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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Spy Cell Phones: Are These Real?

Gone are the days for hiring a detective and wiretapping on landline phones. Now, there is a simple yet effective way of spying on someone. Install spy software in your cell phone, and you got a spy device that keeps track on other cell phones unnoticed. But are these spy cell phones real? Is it worth paying for?
Spy softwares are competing on the market, and they offer spying features for your cell phone. Some offers a low key spying, which is checking other cell phone’s SMS inbox without detection and detecting their current location. Others offer a third party call; which you could hear actual phone conversations on other cell phones without them detecting yours. And you can also record close range conversations by placing your cell phone near other people. And it is costs less than wiretapping your phones or getting an expert detective.
Sure, it is really useful. You can safeguard your kids by checking on them every once in a while. You can hear calls on your spouse’s cell phone if you doubt him or her. And you can look at your employees if they are texting or calling in office hours.
But also know when to stop. If you have been checking other cell phones every now and then, stop. Wiretapping or invading their cell phones unnoticed may direct you in jail for years. It is a serious offense, and if others know what you are doing it can also ruin your relationship with them. Your may hurt your spouse’s feelings but not having faith with him or her. Your employees will see you as a bad boss and may consider resigning.
If anyone could just purchase this type of software; imagine what stalkers, thieves and kidnappers can do with this technology. Stalkers could easily hunt their victims. Thieves could have vital information about the owner’s house. And kidnappers could get somebody on a dark lone road. Look at these ill effects of this technology.
If you really love your family and friends and respect other people, you won’t do a thing that could ruin them. So, if you want one spy cell phones, think first before you use it.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

India's who became best CEO's Why cant U?


NARAYAN MURTHY
As a boy, Nagavara Ramarao Narayana Murthy was someone who could easily go unnoticed in a crowd. He was short, but sharp. Often, his seniors in school came to him for solving Science problems.
Murthy came from a lower middle class, Brahmin family from Mysore. His father, a school teacher, was fond of English literature. And like all the boys of his class, he too had dreams of going to IIT. So he worked hard, studied in the shade of boulders close to Chamundi hills, and helped many in his class to prepare for the entrance exam.
Murthy wasn’t surprised when he got through. When he broke the news of his success to his father, it is said his words were: ‘Anna, I have passed the exam…I want to join IIT.” Proud he was of his son’s achievement but he couldn’t afford the fees and so Murthy had to relinquish his IIT dreams. Murthy stayed back in Mysore. When asked about his decision to stay back, he said to his friends, "It is not the institution but you alone who can change your life with hard work".
He lived up to his own words. Several years afterwards, Narayana Murthy revolutionised India’s software industry by founding Infosys. And this has made him the icon of middle class dreams. He redefined India in the eyes world. India was no longer a third world country, but a fast developing nation. In the process, he promoted thousands of young, creative Indian minds to the world and made Infosys and India a hub of talent.
It is known to the world that he founded Infosys along with six others with just a few thousand rupees which his wife, Sudha Murthy gave. It was an incredible risk to take, but Murthy knew it was going to work, just as he knew he would get through IIT. Which he did, eventually. After Murthy graduated from the National Institute of Engineering, Mysore, he joined IIT, Kanpur.
Thanks to IT and its development, the little known romance of Murthy and Sudha Kulkarni is talked about everywhere. It is hard to believe reading from Sudha’s account of an introvert, quiet Murthy, that he is the same person to have revolutionised the IT industry.
When Murthy was asked by Sudha’s father about his ambitions, he said he wanted to become a politician in the communist party and wanted to open an orphanage.
While he has opened several orphanages since, his dream of becoming a politician still remains unfulfilled. After retiring from Infosys, Murthy was hoping to become President of India after the term of Dr. Abdul Kalam. Even though he denied having political ambitions, his supporters would like to see him on the throne.
Our Mysore Murthy is, no doubt, a visionary who has ignited millions of young minds.
Education
B E (1967)
MTech (1969)
Honours and Awards
Padma Vibushan- 2008
Officer of the Legion of Honor- 2008
World Entrepreneur of the Year- 2003
Business India’s “Businessman of the Year- 1999
JRD Tata Corporate Leadership Award- 1996-97
INDRA NOOYI
Chairman & CEO, PepsiCo
Chairman of PepsiCo's Board of Directors, Indra is the highest-ranking Indian-born woman in corporate America, and she attributes much of her success to her upbringing in India. "Being a woman and being foreign-born, you've got to be smarter than anyone else," says Nooyi, who often dons a sari at PepsiCo events.
Education
She completed schooling at Holy Angels AIHSS, Chennai, has a BSc (Chemistry) from Madras Christian College in 1974 and a PGDM from IIM Calcutta. In 1978, Nooyi earned a Master's degree in Public and Private Management from Yale School of Management. At Yale, she worked as a receptionist from midnight to 5 a.m. to earn some money.
Career graph
Starting her career in India, Nooyi held different positions at Johnson & Johnson and textile firm Mettur Beardsell. In the US, Nooyi worked with BCG, Motorola and ABB. Nooyi joined PepsiCo in 1994, and became chairperson in 2007.
Childhood memories
As a child, Indra’s grandfather insisted on academic excellence from his grandchildren. According to Indra, when she did not figure in the top three ranks in class, she preferred to throw herself under a bus than face her grandfather.
Awards
2007, Padma Bhushan
2008 Elected as Fellow, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
ARUN SARIN
Former CEO, Vodafone
Born on October 21, 1954 at Panchmari, Madhya Pradesh, Sarin was an academically bright student. He was equally good at sports like field hockey, boxing and various extracurricular activities. He wanted to follow his father's footsteps into the military by pursuing a career as a pilot, but when his mom protested, he applied and was accepted at IIT, Kharagpur.
He graduated from the IIT in 1975 with a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering in the top 10 percent of his class and received the BC Roy gold medal for academic excellence. He received a full scholarship to the University of California, Berkeley, Graduate College of Engineering.
In the year 2003, Sarin became the Chief Executive Officer of Vodafone. When he resigned in 2008 from his post Vodafone was the world's largest mobile phone company by revenue. It was the firm’s large market presence in India that catapulted Sarin into the limelight. Currently he serves on the boards of Cisco and Safeway, Inc.
Academics
BTech (IIT)
MBA (Haas UC,Berkeley)
Awards
University of California at Berkeley, Haas School Business Leader of Year- 2002
University of California Trust (UK) Award- 2003
Born in Nagpur, Pandit was the Citigroup’s youngest CEO when he took over in 2007. The first Indian to achieve this feat, the job was touted as the toughest in the world due to the company’s poor performance.
A brilliant boy in school, he moved to US when he was 16. After finishing his Master’s in electrical engineering and MBA from Columbia University, he was determined to get a PhD in a different subject. In those days, students preferred to either study medicine or engineering. And that was the time when his guide advised him to take up finance, as it was a good field. He followed the advice, and switched to finance.
For a brief span, he taught at Indiana University Bloomington, Columbia’s Business School. He stepped into the corporate world in 1994, as a head of Morgan Stanley. His administrative and technical skills, plus an ability to make himself indispensable to bosses like John J. Mack and Phillip J. Purcell, fuelled his career at Morgan Stanley, where he became the president. He dealt with the Institutional Securities Division, Worldwide Institutional Equities Division. For him, this was an interesting area to work on
“To do well you have to put a lot of yourself into it.”
BS, Electrical Engineering, Columbia University (1976)
MS, Columbia University (1977)
MBA, Columbia Business School, Columbia University (1980)
PhD, Columbia Business School, Columbia University (1986)
SABEER BHATIA
Pioneer of web-based e-mail
Sabeer Bhatia has done the unconventional ever since he decided to study abroad at the age of 19; two years into undergraduate education at the Birla Institute of Technology and Science, he qualified for a transfer scholarship at Caltech, considered to be the world's most competitive scholarship. After graduating from Caltech in 1989, he pursued an MS in Electrical Engineering at Stanford University.
At the age of 27, Bhatia was no longer interested in working for others, and together with Smith, began chasing what many people in Silicon Valley deemed a “crazy idea” – a free e-mail service. They raised about $300,000 for their venture - Hotmail. Within a year, Hotmail had one million subscribers. So revolutionary was it that Microsoft bought it for $400 million after 18 months.
Did you know?
* He was rejected by 20 venture capitalists before Draper Fisher Juvetson bought his idea.
* The original spelling was HoTMaiL
Award
TR100 by the MIT, given to 100 young innovators who are expected to have the greatest impact on technology.
Qualifications
BTech, BITS Pilani
BSc(Honours) California Institute of Technology, US
MS Electrical Engineering (Stanford)