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Steel PSUs' budgetary estimates may be inflated: Panel
A parliamentary panel has rapped the steel ministry for under-utilisation of funds by Public Sector Undertakings (PSUs) like SAIL and RINL, and said the Budgetary Estimates (BE) may be “inflated”.

Logistics cost savings to have big impact on GDP: KPMG
A reduction of the logistics costs by 1 per cent of the GDP means a saving of over $7.5 billion, according to a report on ‘Competitiveness Through Efficient Logistics’ released by KPMG in association with CII Institute of Logistics.

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Back on the farm
Gates-food: When Bill Gates was a young man, he wanted to turn his taste for software into a successful business. The Microsoft founder got rich beyond any technologist’s dreams. But Gates has changed over the years. His latest idea isn’t quite to get poor through low technology, but he will be giving away money to help people engaged in the simplest of economic activities: subsistence agriculture.
International Business

Twitter, Facebook 'costing British eco 1.38 bn pounds'

In today"s world, popular social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook are without a doubt the best way to stay connected with friends and share what is happening right now. - Exchanging bow-vows - India Inc is all a Twitter - Tharoor wants more Indian politicians to use Twitter - Vista a blow to Microsoft reputation: Ballmer - Transport ministry to use tweeting to bring down accidents - Sweet tweets But, a new survey has revealed that the popular sites are actually costing British businesses 1.38 billion pounds a year in wasted time. In fact, according to the survey, more than half of office workers use the social networking sites like Twitter and Facebook for personal use during the working day, and admit wasting an average of 40 minutes a week each. One in three of the 1,460 office workers surveyed also said they had seen sensitive company information posted on social networking sites, leading to fears about how workers use the Internet, "The Daily Telegraph" reported. Three quarters of the office workers surveyed said their employer had not given them any specific guidelines on how to use Twitter, but 84 per cent believed it should be up to them what they post online. Philip Wicks, consultant at Morse, the IT services and technology company which commissioned the survey, said the true cost to the economy could be substantially higher than the 1.38 billion pounds estimate. "When someone is asked for their own use they say around 40 minutes a week, but when asked about their colleagues they say they say up to an hour a day. We have used the lower of those figures rather than the high point. "It is the sort of thing people constantly use which means that its not quite the same as doing a crossword, where you spend half an hour on it and it is finished. When it comes to an office environment the use of these sites is clearly becoming a productivity black hole. "Social networking can be a cause for good when it is used professionally but I think organisations need to wake up – that is not the way it is always being used," he was quoted as saying.


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