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Monday, September 27, 2010

Chennai Super Kings (CSK) Proved That Best T20 Domestic Team In World


Some teams that are just so good, that they make even the best opposition look sub standard. The Chennai Super Kings did just that on Sunday evening when they strolled home to an 8 wicket victory against the Warriors in the finals of the Champions League T20.

The IPL Champs hammer the Warriors and bring home the Champions League crown. © AFP

The evening’s display began with Chennai’s much revered bowling attack that practically strangled the Warriors who went in to bat first. There was some early hitting which gave the home team a glimmer of hope, but as soon as Murli and Ashwin came to the party, the runs seemed to evaporate and the wickets began to tumble. Murli finished as the pick of the bowlers taking three wickets on the night while Ashwin will take home the mantle of the tournaments highest wicket taker with a haul of 13 wickets over six matches. They combined to restrict the Warriors to a score of 128 for 7 for their 20 overs.

Chennai then went into bat with an opening pair that has seen nothing but success in this Champions League. Vijay and Hussey were that pair and they carried on with their hot streak, scoring a half century each, to ensure that the game would go Chennai’s way. The half century also ensured that Murali Vijay became the highest run scorer in the Champions League taking home the Golden Bat. Of course, the runs they scored weren’t at the blitzkrieg rate you’d expect from a T 20 game, and there was a moment or two towards the end, where it looked as if the slow run rate might be Chennai’s undoing. But, it is for such occasions that Mahendra Singh Dhoni was born. He came in to hammer a quick fire 17 that carried the IPL Champs over the final hurdle.

It’s the result that every Indian cricket fan wanted and whatever your IPL allegiances, it’s a win that all of India will celebrate.

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Yahoo Users Can Now Open a Google Account With OpenID



Google is now letting any Yahoo users sign in to Google using OpenID, the company announced Tuesday.
If you’re a Yahoo user and you want to try Google Docs, Calendar or Reader, this makes the sign-up process easier. Instead of filling out a web form and waiting for a confirmation e-mail when signing up for a Google account, there’s now a new button you can click on. It says “Verify by signing in at Yahoo.com.” Click it, and you’re sent to Yahoo, where you’re asked to allow Google and Yahoo to link up your accounts. All of a sudden, you’re a verified user at Google and you can start using Google’s web apps.
By using this method, you’re giving Google permission to access the data in your Yahoo profile, and you have the ability to import whatever data you’d like into Google. OpenID ensures that all you’re required to share is an e-mail address, not your password or any other information you don’t want to share.
Tuesday’s development marks Google’s first attempt to be an OpenID relying party — a website that accepts OpenID logins from third-party providers. Also, this only works for Yahoo users for now, but Google says it’s going to start offering support for other OpenID providers soon.
On the surface, this may look like an attempt by Google to poach users away from Yahoo by making it even easier for them to switch. In fact, it’s a real-world example of the type of interoperability that OpenID has been promising to bring to the open web for some time.
The more services, web apps and social networks we sign up for, the more places we have to create an account, remember a password, find friends, and build up a user profile. OpenID and the other twiddly bits in the “open stack” of social web technologies — like OAuth and Portable Contacts — make it easier for us to securely re-use this data across numerous websites and applications while only having to maintain one user account and one password at the provider of our choosing. With OpenID and OAuth, your data can easily be forklifted into other social networks with just a few clicks. OpenID currently powers the majority of third-party logins on the web.
This new Google/Yahoo system works because Yahoo is an OpenID provider. If you have a Yahoo account, you can use it to log in to any website that accepts OpenID. Google has simply started using the Yahoo OpenID API, the bit of code that makes it easier for third parties to create a simple, streamlined login experience for visitors who want to use their Yahoo ID to log in.
The same type of third-party login is possible using your Google account, since Google exposes the information necessary to make that happen in its own OpenID APIs.
So there’s no poaching happening here, just an open door policy on Yahoo’s end, and the implementation of one of Yahoo’s APIs on Google’s end.
Google is currently only offering OpenID logins for Yahoo users, the company says. The Google Code blog gives some more detail: “As [the new login feature] is based on an internet standard, we plan to use it in the future with other e-mail providers that add support for this usage of OpenID and related standards like OAuth, such as in the Microsoft Live identity APIs.”
Google is also experimenting with an OpenID/OAuth hybrid called Step2, which builds on similar community efforts to build a new system based on those two technologies. Among other things, these new hybrid systems aim to make the process less confusing for users, and to make OAuth sign-ins easier for applications that run on a phone or on the desktop rather than in a web browser.
This article originally appeared on Webmonkey.com, Wired’s site for all things web development, browsers, and web apps. Follow Webmonkey on Twitter.

Sunday, September 5, 2010

Airtel Champion League T20 2010 Schedule Fixture Timetable


The Airtel Champions League Twenty20 (CTL T20)is an initiative of its three founding members, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), Cricket Australia (CA) and Cricket South Africa (CSA). ESPN STAR Sports is the commercial rights holders for Champions League Twenty20 for a period of 10 years. The second season will be played in South Africa from 10-26 September 2010.
Key features of the Airtel CLT20 Format and Match Schedule
  • 10 Teams divided into 2 Groups of 5
  • Top 2 Teams from each Group advance to the Semi Finals
  • 23 Matches in total (same as 2009)
  • Group A – Chennai Super Kings, Warriors, Victorian Bushrangers, Wayamba Elevens, Central Stags
  • Group B – Mumbai Indians, Highveld Lions, South Australian Redbacks, Royal Challengers Bangalore, West Indies Domestic T20 Champions (TBC)
  • 5 Double Headers
  • Matches evenly distributed across four venues
  • Semi Finals in Durban and Centurion
  • Final in Johannesburg
2010 Airtel Champions League Twenty20 Competing Teams
  • Chennai Super Kings (DLF Indian Premier League – India)
  • Mumbai Indians (DLF Indian Premier League – India)
  • Royal Challengers Bangalore (DLF Indian Premier League – India)
  • Victorian Bushrangers (KFC Twenty20 Big Bash – Australia)
  • South Australian Redbacks (KFC Twenty20 Big Bash – Australia)
  • Warriors (Standard Bank Pro 20 Series – South Africa)
  • Highveld Lions (Standard Bank Pro 20 Series – South Africa)
  • Central Stags (HRV Cup Twenty20 – New Zealand)
  • Wayamba Elevens (Inter-Provincial Twenty20 Cup – Sri Lanka)
  • TBC (West Indies Domestic Twenty20 Champions)
2010 Airtel Champions League Twenty20 Match Schedule and Fixture
GROUP A GROUP B
A1 Chennai Super Kings B1 Mumbai Indians
A2 Warriors B2 Highveld Lions
A3 Victorian Bushrangers B3 South Australian Redbacks
A4 Wayamba Elevens B4 Royal Challengers Bangalore
A5 Central Stags B5 TBC – West Indies Domestic T20
DATE
TEAM 1
TEAM 2 VENUE
TIME
Fri 10 Sep
Mumbai Indians
v/s Highveld Lions Johannesburg
1730
Sat 11 Sep
Warriors
v/s Wayamba Elevens Port Elizabeth
1330
Chennai Super Kings
v/s Central Stags Durban
1730
Sun 12 Sep
Highveld Lions
v/s South Australian Redbacks Centurion
1330
Royal Challengers Bangalore
v/s TBC Centurion
1730
Mon 13 Sep
Warriors
v/s Victorian Bushrangers Port Elizabeth
1730
Tue 14 Sep
Mumbai Indians
v/s South Australian Redbacks Durban
1730
Wed 15 Sep
Victorian Bushrangers
v/s Central Stags Centurion
1330
Chennai Super Kings
v/s Wayamba Elevens Centurion
1730
Thu 16 Sep
Mumbai Indians
v/s TBC Durban
1730
Fri 17 Sep
South Australian Redbacks
v/s Royal Challengers Bangalore Durban
1730
Sat 18 Sep
Warriors
v/s Central Stags Port Elizabeth
1330
Chennai Super Kings
v/s Victorian Bushrangers Port Elizabeth
1730
Sun 19 Sep
Highveld Lions
v/s TBC Johannesburg
1330
Mumbai Indians
v/s Royal Challengers Bangalore Durban
1730
Mon 20 Sep
Victorian Bushrangers
v/s Wayamba Elevens Centurion
1730
Tue 21 Sep
South Australian Redbacks
v/s TBC Johannesburg
1330
Highveld Lions
v/s Royal Challengers Bangalore Johannesburg
1730
Wed 22 Sep
Wayamba Elevens
v/s Central Stags Port Elizabeth
1330
Chennai Super Kings
v/s Warriors Port Elizabeth
1730
Thu 23 Sep
No matches

Fri 24 Sep
Semi Final 1
1st Group A v/s 2nd Group B
Durban
1730
Sat 25 Sep
Semi Final 2
1st Group B v/s 2nd Group A
Centurion
1730
Sun 26 Sep
Airtel CLT20 Final
(Winner Semi Final 1 v/s Winner Semi Final 2)
Johannesburg
1730
Note: All times listed are South African Standard Time (SAST)

New Zealand Earthquake Report


New Zealand Earthquake Report - Sep 5 2010 at 5:15 pm (NZST)

Magnitude 3.2, Sunday, September 5 2010 at 5:15 pm (NZST), 20 km south-west of Christchurch.

Quake Details

Information about this earthquake:
Reference Number
3367026/G
Universal Time
September 5 2010 at 5:15
NZ Standard Time
Sunday, September 5 2010 at 5:15 pm
Latitude, Longitude
43.59°S, 172.46°E
Focal Depth
12 km
Richter magnitude
3.2
Region
Canterbury
Location
20 km south-west of Christchurch
Felt in the Christchurch area.


A state of emergency was declared in New Zealand's second largest city of Christchurch today after a powerful 7.0 earthquake caused widespread damage. Christchurch residents said the walls of their homes "wobbled like jelly" when a 7.0 magnitude earthquake rocked New Zealand's second largest city
early Saturday.
The force of the quake, one of the most powerful recorded in the country, tore jagged fissures in the ground and destroyed the facades of buildings, littering the city's streets with bricks and shards of glass.
Markham McMullen, a school principal at Darfield, near the quake's epicentre, said it felt like a train had hit his house, creating a jolt that threw him and his wife out of bed.
"It just kept coming, it went and on and on," he said.
"It was absolutely terrifying. We grabbed our daughter, Sophie, from her room and crouched under a doorway. The TV was flying around the room... it was very scary."
Old buildings were the worst affected, with entire facades of brick structures collapsing onto the street, crushing cars under tonnes of debris and leaving kitchens and living rooms exposed, many eerily untouched by the surrounding chaos.
At Castle Rock, a rugged outcrop just outside the city, the earthquake sent boulders bigger than cars tumbling down the hillside.
Only two people were seriously injured, but Civil Defence officials said the toll would have been much worse had the quake hit in daylight, when there would have been thousands of people on the streets.
"We've been extremely lucky as a nation that there's been no fatalities ... we're blessed actually," Civil Defence Minister John Carter said.
Hotelier Richard Hawes said he thought he was going to die as his 130-year-old building shook. "(It) wobbled like a jelly," he said.
Aftershocks continued to rattle the city of around 340,000 throughout Saturday, as dazed residents assessed the damage.
Police pleas for people to stay away from the city centre were ignored, with thousands of sightseers flocking to the worst-hit areas, many recording the moment on their mobile phones.
"Honestly, the scale of it is quite astonishing," Frances Adank, who lives in the suburb of St Albans, told Radio New Zealand.
"The city council I think is going to be working for days to get the water mains sorted out... There's just water pouring out of every front section."
In the same suburb, Marsha Witehira said she had a narrow escape when a friend pulled her from her bed moments before the wall of her house collapsed on top of it.
"He saved my life, no doubt about it... if I had been there, I would have smashed my head," she told the Christchurch Press newspaper.



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