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Telenor to Launch 4G Services

Telenor to Launch 4G Services in 6 Circles by Fiscal-End Telecom operator Telenor India, which positions itself as the most affordable network, expects to have 4G services ready in six circles by the end of this fiscal. "As we speak, we have already swapped 7,000 mobile sites. They are LTE ready. Based on this transformation we have started offering LTE in Varanasi. We expect entire network will be upgraded by end of this financial year,"  Telenor  India Chief Executive officer Sharad Mehrotra told PTI. The company has awarded Rs. 1,240 crore contract to Chinese telecom equipment firm  Huawei  for modernising all its 25,000 mobile base station in six telecom circles where it operates. Telenor provides mobile services in UP (West), UP (East), Bihar (including Jharkhand), Andhra Pradesh (including Telangana), Maharashtra and Gujarat. Together, these circles account for more than 50 percent of India's population. The company has permit for Assam but

Indian Premier League

Indian Premier League Please join with your Team and play .follow  these steps to join  Open this URL :  http://fantasy.iplt20.com/IPL/en/1/clienthome.do create Your Account  chose your Team and play with US Click on 'Mini Leagues' from the menu  choose Join Create MIni League and enter the Code 118108-22615 Date Match Venue Time (IST) 09/04/2016 Mumbai Indians  vs  Rising Pune Supergiants Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai 20:00 10/04/2016 Kolkata Knight Riders  vs  Delhi Daredevils Eden Gardens, Kolkata 20:00 11/04/2016 Kings XI Punjab  vs  Gujarat Lions Punjab Cricket Association Stadium, Mohali 20:00 12/04/2016 Royal Challengers Bangalore  vs Sunrisers Hyderabad .M. Chinnaswamy Stadium, Bengaluru 20:00 13/04/2016 Kolkata Knight Riders vs Mumbai Indians Eden Gardens, Kolkata 20:00 14/04/2016 Gujarat Lions vs Rising Pune Supergiants Saurashtra Cricket Association Stadium, Rajkot 20:00 15/04/2016 Delhi Daredevils vs Kings XI Punjab Ferozeshah Kotl

When it comes to wrangling data at scale, R, Python, Scala, and Java have you covered -- mostly

When it comes to wrangling data at scale, R, Python, Scala, and Java have you covered -- mostly You have a big data project. You understand the problem domain, you know what infrastructure to use, and maybe you've even decided on the framework you will use to process all that data, but one decision looms large: What language should I choose? (Or perhaps more pointed: What language should I force all my developers and data scientists to suffer?) It's a question that can be put off for only so long. [ Download the InfoWorld quick guide:  Learn to crunch big data with R . | Sign up for  InfoWorld's Big Data Report  to stay atop all the latest news and developments in the field. ] Sure, there's nothing stopping you from doing big data work with, say, XSLT transformations (a good April Fools' suggestion for tomorrow, simply to see the looks on everybody's faces). But in general, there are three languages of choice for big data these days -- R, Python, and Sca

Stack Overflow Survey 2016

Stack Overflow Survey 2016 — JavaScript Continues To Rule The Web In  Stack Overflow survey  for 2016, 56,033 coders took part from 173 countries. They were asked 45 questions that covered a wide range of topics. In this article, we’ll tell you about some interesting findings. In January 2016, more than 45 million opened Stack Overflow in their web browsers to ask a question or answer something asked by a fellow developer. Most respondents identify themselves as full-stack developers with a number as high as 28%, followed by back-end web developers with 12.2%. About 11.4% percent participants call themselves a student, followed by 8.4% developers who are indulged in Android, iOS, Windows Phone, and multi-platform development. If we move to the section where we’ll talk about the most used technologies, JavaScript continues to rule the web. It’s still the most popular programming language for web development with 55.4% people saying that they code in JavaScript. This hugely

This Facebook co-founder learned to code in 2 days

This Facebook co-founder learned to code in 2 days agine spending a few days to learn a new programming language which would later turn you into a billionaire. Back in 2005, when Facebook was a tiny startup with 50 people, CEO  Mark Zuckerberg  was invited to give a lecture at his old school Harvard. He was such a relative nobody at that time that hardly anybody showed up to hear him. But the lecture was posted a couple of years ago on YouTube and it's kind of fun to listen to it now, with 20/20 hindsight. In 2005, Facebook was making some waves in its world. It was a social network for college students that had spread to 2,000 schools and was generating around 400 million page views a day, Zuckerberg told the audience. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has one rule for hiring That was, he estimated, more page views than Google was doing back then. (Remember in 2005, Yahoo was still a big deal for searching the 'net and was considered one of the huge successful interne