After slipping into the negative terrain, the 30-share index Sensex soon came back into the positive.
India`s benchmark wholesale price index (WPI), inflation surged marginally for the second consecutive week because of growing prices of food items, jet fuel and alcohol.
It stood at 5.64% for the week ended Jan. 17, 2009, up 4 basis points as compared to 5.60% a week ago.
The Sensex continued to trade in a lusterless way amid volatility. Selling action was witnessed in power, oil & gas and consumer durables stocks.
As per some of the popular tech blogs, Google, world’s most popular and widely used advertising system, would soon come up with 'GDrive', an online storage for its users.
If launched, the Google’s GDrive would store all the data of your PC on the internet. If instructed, G-drive would keep syncing all the data of the web and your PC on a periodical basis. Not only this, the new service from Google would make it possible to access and update information like emails, photographs, music, documents and spreadsheets from any device with an internet connection.
The King Khan aka the Bollywood legend Shah Rukh Khan is all set to add another feather to his cap. In collaboration with the popular Hindi general entertainment channel, NDTV Imagine, Shah Rukh Khan's Red Chillies would launch a comedy show, Ghar Ki Baat Hai, every Friday to Sunday at 9:30 pm starting January 30.
With this, SRK Red Chillies has entered in the world of television.
Here’s something for those who are suffering from liver problems.
According to a new study of the American physician of Yale University, a daily dose of aspirin could prevent liver damage.
In his study, Dr. Wajahat Mehal (Associate professor, Dept of Immunobiology, Yale School of Medicine) advocates that aspirin could protect the body's largest internal organ from overdoses of another common painkiller, paracetamol (acetaminophen). An overdose of paracetamol harms the liver which causes acute liver failure.
Reporting their findings in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine, researchers at the University of Minnesota said that kidney donation doe not have any long-term effect on either the health or the longevity of life of the donor.