Sunday, November 29, 2009
Sir Ronald Ross (1857-1932)
Sir Ronald Ross was a British physician and bacteriologist, born in Almora , India . From 1881 to 1899 he served in the Indian medical service.
Ross is well-known for his work on malaria, a topical disease caused by a parasite plasmodium. He discovered this parasite inside the body of the female anopheles mosquito.
A bite from the infected anopheles mosquito can transfer the malarial parasite in to the blood of humans.
Ross was awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine or physiology in 1902.
Ross established an institute for studies on tropical diseases, of which he was the Directed till his death. This institute was later named after his.
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Bhuvan mapping
DOWN LOAD Bhuvan mapping
A review of ISRO Bhuvan Features and Performance
download bhuvan mapping.............. here
Here is a frank review of the features and performance of ISRO Bhuvan (the much anticipated satellite-based 3D mapping application from ISRO) BETA Release and comparing it to supposed arch rival Google Earth. Bhuvan from the begining is claiming that it is not competing with Google Earth in any way, but there was much hype and propaganda in the media saying that ISRO Bhuvan will be a Google Earth killer atleast in India. But it looks like that can nit be the case anytime soon. Here is why..
- While Google Earth works on a downloadable client, Bhuvan works within the browser (only supports Windows and IE 6 and above).
- The ISRO Bhuvan currently has serious performance issues. The site currently very unstable. It gives up or hangs the browser every once in a while. When a layer (state, district, taluk, etc.) is turned on, it renders unevenly and sometimes fails to render at all. The navigation panel failed to load routinely and it felt like a rare sighting when we could actually use the panel.
- The promise of high resolution images has not been kept. While the service promises zoom up to 10 metres from the ground level as against 200 metres for Google Earth, we didn’t encounter a single image with nearly as much detailing. In fact, comparative results for a marquee location such as New Delhi’s Connaught Place or Red Fort make its clear as to the inferior performance of ISRO Earth as of now.
- The navigation tools are similar to Google Earth (GE).
- The search doesn’t work if a query returns multiple results. A pop up window is supposed to give the multiple results from which the user is supposed to be able to choose. During two days of sporadic testing, we found the result only once. The rest of the time, the window would pop up, but nothing would be displayed. When the search is accurate, the software ‘flies in’ to the exact location, the same way as GE.
- Users need to create an account and download a plug-in.
- Bhuvan packs a lot of data on weather, waterbodies and population details of various administrative units. We were unable to access weather data. Clicking on icons of administrative units show basic information such as the population. For specialist users, Bhuvan might hold some attraction. For instance, there is a drought map which cab be used to compare drought situation across years and there is a flood map that shows Bihar during the Kosi flood and after. With Isro backing, Bhuvan would be able to provide such relevant data from time to time, but the application needs major improvements in terms of usability before it will be of interest to the ordinary user.
- Users can also not edit any data or tag locations.
- We hope Bhuvan is able to fix the bugs soon. But even then, to be a credible alternative to existing mapping services, and even to get new users to try it, it much provide much higher resolution images. User interest will be piqued only when they can see their house or school or local street in high resolution. With Isro data, this is easily doable.
Having said all this, ISRO Bhuvan is still a very good step forward for ISRO in the right direction we feel. We wish all the best for ISRO and hopefully Bhuvan will mature very fast to become a good service and can really compete with Google Earth.
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