Tuesday, May 25, 2010
Search for a British cat using an Indian psychic!
A British woman has sought the help of a psychic based in India to look for her cat that went missing seven months ago.
Sarita Gupta, who is based in Bangalore, has been told to conjure up an image of where the cat was likely to turn up, the Daily Mail reported Saturday.
Four-year-old Oliver went missing from his home in Boothby Graffoe in October last year.
Oliver's owner Sue Machen had asked pet detectives to look for the cat.
Animal Search UK conducted door-to-door enquiries, interviewed people and used mobile phones and two-way radios to co-ordinate one of Britain's most extensive missing cat hunt.
'I don't mind what it costs. The money isn't as important as getting him back. He's never been away for more than a couple of hours at a time but there's been absolutely no sign of him since the day he disappeared.
'I just feel he is being looked after somewhere or adopted by someone who doesn't realise he's not a stray. I can't accept that something awful has happened to him,' Machen said.
*********** Enjoy..Anil
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
A brave cat's journey back home!
A tabby cat Charles travelled 1300 miles from his Mexico home to Chicago in a mystery no one could solve! This shows how much cats take care of themselves and remain agile. And now, he is set to return home in a flight alongwith his owner Alex's neighbour named Sims who was coming back from Chicago attending a marriage. Sims arranged everything for the cat's flight like getting a company to donate a cat carrier and to waive off the cat's travel fee from American Airlines.
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Enjoy..Anil
Friday, April 16, 2010
Cat's brain inspires superfast bio-computer!
| A cat can recognise a face faster and more efficiently than a supercomputer. That’s one reason a feline brain is the model for a biologically-inspired superfast computer project. | |
Lu previously built a “memristor,” a device that replaces a traditional transistor and acts like a biological synapse, remembering past voltages it was subjected to. Now, he has demonstrated that this memristor can connect conventional circuits and support a process that is the basis for memory and learning in biological systems. “We are building a computer in the same way that nature builds a brain,” said Lu, an assistant professor in the U-M Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. “The idea is to use a completely different paradigm compared to conventional computers. The cat brain sets a realistic goal because it is much simpler than a human brain but still extremely difficult to replicate in complexity and efficiency,” he said. Today’s most sophisticated supercomputer can accomplish certain tasks with the brain functionality of a cat, but it’s a massive machine with more than 140,000 central processing units and a dedicated power supply. And it still performs 83 times slower than a cat’s brain, Lu wrote. In a conventional computer, logic and memory functions are located at different parts of the circuit and each computing unit is only connected to a handful of neighbours in the circuit. As a result, conventional computers execute code in a linear fashion, line by line, Lu said. They are excellent at performing relatively simple tasks with limited variables. But a brain can perform many operations simultaneously, or in parallel. That’s how we can recognise a face in an instant, but even a supercomputer would take much, much longer and consume much more energy in doing so. The next step is to build a larger system, Lu said. His goal is to achieve the sophistication of a supercomputer in a machine the size of a two-litre beverage container. That could be several years away. Lu said an electronic analog of a cat brain would be able to think intelligently at the cat level. For example, if the task were to find the shortest route from the front door to the sofa in a house full of furniture, and the computer knows only the shape of the sofa, a conventional machine could accomplish this. But if you moved the sofa, it wouldn’t realise the adjustment and find a new path. That’s what engineers hope the cat brain computer would be capable of, said a U-M release. | |
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Enjoy..Anil
Now, a software to catproof your computer!!
"PawSense" is a software[available for Windows 2000, XP, Vista, and 7] utility that helps protect your computer from cats. It quickly detects and blocks cat typing, and also helps train your cat to stay off the computer keyboard.
Every time your computer boots up, PawSense will automatically start up in the background to watch over your computer system.
Even while you use your other software, PawSense constantly monitors keyboard activity. PawSense analyzes keypress timings and combinations to distinguish cat typing from human typing. PawSense normally recognizes a cat on the keyboard within one or two pawsteps.
If a cat gets on the keyboard, PawSense makes a sound that annoys cats.
This teaches your cat that getting on the keyboard is bad even if humans aren't watching.
Once a cat has been recognized, PawSense blocks the cat's keyboard input. This keeps the cat from entering lots of commands to your programs or operating system.
If you carefully measure cat paws, you will find that practically all cat paws are significantly larger than a typical keyboard key. When a cat first places its paw down, the cat's weight plus the momentum of the cat's movement exerts pounds of force on the keyboard, primarily through the cat's paw pads. The cat's paw angles and toe positions also undergo complex changes while the paw lands on the keyboard. This forces keys and often key combinations down in a distinctive style of typing which includes unusual timing patterns. Cats' patterns of overall movement in walking or lying down also help make their typing more recognizable.
PawSense also includes a screensaver mode, which features extra-sensitive cat detection, protection, and sonic training and a one-click escape button.
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Enjoy..Anil
Wednesday, April 7, 2010
Save our Tigers..The BIG CATS..
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Best Regards,
Anil [http://anilreddy12001.blogspot.com]
Friday, February 19, 2010
Monday, May 4, 2009
Cat Parasite!!

Above, an Abyssinian cat participates in a beauty contest in Bucharest, Romania, on April 26, 2009.
The parasite, Toxoplasma gondii, has been transmitted indirectly from cats to roughly half the people on the planet, and it has been shown to affect human personalities in different ways.According to a report in abc news:
"Research has shown that women who are infected with the parasite tend to be warm, outgoing and attentive to others, while infected men tend to be less intelligent and probably a bit boring. But both men and women who are infected are more prone to feeling guilty and insecure.
Other researchers have linked the parasite to schizophrenia. In an adult, the symptoms are like a mild form of flu, but it can be much more serious in an infant or fetus. Oxford University researchers believe high levels of the parasite leads to hyperactivity and lower IQs in children.
Lafferty, who is a parasite ecologist with the U.S. Geological Survey at the University of California at Santa Barbara, is an expert on the role parasites play in the ecology of other animals.
Building on research by scientists in the Czech Republic, Lafferty took a long look at areas of the globe where infection levels are quite high, or quite low. In Brazil, for example, two out of three women of child-bearing age are infected, whereas in the United States the number is only one out of eight.
Lafferty argues in a research paper published Aug. 2 in the Proceedings of the Royal Society, Biology, that aggregate personality types, or what cultures tend to be like, fit neatly with the effects that the parasite produces in individuals."
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