Ex-aluno invade universidade, atira em estudante e tenta se matar

Thursday, August 21, 2008
Posted by Marcos R Goto 0 comments

Não é mais uma das tantas manchetes do gênero que estamos acostumados a ver nos jornais norte-americanos. Desta vez foi no Brasil. Estaríamos assistindo a uma mudança no perfil criminológico em nosso país? http://www1.folha.uol.com.br/folha/cotidiano/ult95u436011.shtml

21/08/2008 - 00h28 Ex-aluno invade universidade, atira em estudante e tenta se matar em BH

MARCEL GUGONI da Folha Online

Um homem armado invadiu na noite desta quarta-feira (20) uma sala de aula da Faculdade de Letras, no Campus Pampulha da UFMG (Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais), em Belo Horizonte. Após atirar contra uma mulher, ele tentou se matar.

João Luciano Ferreira Júnior, 39, que é cadeirante, é ex-aluno da faculdade. Ao entrar na sala, por volta das 20h20, ele exigiu que todos os alunos saíssem e rendeu a estudante, cuja identidade não foi revelada.

Em depoimento à polícia, ela inicialmente teria se identificado como professora da instituição. A PM não informou se Júnior e a estudante mantinham alguma relação.

A mulher não ficou ferida, mas o homem acabou baleado na cabeça. Socorrido, ele foi levado para o Hospital Municipal Odilon Behrens ainda com vida. Segundo a assessoria do hospital, ele foi internado em estado gravíssimo e corre risco de morte.

A assessoria do hospital informou que ele respirava por aparelhos e já havia sido submetido a operações neurológicas, por volta das 23h30.

Em entrevista à Folha Online, a universidade declarou que lamenta a situação, mas que só fará um pronunciamento oficial nesta quinta.

O caso será investigado pela Polícia Civil.

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quinta-feira, 21 de agosto de 2008, 04:25 | Online

http://www.estadao.com.br/cidades/not_cid228089,0.htm

Após atirar contra professora, ex-aluno da UFMG tenta se matar

João Luciano tem 39 anos e está internado em estado grave; docente de 25 anos não ficou ferida

Ricardo Valota, do estadao.com.br, e Eduardo Kattah, de O Estado de S. Paulo

SÃO PAULO - Alunos da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais (UFMG) viveram momentos de pânico na noite de quarta-feira, 20, quando um ex-aluno invadiu armado uma das salas de aula do campus da Pampulha.

Paraplégico e em uma cadeira de rodas, João Luciano Ferreira Júnior, de 39 anos, entrou na sala, localizada no quarto andar da faculdade, e exigiu que todos deixassem o local, à exceção da professora e aluna de pós-graduação Poliana Costa Arantes, de 25 anos.

Em seguida, ele disparou pelo menos duas vezes, sem acertar Poliana. Depois, deu um tiro na própria cabeça. João Luciano foi socorrido e levado para o Hospital Odilon Behrens, onde passou por uma cirurgia e continua internado em estado grave, respirando por aparelhos.

Testemunhas disseram que nutria uma paixão platônica pela professora, que dá aula de alemão no curso. Ela disse á Polícia Militar que vinha sofrendo assédio do ex-aluno.

Situation is changing for Indian Tech Companies. Will they prevail?

Posted by Marcos R Goto 0 comments

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121919218719255181.html?mod=hpp_asia_pageone

For India's Tech Titans, Growth Is Waning

By NIRAJ SHETH August 20, 2008; Page A1

NEW DELHI -- India's information-technology industry, the engine of the nation's economic resurgence, is losing steam.

A decade ago, a host of Indian companies -- led by Infosys Technologies Ltd., Wipro Ltd. and Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. -- shot to global prominence by helping fix the "millennium bug" that threatened to crash many of the world's computers at the end of 1999. Often growing at 40% a year or more since, they quickly helped build a global tech-outsourcing industry that has changed how the world does business and how it views India.

Now that growth is slowing sharply. The credit crunch and spending slowdown in the U.S. are hurting the companies' biggest market, while a cheaper dollar shrinks their profits. Longer-term problems are surfacing. Competition is rising from other low-cost nations, ranging from Eastern Europe to the Philippines and Vietnam. And India's own success has raised labor expenses, cutting into the companies' low-cost advantage just as their revenue growth is slowing.

[chart]

Infosys expanded its corps of software engineers by one-third between 2006 and 2007, adding 15,000 people. Its average salaries are rising 12% a year, and increasingly high turnover is forcing the company to spend more on training. Growth in profits fell to 18% in the most recent fiscal year, which ended March 31, compared with 56% the previous fiscal year. Tata Consultancy Services posted just a 4.9% increase in net profit in its latest quarter, compared with 37% in the same period a year earlier. Wipro's earnings growth slowed similarly, to 11.6% in the fiscal year ended March 30, down from 42.3% in the previous year.

The Indian tech industry's trade group, Nasscom, projects revenue to grow at 20% to 25% in coming years -- still heady by the standards of most industries, but barely half the recent rate. "The first round of growth is always easier," Nasscom President Som Mittal said last month. "The next 10 years is going to be different."

To compensate, India's outsourcing giants are trying to pivot into more ambitious -- and in some cases unfamiliar -- enterprises. In a project called "ShoppingTrip360," a team of Infosys engineers is pitching retailers on a wireless-equipped shopping cart that charts the most efficient path through a store based on a consumer's shopping list. Wipro won a contract to help design a water-flow system for the toilets in Airbus's new A380 superjumbo jet. Tata Consultancy Services has set up an "Innovation Lab" in Chennai where, for instance, engineers are trying to develop software that airlines could use to improve their customer service; the idea came from TCS executives' own airline peeves.

The efforts haven't yet been much help to the bottom line. Basic outsourcing remains the overwhelming share of their business -- 84% in the past fiscal year, according to Nasscom. But the revenues of Wipro's product-development unit rose by almost 50% in the past two years combined, to $686 million last year. The Indian tech firms are hoping they can leverage their ties to companies around the world to sell them on new ventures.

"We're in a challenging environment for growth," said S. Ramadorai, chief executive at TCS, India's largest technology company by sales, in an interview in Mumbai. The next opportunities won't be based merely on low-cost labor, he said, but on "innovation and strategy."

The industry's predicament is a rare setback for India's greatest business success story. In some recent years, technology companies have combined to hire more than 300,000 workers to keep up with soaring demand, as large Western companies sought to cut costs by sending back-office work overseas.

The change comes as India's broader economy already is slowing. Economists estimate that growth in gross domestic product will ease to between 7% and 7.5% this fiscal year, after five years of averaging almost 9% annually. The Indian economy depends heavily on service industries for expansion, and technology -- though a small piece of the overall pie -- has been India's fastest-growing sector for several years. It accounted for 4.5% of India's GDP in the year ended March 31, up from 2.5% in 2004. In contrast, agriculture, India's staple, has declined to 17% of GDP from 20% during that period.

The tech boom has especially transformed the southern cities of Bangalore and Hyderabad. American and European architects designed steel-and-glass high rises surrounded by manicured, palm-lined campuses, as a rural, developing region evolved into a driver of the globalization of the technology industry.

Global Phenomenon

Of course, tech outsourcing as a global phenomenon remains relatively new, and India's giants are still well-placed to gain a big share of new work. About 11% of the $1.7 trillion spent on technology world-wide last year was sent to tech outsourcers, according to the industry. The same companies also do outsourcing of back-office operations such as payroll processing, as well as call centers, though recent growth there also is reduced. "There is so much of outsourcing yet to be done," said K.R. Lakshminarayana, chief strategy officer at the Wipro Technologies division. "There is enough head space for all of us."

But snags started appearing two years ago. India's rupee, the currency in which the industry's costs are measured, began appreciating against the dollar. Most of the companies' sales were in dollars, so their revenues were worth relatively less when translated back to rupees. Between June 2006 and earlier this year, the rupee rose 16.4% against the dollar to 39.3 rupees from 47, though it has since given back about half of that gain.

[Chart]

Investment from private-equity firms and venture capitalists in India's smaller technology companies also started drying up, as investors became jittery over a stronger rupee and the U.S. slowdown. In the first half of 2008, such investments fell by 63% from the same period a year earlier, to $151 million, according to Chennai-based research firm Venture Intelligence.

The industry's frantic hiring drained the pool of skilled workers, drove up wages and increased turnover as employees job-hopped for more pay. The attrition rate for employees at Infosys was 13.7%, up from 11.2% in 2006.

To replenish the pool of recruits, India's tech giants are spending more on training and on educational initiatives at Indian universities, efforts that add to their expenses. Infosys sends trainers to nearly 500 colleges to teach engineering-school instructors how to foster discussion and collaboration in classes and rely less on rote memorization. TCS this year is training 1,500 college graduates who studied science to learn computer programming and communication skills, at a center it built for that purpose in Chennai.

The industry's biggest blow came last summer, when the meltdown in the U.S. subprime-mortgage industry and ensuing credit crisis froze new business from global banks and other financial institutions, which bring in close to half of the industry's revenues.

Earlier this year, TCS said two Wall Street banking clients had put a freeze on their tech spending until they could cope with the fallout. The Indian company now says that it expects sales in the banking sector to improve in the coming quarters. But other banks are asking for price reductions.

India's wage inflation, currency appreciation and high labor turnover have also started pushing tech work to smaller competitors in Eastern Europe and the Philippines that don't have the same problems. For example, Siemens AG has moved its in-house customer-service centers away from India. Over the past two years, Siemens has hired 1,500 workers to staff a customer center in Manila, where the company says the spoken English is closer to the American dialect of its U.S. customers. In the Philippines, Siemens says it has a 2.5% monthly turnover rate, compared with the 20% turnover it had in its India call center.

"India is still one place where a cost benefit is possible, but not always as much as it was before," says William McNamara, head of IT strategy for the company's North American office.

All that has added pressure on India's technology companies to find other sources of sales. In a departure from the tech companies' usual reliance on tech services provided at the behest of a customer, they are increasingly developing products on their own, then trying to pitch them to customers.

Engineers at Wipro in Bangalore are building a set-top box for digital-television subscribers that they hope to sell to cable companies. They started working on it two years ago after the U.S. Congress passed legislation mandating a move to digital cable by 2009. Now, the company is shopping its set-top box technology to American cable companies, targeting its cheaper, off-the-shelf box to smaller cable providers that may not want to pay for a fully customized product.

Infosys engineers have designed a cosmetics mirror that turns into an information screen when a radio-tagged lipstick is brought close it, to recommend coordinating colors and products to customers. They got the idea while doing work on inventory-maintenance applications for retailers in Singapore and elsewhere in Southeast Asia, where they learned that Asian shoppers don't trust salespeople to give them advice as much as computers, which are seen as more objective. The company has two pilot projects running in the Asia-Pacific region and is in talks with an American retailer to put some of the gadgets in U.S. stores.

They also are working on "smart shelves" that automatically track which piles of shirts customers have picked up the most often. That way, retailers know when their shirts attract a lot of attention but, for some reason, don't get bought. The company showcases the technologies to interested retailers at a mock apparel store on the company's campus in Bangalore, complete with a working checkout counter and muted classical music playing in the background.

The 'Innovation Lab'

At TCS's "Innovation Lab," the company's top programmers and engineers use experience gathered from working in certain industries to come up with products and services they hope to sell to clients. They've used information collected from TCS's airline clients to analyze passenger complaints and design marketing campaigns aimed at defusing them. One gadget: a radio-tagged pass that passengers only need to swipe at a terminal to check in, instead of manually typing in last names or confirmation codes. They've also developed software for handheld computers that lets the flight staff know frequent flyers' preferences -- if one needs a blindfold to sleep, for example.

Another group at TCS has hired life scientists and pharmacologists to do data analysis on clinical drug trials for pharmaceutical companies pursuing drug approvals from the Food and Drug Administration. They have secured contracts with GlaxoSmithKline PLC and Eli Lilly & Co., and the group is preparing to write applications to the FDA on the companies' behalf.

The tech companies also have been expanding into consulting, where they say revenue per employee is higher than in outsourcing. But they've struggled to break into the market, which is dominated by well-known names such as International Business Machines Corp. and Accenture Ltd., finding many of their own clients prefer to take advice from those companies rather than the Indian ones better known for their outsourcing. In the year ended March 30, TCS's consulting business contributed 3.4% to the company's total revenue -- the same as in the previous fiscal year.

India itself is emerging as a promising market after years when the companies generally sniffed at doing local work in favor of more lucrative and prestigious overseas assignments. One of the biggest recent orders in the industry was a $400 million government contract to build the technology to support India's new electronic passports, which have electronic chips to store information and make them harder to forge. After a 12-month bidding process, TCS won. The company declined to comment on the project, which is yet to be announced officially.

O Triunfo do trabalho e da dedicação

Saturday, August 16, 2008
Posted by Marcos R Goto 0 comments

César Cielo ganha ouro na disputa dos 50 metros livre

Nadador faz o tempo de 21s30 e se torna o primeiro brasileiro a conquistar uma medalha dourada na natação

André Rigue - estadao.com.br

César Cielo chora com a conquista do ouro

Jonne Roriz/AE

César Cielo chora com a conquista do ouro

SÃO PAULO - Um dia histórico para a natação brasileira. A primeira medalha de ouro do País nos Jogos Olímpicos de Pequim foi conquistada por um guerreiro. Na manhã deste sábado (horário chinês), o paulista César Cielo Filho venceu de maneira espetacular a disputa dos 50 metros livre ao cravar a marca de 21s30 - novo recorde olímpico. É

a primeira medalha dourada da natação verde-e-amarela em todas as edições das Olimpíadas - até então, o Brasil tinha três pratas e sete bronzes.

Natural de Santa Bárbaro d'Oeste, César Cielo chegou sem muitos holofotes em Pequim. A maior parte da imprensa brasileira focou a atenção no carioca Thiago Pereira, que havia conquistado seis medalhas de ouro nos Jogos Pan-Americanos. Thiago deixou Pequim com um quarto lugar nos 200 metros medley como melhor resultado. Cielo acumulou duas medalhas.

Além do ouro nos 50 metros, a prova mais rápida da natação, o brasileiro levou o bronze nos 100 metros livre, a competição mais charmosa. Quando ficou em terceiro, Cielo foi superado pelo francês Alain Bernard e pelo australiano Eamon Sullivan. Nos 50 metros, o paulista deu o troco e venceu os dois com sobra - até então, Sullivan é dono do recorde mundial, com 21s28.

Cielo, que tem o ritual de dar tapas no peito antes de pular na piscina (para "despertar"), teve uma evolução fantástica em Pequim. Durante as semifinais dos 100 metros, o brasileiro chegou a pensar que havia ficado de fora da final, pois não tinha marcado um bom tempo (48s16). No entanto, o nadador entrou na oitava e última vaga e foi para decisão, onde levou o bronze com 47s67.

Depois de conquistar a primeira medalha, o nadador de 21 anos se encheu de entusiasmo e disse que "ganharia o ouro nos 50 metros". Muitos riram dele. Mas foi com esta confiança que Cielo bateu o recorde olímpico por duas vezes durante as eliminatórias. Na decisão, o "desconhecido" Cielo já chamava a atenção da imprensa mundial e dos adversários, que nada puderam fazer para impedi-lo de triunfar.

César Cielo mora e estuda nos Estados Unidos, na Universidade de Aurbun. Thiago Pereira e Kaio Márcio (nado borboleta), que eram as grandes esperanças do Brasil em Pequim, moram e treinam no País. Não é por acaso que os norte-americanos dominam a natação mundial e produzem "atletas perfeitos" como Michael Phelps. O técnico de Cielo nos EUA, o australiano Brett Hawke, já havia alertado que o brasileiro seria o homem mais rápido do mundo.

As provas no Cubo D'Água em Pequim terão continuidade neste domingo (noite de sábado no Brasil). A natação brasileira encerrou a sua participação com Cielo. O único destaque, agora, será Michael Phelps, que tentará ganhar o oitavo ouro no revezamento 4 x 100 metros medley para superar o recorde do também norte-americano Mark Spitz, que levou sete medalhas douradas nos Jogos Olímpicos de Munique, em 1972.

RESULTADO FINAL DOS 50 METROS LIVRE

1.º Cesar Cielo Filho (BRA) - 21s30 (Recorde olímpico)

2.º Amaury Leveaux (FRA) - 21s45

3.º Alain Bernard (FRA) - 21s49

4.º Ashley Callus (AUS) - 21s62

5.º Ben Widman-Tobriner (EUA) - 21s64

6.º Eamon Sullivan (AUS) - 21s65

7.º Roland Schoeman (AFS) - 21s67

8.º Stefan Nystrand (SUE) - 21s72

So the last shall be first, and the first last

Friday, August 15, 2008
Posted by Marcos R Goto 1 comments

After an 18 months US residency experience, I can say that it's not far the day this nation will speak officially two languages: English and Spanish. Not necessarily in this order! It's already reality in some areas of strong spanish spoken communities, big retail chains chose to publish advertisement billboards only in spanish. The economical power this population already holds is very important. Political power is also growing fast. On the other hand, more and more "white movements" against illegal immigration emerge across the country. But one question these people don't want to face is: Are there enough white American people willing to work on the fast food counters, on the hotels doing housekeeping, on homebuilding as carpenters, etc? Seems that as everything else in the Universe, equilibrium is the answer. Themis, the Goddess of Justice represented by the blind-folded woman holding a set of scales comes to my mind to illustrate the situation. The questions that come together with the image are: Is Themis a white woman? How blind would White Lady Justice be knowing that the white plate is going down and Spanish plate, and others are going up? Only time will tell.

Minorities set to be US majority

The Statue of Liberty, New York's historical landmark for immigrants
Population projections are subject to a variety of factors

White people of European descent will no longer make up a majority of the US population by the year 2042 - eight years sooner than previous estimates.

The big change is among Hispanics and Asians whose share of the population is set to double to 30% and 9%.

The population is also ageing: by 2050 one in five residents will be aged 65 or over, up from one in nine today.

The US Census Bureau's latest projections are based on birth, death and current immigration rates.

The projections show that the US population is expected to rise from 305 million people to 439 million by 2050, but it will be a population that looks quite different both in age, race and ethnicity.

According to the census bureau's statistics, people who regard themselves as Hispanic, African-American, Asian, American Indian, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander will become the majority by 2042.

Officials had previously projected that this change would happen in 2050.

The new projections suggestion that by 2050, minorities will account for 54% of the population and non-Hispanic whites 46%, down from their current 64.7% share.

Graph showing projected changes in population to 2050 by race and Hispanic origin

Immigration and higher birth rates among US minorities, especially Hispanics, are accelerating the demographic changes.

Hispanics will see their population nearly triple from 47 million to 133 million, causing their share of the population to increase from 15% to 30%.

Asians will also see a big increase, with their numbers growing from 16 million to 41 million.

Single-race Asians will account for 8% of the population and 9% including those of mixed race.

The black population, including those of mixed race, will show a slight increase from 14% to 15% of the total.

'Ageing baby boomers'

It is likely that the demographic changes will be experienced right across the country - and no longer confined to urban areas as in the past.

The population will also be ageing, with some 88 million people, predominantly white, being aged 65 and over.

The number of people over 85 years old will more than triple in the next 40 years, reaching 19 million.

"The white population is older and very much centred around the ageing baby boomers who are well past their high fertility years," William Frey, a demographer at the Brookings Institution think tank, told the Associated Press.

"The future of America is epitomised by the young people today. They are basically the melting pot we are going to see in the future."

The Census Bureau points out that its projections are subject to big revisions, depending on immigration policy, natural or man-made disasters.

The projections are also subject to changing cultural definitions and the way people see themselves.

The New York Times notes that in earlier eras Irish, Italian and Eastern European Jewish immigrants were not universally considered as whites.

Until the 1960s, Hispanics were not counted separately by the census and Asian Indians were classified as whites, the paper reports.

Watch the video:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/7560034.stm

São Paulo Classics

Monday, August 11, 2008
Posted by Marcos R Goto 0 comments

Após mais um dia de trabalho, e na sequência o meu exercício espiritual da semana, chego em casa e recolho minha correspondência. Dentre contas prá pagar e panfletos de pizzaria, encontro um destes envelopes que chamam a atenção pela qualidade diferenciada do papel. É do Itaú Personnalité. Abro o envelope e encontro um livreto com a programação de concertos da OSESP (Orquestra Sinfônica do Estado de São Paulo) na Sala São Paulo para o segundo semestre de 2008. Além do livreto o pacote inclui um cartão de desconto para o estacionamento. Desconto de 100%. Oba! Pequeno incentivo financeiro em pról da cultura. Nunca pensei que este momento ia chegar na minha vida, mas fiquei com vontade de assistir um concerto destes. Evento inédito para mim até o momento. Quem me conhece sabe do que estou falando. Meu conceito máximo de concerto clássico sempre foi assistir aos Rolling Stones "live". O tempo passa... Complementando o lado sonoro do evento artístico, sem dúvida, a Sala São Paulo é um verdadeiro colírio para os olhos. Coisa de primeiro mundo! Não conheci pessoalmente ainda, mas se fizer jus ao website, é "show"! Vale a pena conferir, nem que seja só o website. Enjoy! http://www.salasaopaulo.art.br/