Issue N0: 23


Big Data in Science Is a Big Challenge

When the Harvard Business Review takes on the topic of data science and announces that data scientist is "The Sexiest Job of the 21st Century," one knows that "big data" has become the latest big news.

read more...

Mobile clinic makes rounds in San Diego

Since last fall, children and their families in San Diego County have been receiving medical and dental care in a state-of-the-art mobile clinic as part of a partnership between La Maestra Community Health Centers and the Verizon Foundation.


read more...

Unnati Platinum program

The Unnati Platinum program is a unique Employment Opportunity to kickstart the career for talented freshers. The program is designed to enrich freshers in technical as well as non-technical aspects. Technical topics include Core Java, Servlets, JSP, and HTML. Non-technical topics include Communication skills, Time management, Positive thinking.

Candidates who have completed BE, Btech, MTech, MCA, BCA, BSc are eligible to apply. Selection procedure involves a written aptitude test and a technical interview.

read more...

8 Tips To Make Yourself Successful

Why are some successful and others not? We should begin to look at what it is that makes some successful and others not. 3% of the population produces 97% of success. What makes these individuals so successful?
                                                                                                         read more...

The Best Way to Start a Work Out Plan

So you've decided you want to get in better shape. Although you should be commended for wanting to better yourself, you've no doubt heard the stories of many people who have started a workout program only to quit days later. Worse, maybe you've gone through this experience yourself.
read more...

Detailed Articles

Big Data in Science Is a Big Challenge

When the Harvard Business Review takes on the topic of data science and announces that data scientist is "The Sexiest Job of the 21st Century," one knows that "big data" has become the latest big news. However, data science has been at the core of the Laboratory's mission from the very beginning, when data was measured in kilobytes, as compared to the petabytes that are processed and analyzed today.

We live in a world awash in data, a world of complex, interconnected systems and networks, from the vast systems that control and run various aspects of the country's infrastructure, to systems embedded in manufacturing processes, to the smartphones and tablets on which we depend in our personal lives. Here at Lawrence Livermore, data science involves taking massive amounts of raw data in a variety of forms—for example, ocean-surface temperatures, spectra gathered from telescopes scanning the night sky, and DNA sequences—and analyzing it to extract information about relationships, patterns, and connections, and then presenting that information in forms that can be used to make decisions.

Today, the challenges of big data sweep across all our mission areas—from biosecurity and counterterrorism to nonproliferation and weapons systems. Data science also plays a major role in science-focused areas such as climate, energy, astrophysics, and high-energy physics. Any mission that is involved with collecting and analyzing enormous quantities of data will turn to data science as part of the analysis process. The difference between the Laboratory and a commercial entity is that our focus is on ensuring national security—the driver behind our efforts.

Data science has huge challenges ahead, but vast rewards beckon. At Livermore, we are engaged in forward-leaning areas of investigation, pushing the boundaries in all directions, whether the subject is biosecurity, such as typified by the effort to predict the viability of mutated viruses, or climate science research, such as the Earth System Grid Federation, an international collaboration whose portals include Livermore's Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and Intercomparison.

To succeed in these areas and elsewhere, addressing the data tsunami is vitally important. The Laboratory will contribute with the excellence of effort that it brings to bear on all its missions, providing the country's decision makers with the information they need to do their jobs.

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Mobile clinic makes rounds in San Diego

Since last fall, children and their families in San Diego County have been receiving medical and dental care in a state-of-the-art mobile clinic as part of a partnership between La Maestra Community Health Centers and the Verizon Foundation.

The foundation awarded a $90,000 grant to La Maestra last year to help support telemedicine capabilities in the mobile RV clinic and deliver quality healthcare services to patients at schools, housing complexes, community events and key retail shopping areas. The mobile clinic is now equipped with the latest telemedicine and X-ray systems technology.

While many healthcare providers are still using film X-ray, La Maestra's mobile clinic will soon add digital capabilities, enabling providers to catch potentially life-threatening conditions far in advance. The new telemedicine capabilities will also bridge the gap between the mobile clinic and medical clinics, making timely patient-provider consultations more attainable and patients' records more accessible.

With the foundation's support, La Maestra's mobile medical clinic has established a regular schedule on site at five schools in the San Diego Unified School District and in two schools at the National school district (National City) to reach many of these underserved residents.

"Access to medical and dental care is always a challenge for our patient population, and La Maestra is dedicated to expanding opportunities for families in this area," said Zara Marselian, CEO of La Maestra Community Health Centers, in a news release. "Many of the children who visit our mobile clinic have never seen a doctor or a dentist before. Our partnership with Verizon is having an immediate impact and changing people's lives, and it's helping the healthcare system by keeping patients from using emergency rooms for primary medical care."

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Unnati platinum program

The Unnati Platinum program is a unique Employment Opportunity to kickstart the career for talented freshers. The program is designed to enrich freshers in technical as well as non-technical aspects. Technical topics include Core Java, Servlets, JSP, and HTML. Non-technical topics include Communication skills, Time management, Positive thinking.

Training period is for a duration of 6 months from the date of joining. This includes 1 to 2 months of intensive classroom training plus 4 to 5 months of hands-on project work training.

Candidate would not have received exposure and experience working on real-time projects under the guidance of competent developers. He would also not have had the opportunity to interact with clients and may not understand the expectations of full time employment in a software company. Hence, even if he has completed Java training, he will not be ready. The objective of this program is to transform him into software professional.

After completion of training period, there would be an assessment process. Employment would be regularized depending on the performance. Since this is an Employment opportunity (and not a stand-alone training program), candidate will get an Experience letter and not just a course completion certificate.

Benefits of Unnati Platinum

Hands-on Technical knowledge
Personality Development
Rich Work Experience
Employment Guaranteed
Better Career Opportunities
Experience Certificate

8 Tips To Make Yourself Successful

Why are some successful and others not? We should begin to look at what it is that makes some successful and others not. 3% of the population produces 97% of success. What makes these individuals so successful?

1. In the first place they always know where they are with their activities. If we take sports as a perfect example, Barry Bonds always knows how many home runs he hit yesterday. Many businessmen, however, turns a blind eye to their current performance.

2. The successful have also always measurable goals that they have decided when they want to achieve them. In sports there are no stars that are successful without a goal. If Tiger Woods had not set himself a goal to win the Masters, he would had not reached the level he is at today, which he so well deserves. In the world of business, it is essential to set goals, but most of those who fail have no concrete goals to live up to.

3. The successful set great objectives that they know they will achieve but not how they will achieve them. The goal must be so challenging that a person must develop himself in order to achieve it. I read an article about football player Joe Namath, where it was mentioned that someone had said that he could never become a good football player. Namath wanted something different. He set his ambition to become good and ignored all the critics around him. Most less successful entrepreneurs set targets that are too small to develop them and to create real success.

4. The successful make their own decisions. It means taking full responsibility for what you do. To get a lot of good advice is good and you can feel free to see if any of these fit into your life. But in the end, it is you that will be responsible for your life and know what is best for you (no sense telling you otherwise). Take Al Gore for example. He listens to what his surroundings say, and then makes his own decisions as to what is best for him, to get himself and his family in balance.


5. The successful are prepared to go through their fears to achieve success. Those who are afraid to pick up the phone, talk to the boss or start their own business remains stuck and will have undesirable results. However, if you dare to challenge yourself to succeed the world stands open to you. Madonna once said that she does everything she is afraid of doing. Look at the success and development it has given her. She was not afraid to take the chances, thus opening many doors that would otherwise be closed.

6. Successful always creates an action plan to achieve their goals. The activities have been planned months or years in the future to achieve their goals. The famous Swedish downhill skiing champion, Anja Parsson said during a TV interview about how she came back after a serious injury. She had a clear plan of action that helped her back to the top again. Do you have a plan for your success?

7. The successful plan their daily activities in advance. It is to plan the next day the night before. For example, on Sunday evening sit down and make a list for Monday with six activities that will bring you closer to your goal. The key is to focus on this and do not involve a lot of dead time in between your activities. Through the years, I have had a couple of customers who do this type of planning on a daily basis. Guess who has the most success?

8. The successful get more done in a day than most have done in a week. They do their activities with vigor and calm, which means that they seem to have all the time in the world. Who wants to do business with someone who panics all the time?

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The Best Way to Start a Work Out Plan

So you've decided you want to get in better shape. Although you should be commended for wanting to better yourself, you've no doubt heard the stories of many people who have started a workout program only to quit days later. Worse, maybe you've gone through this experience yourself. But that's the past, and you've got the chance to start again.

Step 1 : Plan your workout routine before you enter the gym. According to SelfGrowth.com, most people who make fitness a New Year's resolution fail because they don't adequately plan ahead, and the same goes for the rest of the year. Identify the exercises you want to perform, create a routine that works out your whole body and visualize yourself completing it. Figure out what time of day you're going to go to the gym, and clear that time out in advance. Determine the days you'll go and the days you'll rest. By making these arrangements in advance, you're less likely to abandon your goals. Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/190349-the-best-way-to-start-a-workout-plan/#ixzz2S7xS7y58

Step 2 : Convince a friend to get in shape with you. Use him as motivation to stick with the program and get to the gym on your scheduled days. Push him to do better, and encourage him to do the same with you. Sharing your progress with a buddy can help both of you, so don't be shy about it. Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/190349-the-best-way-to-start-a-workout-plan/#ixzz2S7xaVcX8 At this time, the medical center is not releasing which department the laptop went missing from, but Jack Mazurak, spokesperson for UMMC, said it could be thousands of patients per year seen in this particular department. Overall inpatient admissions at the 722-bed UMMC total close to 28,000 annually.

Step 3 : Start out slowly in your first days at the gym. Expect to be sore, and embrace this soreness as a sign of progress. Don't be too aggressive, however, as this can cause you to hurt yourself or burn out on your new workout plan. You can always add exercises as you get into better shape, but doing too much too soon is a sure-fire recipe for disaster. Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/190349-the-best-way-to-start-a-workout-plan/#ixzz2S7xf1AcK

Step 4 : Change your routine. As you become more proficient at performing your initial group of exercises, expand your palette. Add more reps to your existing exercise routine, or replace exercises you don't enjoy with new ones that look interesting. Reassess your goals, and let those goals dictate the direction of your workouts. Keeping things fresh is key for your physical and mental development; while you look forward to trying something new, your muscles will also respond positively to being tested in different ways. Read more: http://www.livestrong.com/article/190349-the-best-way-to-start-a-workout-plan/#ixzz2S7xl47pk


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