Headlines

Is Merin Joseph Is the new ACP Of Kochi?

Posted by Unknown | Saturday, September 13, 2014 | Posted in , ,


Kochi: She is an Indian Police Service trainee and she is so beautiful! Everyone says that after seeing her picture. Why can’t IPS’ be attractive and beautiful?
Here's proof! Merin Joseph who ''took charge as the new ACP of Kochi '', is getting many compliments for her good looks and they say that they don’t mind getting arrested by her. After seeing the picture, many people also said that they could start thieving to get arrested by her!

People mistook her to be the newly appointed ACP but she later clarified that she is an IPS trainee. She posted, “An urgent clarification- i am NOT the new ACP of Kochi. Still under training in NPA Hyderabad. Will update when I get my first charge in January next year. Kindly refrain from believing baseless rumours floating in social media. Thanks."
After the picture was shared by a civic issues related Facebook page, the picture attracted 10,000 likes in one day and was shared and re-tweeted. With a chain of sharing, this also went viral on WhatsApp.

People are constantly commenting on the picture and expressing that she is a cute, sweet and a beautiful ACP. Some are actually sending best wishes to her and actually expressing respect while it seems many others can't digest this fact that the police officer can also be beautiful.

Babji Patnaik Vantaram, a senior citizen write: “Finally one of the few lady cops who looks humane.Congratulations little lady.God Bless you and more your parents for encouraging you.This country needs more and more ladies working in critical and crux positions.Step forward with a will to perform and courage to to say NO.I am a senior citizen and hope male egos do not come in the way of your marching ahead.Always look up and into the eye,”

Facebook to roll out 'I'm a Voter' feature worldwide

Posted by Unknown | Tuesday, May 20, 2014 | Posted in ,




When Americans voted to renew President Barack Obama's lease on the White House in November 2012, more than 9 million citizens took to Facebook to click the "I'm a Voter" button, showing their online friends that they had cast a ballot.

The social media site plans to offer versions of the feature around the world for a slate of national elections this year, the company said on Monday.

The feature was available for voters in India as the world's largest democracy chose a new prime minister, Narendra Modi, in voting over recent weeks. Over 4 million Indian voters used the "I'm a Voter" button during the country's parliamentary elections, Facebook said.

For Facebook, this is another effort to integrate its services into the everyday life of people around the globe as it seeks to increase its number of users, particularly in emerging markets.

The button will appear for voters in next week's European Parliament and Colombian elections, and for citizens in South Korea, Indonesia, Sweden, Scotland, New Zealand, and Brazil later this year. It will also appear again for Americans, during November's midterm congressional elections.

By clicking the button, users broadcast their status as a voter to their network of friends, but do not reveal how their vote was cast.

Previewing the feature's worldwide roll-out, Facebook said it estimates nearly 400 million people will see the message in their news feeds this year - more than one third of its roughly 1.1 billion active users.

A 2012 study in scientific journal Nature found that in the United States' 2010 midterm elections, 340,000 additional citizens voted after seeing that their friends had clicked the button to indicate they had cast a ballot.

That election heralded the rise of the conservative Tea Party movement for smaller government, as Republicans swept into office and claimed the US House of Representatives from Democrats.

"There is a real social multiplier effect," said Andy Stone, a spokesman in Facebook's Washington office. "When people see on Facebook that their friends have voted, they themselves are motivated to vote."

Facebook shares were at $59.28, up 2 percent, in late US trading.

Is your boss a Facebook friend?

Posted by Unknown | Sunday, May 18, 2014 | Posted in ,



Think twice before you waltz with the bosses on social media; it could lead to heartache

Sushil Kumar wanted to be a ‘textbook’ boss, someone whom employees loved, not merely respected. He was chummy with them on the factory floor and also on the online space. All friend requests were accepted and likes and lols littered his home page.

One evening, he ticked off an errant employee with whom he’d had a fun-filled tweet session earlier that day, over a task not completed. The employee was upset that his social media ‘friend’ treated him like a regular employee. On the other hand, Sushil (name changed) felt his authority as boss was being questioned.

This is an increasingly common scenario. People break basic rules of social media etiquette and get friendly with people they should not get overly familiar with. Office and personal spaces have merged and boundaries have blurred. This makes it difficult for anyone to function in a professional manner, say etiquette experts.

Subodh Sankar, who runs Atta Galatta book store and café in Bangalore, says being friendly with employees in the online space comes with its share of perks and quirks. He once approved a sick leave application only to find the employee concerned posting a photo performing a paal abhishekam for his matinee idol! He let that pass, but another employee whose wall was full of porn found himself without a job.

“I have a lot of blue collar workers in my store and these are people who are discovering social media on their phone. They come from semi-rural backgrounds and take great pride in the fact that they are ‘friends’ with their boss. They delight in sharing news about their workspace on Facebook and Twitter. But, they know that in the work space, the boundaries are clearly demarcated,” he says.

These lines get blurred more often in new-age companies where there is no defined boundary. Ganesh Chandrashekar, senior editor, Wordplay Content, says that as a start-up company, they believe in being well connected outside of work as well. “The entire organisation is well connected through social media (FB, Twitter, Instagram…),” he says. However, some employees (“a dying breed”) feel the need to draw lines, he adds. Ganesh says the system works well only when there is a two-way trust. “I don’t stalk my employees online when they call in ‘sick’,” he says.

Former techie and now film writer G. Sai Shyam is friends with his current and previous bosses on Facebook. The trick to have a great relationship on social media is to not get down and dirty and attack someone personally, he says. “In fact, my current boss found me on Twitter.”

A place where many people slip up is when they start post work-related angst on social media, little knowing the impact it will have on their current and future job prospects. Sai says it does not help cribbing about work on social media. “You might have the liberty to vent about a bad day at work. But, does cribbing on FB help the situation? It’s better to discuss it with the boss face-to-face,” he says.

Sometimes, when you are posted in an alien land, it helps to build bonds, online and offline, with colleagues and bosses, says software professional S. Dasarathi. “When I was posted in the U.S., my social circle was very limited. I was friends with my manager on social media, and it was great fun. It helps that I never use FB to criticise anyone or post anything to do with my profession. It’s just a light-hearted extension of my life.”

However smooth such a relationship may be, it is best to respect boundaries. There is little need to be friends online with bosses, says life coach, grooming and image consultant Chhaya Momaya.

“It is necessary for bosses to keep a distance. It is important to be warm, but very often, being friendly is disastrous,” she says.

Social graces

- Refrain from making comments about work

- A boss is a boss, even if he is a ‘friend’ online

- Nasty posts have a way of catching up with you

- Your posts are a reflection of you. Create the right impression

Facebook cracking down on fake 'likes' in poll season

Posted by Unknown | Wednesday, April 2, 2014 | Posted in




Kolkata: With politicians boosting their social media presence in the poll season using fake online followers, Facebook has started cracking down on fraudulent accounts showing suspicious high number of 'likes'. 


Data from the Facebook team show that close to 52,000 pages exist for politicians and political parties in India. Of them 60 are verified pages. 


"We're always focused on maintaining the integrity of our site, but we've placed an increased focus on abuse from fake accounts recently," a Facebook spokesperson said in an emailed response. 


The social networking site, which has around 93 million monthly active users in India alone, has built up a combination of automated and manual systems to block accounts used for fraudulent purposes and 'Likes'. 


Company officials say action is being taken against sellers of fake clicks and are helping to shut them down. 


With the growing power of social media, politicians across parties have taken to the digital medium to interact with the youth through Facebook and Twitter this election season. 


It is suspected that many 'Likes' and 'followers' on these platforms are from fake account holders. 


Among the pages for politicians on Facebook, BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi is a clear winner with a massive 1.2 crore 'Likes' followed by Arvind Kejriwal 48 lakh, Mamata Banerjee 670,000 and Akhikesh Yadav 475,000.

'#Aftersex selfies' latest trend on Instagram

Posted by Unknown | Saturday, March 29, 2014 | Posted in



In another weird trend of crazed selfies, users are reportedly posting pictures of themselves on Instagram right after having sex.
The active new trend on photo-sharing site Instagram, consisted of people taking selfies immediately after experiencing carnal joy, and posting them with the #aftersex.
According to Cnet, there have been almost 3,000 such pictures so far on the site, with people fully clothed and snuggled up to their lover after postcoital bliss.
There have been only a few pictures in a state of undress, which suggested that the #aftersex selfies were as symbolic as it were a mere documentation of life on social media, the report added.

Facebook to use satellites, drones to spread the Web worldwide

Posted by Unknown | | Posted in




Facebook Inc is harnessing satellite, drone and other technology as part of an ambitious and costly effort to beam Internet connectivity to people in underdeveloped parts of the world.

The world’s top social network said on Thursday it has hired aerospace and communications experts from NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab and its Ames Research Center for the new “Connectivity Lab” project. “Today, we’re sharing some details of the work Facebook’s Connectivity Lab is doing to build drones, satellites and lasers to deliver the internet to everyone,” Facebook chief executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on Facebook. He gave few specifics and did not specify a time frame.

The move extends the social networking company’s Internet.org effort, aimed at connecting billions of people who do not currently have Internet access in places such as Africa and Asia. Facebook has been working with telecommunications carriers to make Internet access more available and affordable. “We’re going to continue building these partnerships, but connecting the whole world will require inventing new technology too,” Zuckerberg said in his post.

Facebook envisions a fleet of solar-powered drones as well as low-earth orbit and geosynchronous satellites delivering Internet access to different regions of the world. Invisible, infrared laser beams could allow Facebook to dramatically boost the speed of the Internet connections provided by the various aircraft, Facebook said on a Web page that explaining the project.

Facebook's plans to take to the skies underscore the company’s rising ambitions to exert its influence beyond the confines of its 1.2 billion-member social network and to set the pace for new technology that will shape society.

Among the jobs openings posted on Facebook’s website on Thursday were roles such as Antenna Systems Engineer and Electro-Optical Network Access Hardware Engineer. Facebook also said it had hired a five-member team that worked at Ascenta, a British company whose founders created early versions of the Zephyr, which Facebook said held the record for the longest-flying solar-powered unmanned aircraft.

Durex study finds British couples are checking Facebook during sex

Posted by Unknown | | Posted in


London: Social media has entered bedrooms for sure and is now threatening love-making, with some couples checking Facebook during sex. According to a new survey by global condom maker Durex, some of the British couple are checking Facebook during sex.


The Durex study polled 2,000 British residents to understand if technology had an adverse effect on their sex lives. Nearly 30 percent of respondents reported that their partners had been distracted by their mobile devices during sex. About 60 percent said they spend more time playing with technology in bed than they do focusing on their partners, said the report published in The Daily Dot. Over five percent of them admitted using Facebook while having sex with their partner. The survey, however, did not go to the length to determine why is this happening. “The thought of two people having sex while they both check Facebook is an alarming trend,” the survey added.

After Lata Mangeshkar, Asha Parekh’s death rumours go viral on Twitter

Posted by Unknown | Friday, March 28, 2014 | Posted in



Hours after the sudden demise of veteran actress Nanda, Twitter was abuzz with news of legendary playback singer Lata Mangeshkar having suffered a heart attack. However, the Nightingale of India put rumours to rest via her official Twitter account.

And now a day after, there were reports of the death of veteran actresss and Nanda’s best friend Asha Parekh.

And this looked more real because of tweets by former cricketer Sanjay Manjrekar and senior journalist Rajdeep Sardesai.

But actress Adah Sharma of 1920 fame tweeted that the veteran actress was perfectly fine.



ashaparekhdead


Deepika Padukone now has 15 mn Facebook fans, chats live with them

Posted by Unknown | Thursday, March 27, 2014 | Posted in




Actress Deepika Padukone's fan following on Facebook has crossed 15 million, and as a mark of appreciation, she decided to give her fans an opportunity to chat with her live on Facebook on March 26.


Deepika, who gave four back to back hits including Yeh Jawaani Hai Deewani, Chennai Express andRam-leela last year, has always considered her fans to be the reason behind her success, and she makes it a point to express her gratitude in her own small ways, said a source. 

"This Facebook chat seems to be yet another token of appreciation to her fans all over the world - her way of acknowledging that her fans mean the world to her," the source added.