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Apacer Appts Jupiter as ND for USB Drives
By
ChannelTimes Staff
Mumbai, Jun 2, 2007
After opening Indian branch office in Bangalore on March 1st, 2007, Apacer Technology has appointed Jupiter International as the company s national distributor of USB drive in India.
Cindy Huang, Apacer s AP sales marketing director said, Apacer was very willing to know and learn Indian consumer s needs and the market. We conducted a strict research of this. We believe that by doing this we could provide best products and services for India.
Apacer has introduced USB drives in the Indian market equipped with unique software called Apacer Compression Explorer (ACE), application software that provides users to store up to five times capacity along with functions of decompression and password.
Alok Garodia, MD, Jupiter said, The Indian market for USB drives has seen a stupendous growth in last few years. We would like to capitalize on the demand generated by the working professionals in corporate and SOHO segments. The next generation youth market also hold a lot of potential to contribute to the growth of USB drive market. I am very much confident that with the quality, features and designs of the class of Apacer we will be able to establish it as a leading brand in Indian USB drive market.
The USB drives can be segmented to entry level, mid-level and high-end level to fulfill different needs. Entry level and mid-level are for general storage use whereas high-end level is for professionals or people who require fast speed and high performance in the process of storage.
Apacer claims that their designs benefit the users. The one like ACE application software contributes an added value to Apacer s USB drives.
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Agreed. THE INDUSTRY SHOULD WAIT AND SEE IF THERE IS NEW mRS. CHAUHAN. THAT WILL SHUT EVERYBODY UP. FOR THE TIME BEING STOP THIS NONSENSE. |
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- jayanti,
not applicable, chennai
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Agreed. we donot know neighbors sons or daughters. BUT IF CEO'S come into scrutiny because they ARE ROLE MODELS. |
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all top ranking persons are role models. allover the world. they lead public lives. Because people are interested in them. So they have responsibility. This is the differentiating factor between ordinary and top. People rise at top due to inherent qualities and hard work. But if he role models do negative things they lose credibilty.It is the law of nature. And all associated with them suffer. |
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- TRUTHFINDER,
Anonymous, Delhi
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I fully agree with you. channeltimes is an appropriate professional medium for the IT industry. But if the top ranking IT industry person does something shocking, and someone knows he is doing it, I think there is nothing wrong in letting his peers know. There is no smoke without fire. |
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- TRUTHFINDER,
Anonymous, Delhi
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my friend you can't help a person who choses wrong path even if that person is your own blood relative. |
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- TRUTHFINDER,
Anonymous, Delhi
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go for it |
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- rak,
indi, mumbai
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I think the reporters of channeltimes should investigate into the story. |
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- Anonymous,
Anonymous, Delhi
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The women rights group are non-exixtent in India |
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- swati,
Anonymous, mumbai
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But where is Neeraj's family? |
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- Truthfinder,
Anonymous, delhi
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Yahaan pe toh koi bhi kuch bhi chaap sakta hai...
Winning always calls for a celebration and so it did for designer Hemant Sagar and his French partner Didier Lecoanet. The party was primarily to present a capsule viewing of the collection that won the duo 'Designer of the Year' title at Miami Fashion Week.
The venue Flluid, a lounge at MOSAIC hotel, Noida, looked like the 'Rendezvous with Simi Grewal' set (minus the flowers for sure!), with spotless white interiors. The spacious lounge felt even more so as it waited desperately for people to walk in and get some action going. But alas, that wasn't how it was to be. It was the media who ruled the attendance charts at the party with very few of the expected guests showing up.
Sagar and Lecoanet were amongst the first to arrive and spend most of their time speaking to the press. Dressed in simple yet haute clothes, they surely seemed animated about their collection that made Miami go 'my- oh -my'. Setting Flluid on fire was DJ Igantuis Camelio. Dressed in a Lecoanet Hemant attire, with a jacket designed out of a firecracker advertisement, he oozed out generous doses of attitude. "I play music for myself, mostly soulful music that's sensuous and erotic and that's the mood I'm setting tonight as well", he said.
As the much awaited dekho of the winning collection began, the shutterbugs too got busy. The plasma playing the DVD of the Miami Fashion Week went almost unnoticed as everybody (read media) looked fixatedly at the models, Bhavna Singh and Neha Ahuja. And they didn't disappoint the on-lookers as they looked simply stunning in the celebrated collection |
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- Shashank Sharma,
Nanak Computers, Satna
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STOP THIS NONSENSE. This is totally senseless.if true we will soon SEE THE MISTRESS AS NEW MRS. CHAUHAN. CAN'T THE INDUSTRY WAIT |
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- GITIKA,
women rights, delhi
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I AGREE FULLY WITH GITIKA. Let's wait. we will soon see misteress as new Mrs. Chauhan. For the time being put an end to this nonsense. |
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LETS ALL CONCENTRATE ON SHREYA CHAUHAN. ANY PICTURE OF SHREYA CHAUHAN. |
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- Anonymous,
Anonymous, MUMBAI
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"So, David," said Don Bradman, leaning menacingly across the lunch table, "you think you know better than me and Dennis Lillee and Richie Benaud and the Chappell brothers?" Yet again we were debating the front-foot no-ball law, which Don hated. I believed - and still do - that a reversion to the old back-foot law would be retrograde. Bradman was exasperated. His face had reddened. I suppose mine had too. Then his delightful wife Jessie, for surely the umpteenth time in their lives, eased an awkward situation. "David," she said sweetly, "have you written Don's obituary yet?" No, I hadn't. I wasn't that well organised. And anyway, he was going to live to 100, wasn't he? We all laughed.
The lively disagreements we sometimes had through 30 years' friendship were probably a source of sustenance for Don who, in his own estimation, was never wrong. And, like most great men, he found himself spending much time with fawning yes-men. Yet he was forever essentially a boy from the bush, gifted with an extraordinary mind and reflexes, fired by ambition and fierce determination, the key to his insistence on always being right. The keen-eyed young man with kookaburra features was still discernible in that ageing face.
He once took me to task for writing that he bowled Wally Hammond out with a full-toss at Adelaide in 1933. "It was not a full-toss!" But five or six participants in that Test match, including Hammond himself, had declared it a full-toss. And I discovered - too late - that Don himself had spoken of it as such in his radio summary very soon after the incident.
Amazingly, all these years later, he seemed to regard the bowling of a full-toss as a symptom of defective character. I loved him for it. Somewhere in the 100-plus letters I received from him is his reaction to my costly acquisition at auction of Victor Trumper's fob-watch. He kidded that he was now going to hunt through his cupboards: "I reckon I could dig up a couple of wrist-watches."
He was very generous, contributing forewords to two of my books, with scant concern for remuneration, and giving me all kinds of things he no longer needed, such as early New South Wales yearbooks with his personal rubber-stamp on them. Maybe the one thing we truly shared, the red-and-white cap of the St George club, counted for something. Bradman, who revered cricket's traditions, was a man of adamant opinions. He was laughingly dismissive of a purported history on video, declaring that compiler Ian Chappell's knowledge of history "would fit on a postage stamp". He was content only when he had had the last word in a debate. I suppose it was some sort of substitute for 20 competitive years of habitually carving up bowlers of all descriptions.
Tireless correspondent though he was, he became impatient with birthday cards. "I know I'm 84," he wrote in August 1992. "I don't need reminding. It means I'm one step nearer to the grave." Speaking of which, after one long session at his Adelaide home, he kindly offered to drive me back to the hotel. Just after midnight, as he was steering the car out of Holden Street, a vehicle came speeding towards us from the right. Don Bradman seemed not to have noticed it. Whiteknuckled, I cried out. He rammed his foot on the brake pedal and we were saved. Calm as ever (apparently), he continued driving, saying not a word about our lucky survival.
I once tried to entertain friends with an imagined newspaper headline had the worst happened: 'Cricket writer killed in car crash.' And in smaller letters beneath: 'Driver (old cricketer) dies too.' Just imagine.
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- Don,
Cricinfo, Sydney
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