rookie experimentation pervades "House of Cards," the first TV show for Fincher, the director of "Fight Club" and "The Social Network."

"I walk into this as a total neophyte. I don't watch much TV," says Fincher, who directed the first two hours and has overseen the whole series. "What was interesting to me was the notion of having a relationship with an audience that was longer than two hours."

Obsessively bingeing on a serial, whether "The Wire" or "Battlestar Galactica," has become a modern ritual in DVR-emptying bursts, on-demand catch-ups or DVD marathons. In releasing "House of Cards" all at once, Netflix will sacrifice the attention generated by weekly episodes to cater to these habits. Sarandos notes that in the first 24 hours that Netflix had the second season to AMC's "Walking Dead," about 200,000 people watched the entire season.

Netflix, being outside the purview of Nielsen ratings, doesn't plan to release viewership figures for "House of Cards." Instead, they hope to retain and add to its 27.1 million domestic subscribers, a number that hasn't always grown as quickly as some Wall Street investors have wanted. (A positive earnings report Wednesday, though, sent the stock soaring.) The audience for "House of Cards" will be immediately global: It premieres in 50 countries and territories.

"We want to have a situation where these shows have time to find their audience," says Sarandos. "We're not under any time constraints that we have to get all of America to watch this show Monday night at 8 o'clock. There's no differential value in people watching it this year, let alone Monday night."

Transferring the tale from Thatcher-era London to contemporary Washington, D.C., held obvious challenges to Willimon, who sought to broaden the show's scope. The wife to Spacey's Francis Underwood, played by Robin Wright as a kind of Lady Macbeth, has been fleshed out. The reporter whom Underwood exploits to both his and her advantage (played by Kate Mara) is now a blogger.

Urquhart's great catch phrase ? "You might very well think that, but I couldn't possibly comment" ? is plainly British in manner. But Willimon had the breakthrough that if he made Francis a congressman from South Carolina ? where much of Willimon's family lives ? a Southern drawl would make the phrase more natural.

Part of the thrill of "House of Cards," the original and the adaptation, is its use of direct address. Just as Richardson did, Spacey occasionally turns devilishly to the camera to explain his Machiavellian politics. It's a device famously used by Shakespeare in "Richard III," which Spacey fittingly played in a touring show before shooting began on "House of Cards" in Baltimore.

"I'm not sure I would have known how to play it because you're just looking down the barrel of a lens, but I had just had the experience for 10 months and 198 performances of looking into the eyes of the audience around the world," says Spacey, who's also a producer on "House of Cards." ''I really learned a lot about that relationship."

The timing is good for "House of Cards" in that it presents a corrupt Congressman at a time when Congress is viewed by many as the antihero of American life. A recent poll by Public Policy Polling found that Congress, in its inaction and party rancor, is currently less popular than root canals and the band Nickelback.

That makes Fincher recall his first collaboration with Spacey, who played the elusive serial killer in his film "Se7en": "Now that John Doe's in Congress, he's so much more evil," he says, laughing.

Yet Spacey's Underwood gets things done, a Lyndon Johnson-style practitioner of strong-arm politics. Willimon believes the show is thus one of the most accurate political dramas "in terms of how the real world works."

"We give you Francis Underwood, a truly effective politician," says Willimon. "Are we willing to accept that side in our politicians that can be ruthless and self-interested if the result is progress?"

An earlier Netflix original, "Lilyhammer," starring Steven Van Zandt, was created for Norwegian television, but "House of Cards" was made purely for Netflix. In May will come the highly-anticipated rebirth of the former Fox cult comedy "Arrested Development." There are also upcoming shows from the horror filmmaker Eli Roth, "Weeds" creator Jenji Kohan and the comedian Ricky Gervais. Another slate will follow in 2014.

Says Sarandos: "This is definitely just the start."

___

Follow AP Entertainment Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/netflix-shuffles-tv-deck-house-cards-130524476.html

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Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Circadian rhythms can be modified for potential treatment of disorders

Jan. 22, 2013 ? UC Irvine-led studies have revealed the cellular mechanism by which circadian rhythms -- also known as the body clock -- modify energy metabolism and also have identified novel compounds that control this action. The findings point to potential treatments for disorders triggered by circadian rhythm dysfunction, ranging from insomnia and obesity to diabetes and cancer.

UC Irvine's Paolo Sassone-Corsi, one of the world's leading researchers on the genetics of circadian rhythms, led the studies and worked with international groups of scientists. Their results are detailed in two companion pieces appearing this week in the early online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Circadian rhythms of 24 hours govern fundamental physiological functions in almost all organisms," said Sassone-Corsi, the Donald Bren Professor of Biological Chemistry. "The circadian clocks are intrinsic time-tracking systems in our bodies that anticipate environmental changes and adapt themselves to the appropriate time of day. Disruption of these rhythms can profoundly influence human health."

He added that up to 15 percent of people's genes are regulated by the day-night pattern of circadian rhythms.

In one study, Sassone-Corsi and colleagues found that the biological clock controls enzymes localized in the mitochondrion, a cellular structure devoted to energy metabolism. This government occurs through acetylation of proteins, a process that operates as a switch to turn genes on and off in cells based upon the cells' energy usage.

Some of the most important acetylation events in cells are dictated by an enzyme protein called SIRT1, which senses energy levels in the cell. Its activity is modulated by how many nutrients a cell is consuming. It also helps cells resist oxidative and radiation-induced stress. SIRT1 has been linked to the inflammatory response, diabetes and aging.

Sassone-Corsi first showed the circadian rhythm-metabolism link in 2008 and 2009, and in this study, he and his colleagues reveal the metabolic pathways through which SIRT1 works.

"When the balance between clock proteins is upset, normal cellular function can be disrupted," said Sassone-Corsi, who also directs the Center for Epigenetics & Metabolism at UC Irvine.

In exploring how to regulate SIRT1 activity, Sassone-Corsi teamed with scientists from two research-and-development groups at GlaxoSmithKline -- one in the United Kingdom and the other (called Sirtris) in the U.S. -- to test proprietary small-molecule compounds that stimulate SIRT1.

In mouse studies, they were able to modulate the scale of circadian-driven gene function with the SIRT1-activating compounds, effectively governing the circadian cycle in a host of genes involved with the metabolic rate in cells. This research proves that small molecules can be used as a pharmacological strategy to control circadian disturbances and is a step toward the development of drugs that could target many conditions, including metabolic disorders, diabetes, cancer and aging.

Postdoctoral researchers Selma Masri and Kristin Eckel-Mahan, graduate student Vishal Patel and Chancellor's Professor Pierre Baldi of UC Irvine, along with Shahaf Peleg, Ignasi Forne, Andreas Ladurner and Axel Imhof of Germany's University of Munich, as well as Sassone-Corsi, contributed to the study. The National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, INSERM and Sirtris provided support.

In addition to Sassone-Corsi, postdoctoral researcher Marina Bellet and laboratory assistant Marlene Cervantes of UC Irvine; Mohamed Boudjelal, Emma Watts, Danuta Mossakowska and Kenneth Edwards of GlaxoSmithKline; Giuseppe Astarita of Georgetown University; and Christine Loh, James Ellis and George Vlasuk of Sirtris contributed to the study titled "Pharmacological modulation of circadian rhythms by high-affinity SIRT1 activators." The National Institutes of Health and INSERM provided support.

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Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided by University of California - Irvine.

Note: Materials may be edited for content and length. For further information, please contact the source cited above.


Journal References:

  1. Selma Masri, Vishal R. Patel, Kristin L. Eckel-Mahan, Shahaf Peleg, Ignasi Forne, Andreas G. Ladurner, Pierre Baldi, Axel Imhof, and Paolo Sassone-Corsi. Circadian acetylome reveals regulation of mitochondrial metabolic pathways. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, January 22, 2013 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1217632110
  2. Marina M. Bellet, Yasukazu Nakahata, Mohamed Boudjelal, Emma Watts, Danuta E. Mossakowska, Kenneth A. Edwards, Marlene Cervantes, Giuseppe Astarita, Christine Loh, James L. Ellis, George P. Vlasuk, and Paolo Sassone-Corsi. Pharmacological modulation of circadian rhythms by synthetic activators of the deacetylase SIRT1. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, January 22, 2013 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1214266110

Note: If no author is given, the source is cited instead.

Disclaimer: This article is not intended to provide medical advice, diagnosis or treatment. Views expressed here do not necessarily reflect those of ScienceDaily or its staff.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_science/~3/eRF4P-dTyXs/130122162329.htm

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AirGuideOnline.com ? U.S. and Japanese aviation safety officials ...

U.S. and Japanese aviation safety officials investigating problems with Boeing?s 787 Dreamliner visited the headquarters of the plane?s battery maker on Monday Jan. 21, seeking clues into why one of the technologically advanced aircraft made an emergency landing last week.

A spokesman for GS Yuasa Corp, which makes batteries for the 787, said the company was fully cooperating with the investigation, and its engineers were working with the officials from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and Japan?s Civil Aviation Bureau (CAB) at the company?s compound in Kyoto, where it makes airplane batteries.

CAB official Tatsuyuki Shimazu told reporters the investigating team had been briefed by GS Yuasa and had toured the plant, looking at battery design, production and quality. The Japanese investigation at the plant will continue on Tuesday on a more detailed level, including tracking battery batch numbers and production dates, he said.

Authorities around the world last week grounded the new lightweight Dreamliner, and Boeing halted deliveries after a problem with a lithium-ion battery prompted an All Nippon Airways 787 into the emergency landing at Takamatsu airport during a domestic flight. Earlier this month, a similar battery caught fire in a Japan Airlines? 787 parked at Boston Logan International Airport.

Source: http://airguideonline.com/2013/01/21/u-s-and-japanese-aviation-safety-officials-are-investigating-problems-with-boeings-787-dreamliners-battery-maker/

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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Bank of England's King says time to review inflation targeting

BELFAST (Reuters) - The Bank of England's inflation-targeting remit needs to be fine-tuned but should not undergo fundamental change, central bank governor Mervyn King said in a wide-ranging speech on Tuesday.

King also said the central bank was ready to restart bond purchases or cut interest rates if needed to boost the economy, but that Britain needed more fundamental reforms if it was to exceed the "gentle recovery" which he expects for 2013.

King steps down in June, and his successor Mark Carney, who currently heads the Bank of Canada, has promoted long-term commitments to low rates - which are also in favour at the U.S. Federal Reserve - as well as discussing the merits of targeting the size of the economy in cash terms instead of inflation.

To date the Bank has been unenthusiastic about explicit interest rate commitments - arguing its existing policy framework is clearer than other central banks'.

And Chancellor George Osborne, who ultimately decides the bank's goals, said last month that while he welcomed debate, there would need to be a strong case for change.

However, in what is likely to be his last speech outside London, King told members of Belfast's business community that it was time for the Bank and the government to think again.

"Recent actions by central banks and governments in a number of industrialised countries have raised questions about the frameworks within which monetary policy is being conducted," he said.

"In the UK, the inflation target was introduced almost 21 years ago, and it has now come of age. It would be sensible to review the arrangements for setting monetary policy," he continued at the Confederation of British Industry event.

The changes King appears to have in mind are relatively small. In the speech, a text of which was provided by his office, King said Osborne may want to be more explicit about how fast the central bank is expected to return inflation to target.

Inflation has been above its 2 percent goal since December 2009, and King said he expected it to remain so for most of 2013. The central bank's forecasts do not see it firmly back at 2 percent until the second half of 2014.

This is in line with the bank's current interpretation of its mandate, under which it sets monetary policy to get inflation to 2 percent within 2-3 years.

King also referred to the Fed's decision to state levels which unemployment would probably need to fall to before it started to raise interest rates.

"Is there a gain from trying to quantify how the (bank's) Monetary Policy Committee should manage the trade-off between growth and inflation in the short run?," King asked.

"How much discretion to give to the MPC and how much should remain with the Chancellor is an interesting question that was raised, but not fully resolved, in 1997," he added, referring to the date when the Bank gained operational independence.

Earlier on Tuesday, former MPC member Adam Posen argued against both long-term policy commitments - saying markets did not take them very seriously - and targeting nominal GDP, saying it would lead to higher inflation than inflation-targeting.

NO POLICY PANACEA

In his comments about the more immediate outlook for British monetary policy, King left his options open, though his remarks are unlikely to change economists' expectations that the central bank will not add to its 375 billion pounds mervyn king

of asset purchases any time soon.

"We are ready to provide more stimulus if it is needed," King said, adding the bank would continue to assess whether to cut interest rates again - something it has resisted since March 2009 lest it hurt fragile banks or building societies.

Although inflation was likely to remain above target for most of 2013, the MPC could look past this while it was driven by semi-regulated prices like university tuition fees rather than market-generated price rises, King said.

Nonetheless, more asset purchases or rate cuts would not be enough to get Britain's economy back on track.

"Relying on generalised monetary stimulus alone ... is not a panacea," King said.

Britain's economy shrank around 6 percent in the 2008-09 financial crisis, and has recovered much more slowly than its peers. Growth in the last three months of 2012 was likely to have been "considerably weaker" than in the previous quarter, continuing a trend of zig-zagging growth rates, King said.

A more solid recovery required three things, King said, citing supply-side reforms, stronger euro zone growth and restructuring Britain's banks.

Some banks needed more capital and others - like state-controlled Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group - would benefit from selling non-core assets and a prompt return to private ownership, King said.

"With proper implementation, there is no reason why the two banks with significant state shareholdings could not largely be back in the private sector within a relatively short period," King said.

(Reporting by Padraic Halpin, writing by David Milliken; editing by Ron Askew)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/bank-englands-king-says-time-review-inflation-targeting-195013654--business.html

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High impact sales training that delivers a clear ROI | Growth ...

Individual to youIt can be a major chal?lenge to provide appro?pri?ate, cost effect?ive, indi?vidu?ally tailored learn?ing and devel?op?ment to a large and geo?graph?ic?ally spread sales force. To do so with min?imal impact on daily activ?ity and within spend?ing con?straints is almost impossible.? Identi?fy?ing who needs what train?ing and at what level is only the first step.? Man?aging the pro?cess using tra?di?tional sales train?ing solu?tions involves book?ing rooms, train?ers and hotels, jug?gling diar?ies and tak?ing the sales force off the road (or the phone).? Add to that the stat?istic that 87% of know?ledge impar?ted in tra?di?tional train?ing is lost in the fol?low?ing 30?days and the head?aches go on and?on.

An online Sales Academy does more than offer an altern?at?ive means of provid?ing the appro?pri?ate learn?ing to sup?port the strengths ori?ented approach out?lined above.? The Academy plat?form ensures each indi?vidual is engaged in the learn?ing pro?cess through a tailored blend of eLearn?ing and tra?di?tional classroom inter?ac?tions with bespoke industry and com?pany spe?cific con?tent along?side mod?ules accred?ited by the ISMM. Play?ing to the nat?ural com?pet?it?ive instinct in sales people, ?gami?fic?a?tion? has been embed?ded ; learners gain badges and awards, fea?ture on Leader Boards and share their suc?cesses via social media, at the same time as under?tak?ing chal?len?ging mod?ule assign?ments which are graded by inde?pend?ent assessors and can lead to inter?na?tion?ally recog?nised qualifications.

One com?pany using the Sales Academy has seen staff turnover fall from 52% to 23% in the first year, and halved its induc?tion learn?ing time, sav?ing an estim?ated ?2.5 mil?lion to the bot?tom?line.

The Academy allows new con?tent to be uploaded quickly so new product know?ledge or legis?la?tion can be dis?sem?in?ated eas?ily.? Man?agers have a com?pre?hens?ive suite of report?ing tools to hand so they can see who is using the Academy and util?ising the know?ledge and skills gained.

The secrets that these com?pan?ies intu?it?ively under?stand about engage?ment is key to their suc?cess. How?ever, what is also key is that they under?stand that innov?a?tion must be at the heart of everything they do. In adopt?ing and deploy?ing innov?at?ive new solu?tions to old and inef?fect?ive meth?ods to the chal?lenge of enga?ging sales people to drive more rev?enue, these com?pan?ies? are find?ing sur?pris?ing rewards .

The impact of these solu?tions on the bot?tom line is that they sig?ni?fic?antly reduce the dia?gnostic, design and deploy?ment phase of any sales effect?ive?ness pro?ject. Cli?ents are report?ing shortened pro?ject times?cales of up to 75% com?pared to tra?di?tional meth?ods of identi?fy?ing devel?op?ment needs and address?ing them.? In addi?tion they are cut?ting induc?tion train?ing pro?gramme times, and increas?ing reten?tion rates . In deliv?er?ing these cost sav?ings the impact of the time sav?ing is not just cost, but by bring?ing for?ward deploy?ment, the oppor?tun?ity to engage with cli?ents more effect?ively also brings for?ward rev?enue streams and achieves sub?stan?tial improve?ments in the pay?back time frame for a pro?ject in most cases these are being achieved within a?year.

Whilst it is unusual for a pro?ject to deliver both sig?ni?fic?ant cost sav?ings as well as increas?ing rev?enue streams both of which are highly sort after in today?s mar?ket. The icing on the cake for most CEOs is the build?ing of intel?lec?tual cap?ital through the Academy which bene?fits both the effect?ive?ness of the busi?ness and its per?ceived value.

Source: http://www.growthengineering.co.uk/high-impact-sales-training-that-delivers-a-clear-roi/

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Diet & Exercise & Fitness Training

Just a quick poll, how many people here focus on healthy diet and exercise? This question applies to everyone whether you're a diabetic, an athlete, a gymnist, a martial artist or a body builder, a dancer, etc. State your name, your country of origin, your reason for focussing on diet and exercise, and any experience or advice you have that you'd like to share which might be beneficial to others.

I'll go first. My name is Wesley, my country is USA, and I practice a variety of different martial arts which requires me to stay in good shape. I've found that eating health foods like milk, yogurt, soy beans, alfalfa seeds, fish, eggs, fruits and veggies, nuts oatmeal and honey, wheat bread and things like that can be beneficial to your training. I also find it's good to stretch and lift weights to condition your body before any strenuous exercise like kicking or sparring. Anyone else?

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/RolePlayGateway/~3/pgXqOzDc3wc/viewtopic.php

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