Wednesday, March 8, 2017

Display of Books and Magazines on International Women’s Day in Library from 6th March- 10th March 2017.

List of Books displayed on International Women’s Day in Library from 6th March- 10th March 2017
Books
Sr. No
Title
Author
Accession No.
1.
Puzzles to Puzzle You
Shakuntala Devi
18775
2.
Not Without My Daughter
Betty Mahmoody
12042
3.
The Diary of a Young Girl
Anne Frank
11405
4.
The Help
Kathryn Stockett
19132
5.
Chicken Soup for the Women’s Soul
Jack Canfield
1147
6.



7.
I Am Malala
Malala Yousafzi
22202
8.
Lisa’s Story: A Young Girls Life of Courage
Lisa Pugh and Virginia Pugh
2205
9.
Aispais Gappa: Durgabainshi
Pratibha Ranade
11990
11.
Striyansathi Sulabh Yogasane
Yogendra Sitadevi
12938
12.
Women Entrepreneurs: Inspiring Stories of Success
Avinash Kripal
24274
13.
Women Writing in India: 600 B.C to the present
Susie Tharu
18800
14.
How I taught my Grandmother to Read and other stories
Sudha Murthy
15161
15.
Dollar Bahu
Sudha Murthy
11932
16.
Mother  Teresa : A Simple Path
Lucinda Vardey
8177
17.
Mother Teresa: In own words
J.L.G. Balado
3023
18.
It’s Always Possible : Transforming one of the Largest Prisons in the World
Kiran Bedi
12050
19.
Savitribai Phule: Astapailu Vyaktimatva
Prof. N.G.Pawar
24662
20.
I Dare: Kiran Bedi A Biography
Parmesh Dangwal
12049




Magazines
Sr. No.
Magazine Name
Month & Issue No.
Accession No.
1
Fortune:
The 50 Most Powerful Women in Business
November 2016, Vol.7, Issue 2.
P10959
2.
Business India :
Shikha Sharma, MD and CEO of Axis Bank
Sep 26-Oct 9, 2016
P10886
3.
Forbes India:
Kshama Fernandes, MD and CEO of IFMR Capital (How Chennai Based NBFC IFMR Capital is bringing High Finance to Small Businesses

September 2016, Vol.8, Issue 19

P10848
4.
Business Today:
The Most Powerful Women in Business
Oct 2016, Vol.25, Issue 20.
P10898
5.
The Week:
No Bench For Women
Nov 13 2016, Vol.34, Issue 46.

6.
The Week:
Year of the Indian Women
Dec 25, 2016

7
India Today Woman:
Twinkle Khanna: Funny Girl
December 2016

8
India Today Woman:
Taapsee Pannu: Breaking the Mould
November 2016

9

India Today Woman:
Kangana Ranaut: This is Me Deal. Deal with it.
      
October 2016   

10
India Today Woman:
Neeta and Nishika Uncut: Fashion Family and Frienship
September 2016

11
India Today Woman:
Richa Unplugged: The actor on making her own choices, fitting in and finding her style
August 2016

12
India Today Woman:
Huma Qureshi: Huma on Being Huma
July 2016

13
India Today Woman:
Swara Bhaskar: Nine things no woman should forget
June 2016

14
India Today Woman:
Suchi Mukherjee, Founder and CEO OF Limeroad: The Effective Entrepreneur
April 2016

15
India Today Woman:
Kareena Kapoor: She means Business
March 2016

16
India Today Woman:
Nandana Dev Sen: Sen’s Sensibility
February 2016

17
India Today Woman:
Radhika Apte: Rising Star
January 2016

18
India Today Woman:
Sania Nehwal: At the top of her game
December 2015

19
India Today Woman:
Sonali Bendre Behl: Labour of Love
November 2015

20
                 India Today Woman:
Bipasha Basu, Sussanne Khan and Malaika Arora Khan: The Show Stoppers
October 2015



                                                                                

Friday, March 3, 2017

Active Users for the Month of February 2017

Every month we select users who have made maximum use of the library. Below are our active users for the month of February 2017. The below users are entitled for 1 extra book.

Sr. No. Member No's.
1 TEJASWARARAO MOTAMARRI 13
2 SARVESH NARKAR 12
3 SAWANT SHIVANI SANDEEP SUMEDHA 12
4 SHAILIN SHAH 11
5 ASHOK MORE 11
6 ANTIYA AMISHA ISHWARBHAI GEETABEN 10
7 ADINATH BAJPAI 9
8 MASCARENHAS RACHEL NOEL JACINTA 9
9 VINIT NEOGI 9
10 RAVINA DESAI 9
11 PATIL ANKUSH LAXMAN ANJANA 9
12 JOSHI SHUBHAM PRAMOD VINITA 9
13 NIRAJ YADAV 9
14 BHATNAGAR RISHABH SUSHIL RITU BHATNAGAR 9

Friday, February 17, 2017

Learn Marathi language free of cost as 31-year-old Dombivli resident launches unique online course

Soon, take engg entrance tests several times a year

Soon, take engg entrance tests several times a year

NEW DELHI: Students aspiring to study at the country’s top engineering colleges are likely to get multiple opportunities in a single year to crack the tough entrance exam.
The move will significantly shrink an aspirant’s waiting time for the next test in case of failure to clear the first attempt at the Joint Entrance Examination (JEE) Main — conducted for admission to NITs, IITs and other centrally funded institutions.

For instance, if back-toback exams are conducted in December, February and April, a candidate will be allowed to write all of them, or she can opt for one or two. The best marks from any of the three tests will account for the student’s all-India ranking, which decides her eligibility for admission.

The National Testing Service (NTS), a new overarching agency that the government announced in its annual budget this February to conduct all entrance exams for higher education institutions, might hold the JEE Main fully online from the next academic session.

 The format will allow the NTS to hold the engineering test at least thrice a year, sources said. That way a student would not have to spend a full year studying for the test again.
At present, a student has the option of writing the JEE Main online or offline, but the exam is conducted just once a year. But only 125,000 of the almost 1 million students opt to take the test online.
“To ensure greater transparency and avoid instances of paper leak, the ministry is planning to conduct examinations through NTS on an online mode,” said a senior official in the human resource development ministry.

Sources said the NTS is likely to conduct all entrance examinations — including JEE, CAT, and UGC-NET — online from 2018.

Education experts welcomed the move, underscoring that several global screening tests such as the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) and TOEFL are conducted up to seven times a year.
“This will ensure that a candidate is able to give his/her best if there are specific testing windows,” said Soumitra Roy of Prometric India, a global agency that had conducted tests such as CAT for premier business schools.

“This must be done provided there is adequate physical and technical infrastructure in a country like India with different demographics.”

To ensure students from rural areas don’t face obstacles in taking the online exam, NTS will help prepare them with through round-the-clock call centre support.

“NTS will establish an online testing mechanism which will be able to conduct online tests for at least 1 million students at a time with suitable systems for proctoring, instant display of marks and preparation of the merit list,” an official said.

The online system will ensure better safety mechanisms, according to Bipin Batra, executive director of the National Board of Examinations (NBE), which conducts entrance tests such as NEET PG and NEET Super Specialty for medical students.

Source: Hindustan Times, 17th February, 2017
Link: http://paper.hindustantimes.com/epaper/viewer.aspx


Thursday, February 16, 2017

LIRC Offering Scholar's Card and Merit Card Facility


Please Note…….

LEARNING & INFORMATION RESOURCE CENTRE   are offering –“Scholar’s Card” facility to first three toppersand theMerit Card“ facility to those students who have a GPA of =>8.6of respective branches every semester as a token of appreciation of their efforts.
The Privileges of book loan are as follows:
Topper
Privilege
Loan Period
1st Topper
3 extra library cards(Total 5 cards)
1 Week
2nd Topper
2 extra library cards(Total 4 cards)
1 Week
3rd Topper
1 extra library cards(Total 3 cards)
1 Week
GPA of =>8.6
1 extra library cards(Total 3 cards)
1 Week

Rules (for over-dues, reference and book care) remain the same for the above.
These cards will not be valid after the end of the particular semester.



Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Programme in IT Training by IIT-B

PROGRAMME IN IT TRAINING BY IIT-B

The Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay’s (IIT-B’s) Spoken Tutorial Project has started an IT training programme in collaboration with VG Vaze Arts and Science College in Mulund and spatial technologies company, Cybertech Systems and Software Ltd. The programme will be held at laboratory of Vaze College.
The one-year programme aims to provide IT training to IT and non-IT students across the country.
Using Spoken Tutorials, which are essentially a collection of ten-minute long audio-video tutorials, students will be trained in programming languages, office tools and graphic and circuit design tools, in a simple and interesting manner.
To sign up for the programme and know more, visit www.geocivic.in.

Source: Hindustan Times dated 8th February, 2017

Link: http://paper.hindustantimes.com/epaper/viewer.aspx

Tuesday, February 7, 2017

List of Active Users for the Month January 2017


Every month we select users who have made maximum use of the library. Below are our active users for the month of January. The below users are entitled for 1 extra book.
Sr. No.

Member No. of Transactions
1 CHOUDHARY SANTOSH RAMJANAM SARSWATI 13
2 KHAN ARBAZ SALEEM YASMEEN 13
3 CHAUHAN AMAN KISHAN MAYA 12
4 NIRAJ YADAV 12
5 AISHWARYA NAMBIAR 12
6 TEJASWARARAO MOTAMARRI 11
7 SAYALI JAWRE 11
8 ASST.PROF.RAMJEE YADAV 11
9 MISHRA NILESH MARKANDAY DHARMAVATI 11
10 SAWANT SHIVANI SANDEEP SUMEDHA 10
11 SINGH SATYAM RAJNARAYAN MAYA 10
12 SHAILIN SHAH 10
13 ASST.PROF.PRIYANCA GONSALVES 10
14 SONALI PARAB 9
15 KULKARNI OMKAR SANTOSH RAJASHREE 9
16 SARVESH NARKAR 9
17 HRISHIKESH MAHESH TELANG 9

MU to evaluate answer books online from next exams



Source: The Indian Express dated January 29, 2017

http://epaper.indianexpress.com/c/16667145

Friday, December 23, 2016

Govt plans single entrance exam for all engineering colleges from 2018

The government is considering conducting a single entrance examination for admission to all engineering colleges, including private institutions, across the country.
The proposed joint entrance examination (JEE) for engineering colleges, which is said to be human resource development (HRD) minister Prakash Javadekar brainchild, could kick in from 2018.
The test, pending clearance, will be on the lines of the national eligibility-cum-entrance exam (NEET) for entry into medical colleges, sources in the HRD ministry said.
It is aimed at bringing transparency to the admission procedure, including checking the practice in some private institutions of extracting a heavy capitation fee from students.
“The aim is to make the process more transparent, standardised, and free of corruption and commercialisation,” a government official said.
India has more than 3,300 approved engineering colleges affiliated to universities, with an annual approved intake of above 1.6 million students. But only about half of the seats are filled.
The current admission process at the graduation level is dependent on performance in entrance examinations conducted by various agencies.
The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) conducts the JEE-Main for centre-funded institutions. More than 1.3 million students write this examination every year.
The top-rankers from JEE-Main are eligible to write the JEE-Advanced for the prestigious Indian Institutes of Technology (IIT). In the new system, students aspiring for the IITs will have to pass the nationwide common entrance test with high marks and take the JEE-Advanced.
These apart, a number of states conduct their own test. Others grant admission based on marks obtained in class 12.
Several private colleges have their individual entrance examinations. But “some of them, which are self-financed, charge high fees or sell seats in the name of management or NRI quota at a premium”, a source said.
Only a handful of students crack the tough exams set for top colleges such as the IITs, leaving thousands of aspiring engineers to dash for private institutions, many of which are notorious teaching shops.
These colleges have become a magnet for mostly middle-class families in a country where an engineering degree is considered a ticket to a lifetime of fat pay cheques or jobs in the US.
Some of the private colleges admit students without basic talent and aptitude for engineering, affecting overall quality, the source said.
Of the 737,000 graduates in 2014-15, only half found employment. Most of the students didn’t meet expectations of companies offering jobs.
The proposal for a single, nationwide test is viewed as an attempt to streamline the dysfunctional education system. It was discussed at a recent meeting of officials from the HRD ministry and the All-India Council for Technical Education (AICTE), the regulator for engineering colleges.
The council will issue regulations for the examination. Issues such as the number of times the examination would be conducted in a year and the minimum qualification marks are yet to be worked out.
A source said the AICTE is planning to conduct web-based counselling sessions for admissions to engineering colleges based on students’ all-India ranking obtained in the entrance examination.
“States would be invited to join the counselling process to fill the seats in colleges under their jurisdiction,” the source said.
The states will be able to prescribe their admission criteria, apart from the score in the entrance test. The JEE score will, however, be the minimum eligibility criteria, the source said.
 Source: Hindustan Times dated 23 December, 2016.
Link: 

Thursday, December 22, 2016

The new frontiers of Virtual Reality

The new frontiers of virtual reality

Virtual reality can change the way individuals and groups interact, and for those interested in experiencing and sharing its powerful benefits

Virtual reality opens the avenues to experience places and time periods otherwise inaccessible to an individual.
Virtual reality (VR) has entered its golden age and now has the potential to help people experience episodes and incidences, across time periods, from a uniquely first-person perspective. While VR continues to make its mark on entertainment, it has immense potential to allow people to experience something ground-breaking. It equips people to experience being in two realities at once, making ‘duality of presence’—being present in two ‘worlds’ at once—a possibility. This extrapolation of VR into reality has an extraordinary potential to create greater empathy, understanding, compassion, and connection to the ‘real world’.
Virtual reality has the capability to make one feel, and the power to make one ‘know’. By immersing in a ‘real’ experience, VR provides a perspective from prime sources and acts as a representation of the real world. It has the potential to positively impact sectors such as healthcare, media and bring immersive experiences to life.
Immersive healing
High-resolution imaging and detection technologies help enable precise, swift, and timely diagnosis, can limit the number of invasive procedures, and support preventive care. As an example, VR is currently being used to help patients suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Utilizing Bravemind, a clinical, interactive, virtual reality-based exposure therapy tool, an immersive and realistic virtual environment as well as unique interactive scenarios can be recreated. These enable a full-body experience to help normalize the patients’ experiences, thus fast-forwarding the therapy in some cases by as much as two to three years.
Immersive discoveries
VR opens the avenues to experience places and time periods otherwise inaccessible to an individual. This feeds into man’s desire for continuous discovery of the earth, ocean and even the stars. One such example of this is the creation of Cry Out: The Lonely Whale Experience, an underwater VR expedition. It takes the viewer into the depths of the sea where they can witness the underwater life and how pollution has disrupted and injured the delicate ecosystems that create our oceans. This experience educates individuals about the implication of a mere ordinary act on climate change.
Immersive action
VR has also made an impact on journalism, bringing stories closer to life for viewers. With video content fast becoming one of the most popular modes of consumption, many media houses are significantly investing in platforms which enable a video-first content approach. With a firm foundation of traditional journalism, experiences are designed which offer viewers a fully embodied walk-around technology. This offers a virtual but “first-hand” sensation of being an actual witness as a story unfolds.
Many media houses internationally have already ventured into virtual journalism and have produced numerous VR documentaries. With the rapid technological advancements in India, VR stands at the cusp of altering storytelling forever. Indian documentaries such as Cost of Coal (India’s first documentary in VR) and Displaced, planned for release in 2016, are indicative of the potential in the technology.
What’s next?
VR can fundamentally change the way individuals, groups and organizations interact, and for those interested in experiencing and sharing its powerful benefits, it offers an exceptional opportunity, perhaps unlike any other medium. To realise the full potential of VR, pioneering VR headsets and VR-capable hardware and software are required. This is only possible through the partnerships and vision of companies and organizations that bring the most cutting-edge technology to this virtual table. And that’s the reality.
Roy Taylor is corporate vice president of alliances, Advanced Micro Devices Inc.
 

MS MARCO teaches AI to answer questions like humans


Source: Daily News & Analysis dated December 19, 2016

Microsoft releases MS MARCO dataset to train AI systems

Microsoft releases MS MARCO dataset to train AI systems

ranganmajumder
Microsoft Corp. has made yet another big bet in its quest to help lead the development of artificial intelligence with the release of a new dataset containing 100,000 questions and answers.
Called MS MARCO, or Microsoft Machine Reading Comprehension, the dataset is being made available for researchers wishing to train their AI systems. The company says the anonymized data is based on real-world queries typed into its Bing search engine, and that the aim is to make AIs better able to understand questions in a conversational context than they are now.
Microsoft explains that while virtual assistants like Cortana and Siri are already quite adept at reciting facts and figures like the population of certain cities or previous World Series winners, they’re not quite so comfortable with more complex or ambiguous questions. For example, if someone asks Siri what’s the current state of the war in Syria, most virtual assistants will simply provide search engine results that the user then has to comb through to find the answer.
That simply isn’t good enough for Microsoft, which believes its dataset can be used by virtual assistants to provide more definitive answers to such questions. The idea is that instead of simply providing a page of search query results, AIs might be able to analyze those results themselves and come up with an actual answer to the question.
“In order to move toward artificial general intelligence, we need to take a step toward being able to read a document and understand it as well as a person,” said Rangan Majumder (above), a partner group program manager with Microsoft’s Bing search engine division who is leading the effort. “This is a step in that direction.”
Microsoft said the MS MARCO dataset contains questions that its researchers found “interesting.” The answers were based on existing web pages and verified to be accurate by real humans, so as to try and teach AIs to do the same thing themselves. Microsoft said the dataset is available for researchers for free.
The release of MS MARCO came at the end of a busy week on the AI front for Microsoft. Last Monday, the company made headlines with the announcement of a new fund for AI startups, which has already taken a startup called Element AI under its wing. Element AI, is based in Montreal, is working to build commercial-grade AI systems and support the work of local startups trying to apply neural networks in new fields.
Also last week, Microsoft announced a preview of the Cortana Skills Kit and Devices SDK, which are designed for manufacturers that want to integrate Cortana into various smart hardware devices, from cars to home appliances.
With the Cortana Devices SDK, Microsoft is hoping to take on Amazon.com, Inc.’s Alexa-powered Dot and Echo devices, and also Google Inc’s smart home speaker Google Home. To do so, Microsoft is collaborating with Harman Kardon, a brand under Harman International Industries Inc., to create an Amazon Echo-like device that’s integrated with Cortana’s AI capabilities.

Source: http://siliconangle.com/blog/2016/12/18/microsoft-releases-ms-marco-dataset-train-ai-systems/

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