Tuesday, 14 February 2012

Italy buys its first three F-35s

On Feb. 7, 2012, Gen. Claudio Debertolis, head of the agency that is responsible for the procurement of new armaments, has announced that Italy has already ordered the first three Lockheed Martin F-35s.

Unit price: 80 million USD.

Talking to the lower house’s defense commitee, Debertolis explained that these first planes will cost more than the rest of the fleet since costs are going to decrease as the program, currently in Low Rate Initial Production, continues. The Italian high rank officer is particularly optimistic, as he believes that the unit price will be around 70 million each (Lockheed Martin estimates 65M USD for the F-35A and about 73M USD for the F-35B), less than the 79 million USD currently paid for the Eurofighter Typhoon and much less of the 121 million USD per aircraft anticipated in 2011.

Quite surprising, since unit price is one of the JSF partner’s main concern, but possible, considering also that the Typhoon has just lost India’s mother of all tenders based on price.

Although there’s no official commitment yet, the initial requirement for Italy foresaw 131 examples (69 conventional take-off and landing F-35As and 62 of the short take-off and vertical landing variant F-35Bs). Debertolis confirmed that determining how many aircraft Italy will purchase is not a current task, since it will depend on the Defense Budget Review. Nevertheless, even if the number of aircraft will be much lower than the initial 131, the MoD will work to make sure that the industry will get the expected compensation.

Italy is working on stretching deliveries and slowing purchase “a much easier task than that with the Eurofighter program, since the F-35 procurement is modular therefore delays don’t imply increasing costs” Debertolis said.

Furthermore with the recent Eurofighter defeat in India, Italy is going to stop working on the Typhoon and “divert” part (if not all) of its workforce towards the F-35, being assembled at the Cameri FACO (Final Assembly and Check Out) facility.

Finally, Debertolis has confirmed that Italy will have both A and B variants, with the STOVL (Short Take Off Vertical Landing) ones serving both the Air Force and the Navy, that will use them on the Cavour aircraft carrier.

In spite of the widespread criticism surrounding the program and the global financial crisis it looks like the F-35 has, if not a bright future ahead, at least good chances to survive the austerity measures of the new Monti’s technocratic cabinet

Courtesy: www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=191612247612604&set=pu.128391897267973&type=1&theater

Brazil jets deal heats up as Boeing freezes bid



Boeing has frozen the price on its bid for a multi-billion-dollar Brazilian air force jet contract, sources close to the deal told Reuters, as the global race to sell military hardware to emerging economic powers becomes more competitive.

Boeing is offering to sell its F-18 fighter to Brazil for the same price per plane as its previous offer during a round of bidding in 2009, the sources said. They spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the bidding process.

The sources declined to divulge the dollar amount of the bid, which includes the cost of the plane as well as some future maintenance and replacement parts. But the offer essentially means that Boeing would assume the cost of inflation over the past two-plus years, while the planes would be more than 12 percent cheaper for Brazil in real terms compared to 2009.

“It’s an unusual move … that shows how much value is being placed upon this contract,” one of the sources said.

Boeing is competing with France’s Dassault and Sweden’s Saab for the Brazil deal, which is expected to be worth more than $4 billion over time. Brazilian Defense Minister Celso Amorim told Reuters in January that he hopes the government will make a decision in the first half of 2012.

Boeing’s offer illustrates how U.S. and European defense firms are aggressively pursuing deals in the developing world as their markets dry up at home due to budget cuts. Companies are also disputing jet contracts in the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and South Korea.

Dassault last week entered exclusive talks to sell its Rafale to India, which could lead to the jet’s first foreign order. The deal could make the Rafale a more viable option in the Brazilian bidding process, since an established production line would allow Dassault to offer more stable pricing over time and reduce the risk of cost overruns.

The Brazilian deal will be decided by more than just price. While the F-18 is widely believed to be cheaper than the Rafale, Amorim has said that Brazil will base its choice primarily on how generously the companies offer to share their proprietary technology. Brazil hopes that knowledge will help it build a homegrown defense industry, led by Embraer, which is making a return to its roots by investing in military aircraft.

President Dilma Rousseff also sees the deal as a key decision in Brazil’s strategic alignment during the next few decades, officials have said. The planes will be used to help guard Brazil’s borders, protect its recently discovered offshore oil fields, and project greater power as Latin America’s largest economy continues its climb into the world’s elite.

A spokesman for the Brazilian government did not reply to a request for comment. Boeing spokeswoman Marcia Costley said: “We’re in a competition and can’t comment on the specifics of our offering but what I can say is that Boeing can guarantee a price that has been trending downwards because we have an active production line and can leverage economies of scale.”

OUTCOME UNCLEAR

Amorim’s recent comments suggest that the Brazilian deal is entering its endgame after more than a decade of intrigue and last-minute surprises.

Rousseff’s predecessor, Luiz InĂ¡cio Lula da Silva, all but declared Dassault the winner late in his presidency but left office without finalizing the deal. Rousseff then appeared to favor Boeing in comments shortly after taking office in January 2011, but recent developments including Dassault’s India talks mean the final decision is now anybody’s guess.

Brazilian newspaper Folha de S.Paulo reported this week that the government is leaning toward the Rafale again, though it did not provide a source for the information.

Rousseff is likely to personally lead the decision-making on the contract, Amorim said in January.

The decision may come at a moment when Rousseff will be under unusually heavy pressure to be cost-conscious. The government is expected to freeze about $30 billion in budget spending in the next few weeks, equivalent to just over 3 percent of this year’s budget, in an effort to cool the economy and help contain inflation.

The budget freeze will likely be unpopular among members of Congress who will see their discretionary funds cut. That means that Rousseff will need to appear circumspect on other big purchases – including the jets – in order to avert a backlash.



Courtesywww.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=191616030945559&set=pu.128391897267973&type=1&theater

Military Acquisitions


India’s big-ticket military acquisitions are expected to aggressively push schedules for the transfer of production to the country’s ambitious aerospace and defense industry. But the technology that India expects to be transferred through co-development work generated by offset agreements is raising concerns among vendors about possible violations of intellectual property rights (IPR).

A revised policy on offsets is expected to be released soon and the industry hopes that this will at last deal with the thorny issue of transfer of technology (TOT), which is no longer mandatory as part bids, as it was in the past. Starting with projects awarded from 2011, TOT can now be offered as offsets.
Industry observers say India’s lack of clarity on dual technology and IPR may result in OEMs finding ways to circumvent the use of advanced technology on the grounds that India does not have safeguards to protect manufacturers that license technology to local partners. The Indian industry has called for a National Technology Audit Agency and an integrated legal framework to be put in place to ensure TOT protects the OEM.

Issues are already surfacing. India’s Aeronautical Development Agency selected 99 GE F414 engines to power the Mk II version of Hindustan Aeronautics’s Light Combat Aircraft for the Indian Air Force. GE Aviation will supply the initial batch of F414-GE-INS6 engines and the rest will be manufactured in India under transfer of technology arrangement.

The contract requires 10 engines to be provided in flyaway condition. The agreement also contains a30-percent offset clause and will tap some of the 24 Indian companies that GE has certified. But with India indicating that it might use the TOT for the engine for its indigenous aircraft under development, OEMs are seeing red. “We can almost be sure there will be no transfer of crystal blades of the F414, something India desperately needs,” said an analyst under condition of anonymity.

Last year, there were more than 50 contracts in India that required offsets worth $10 billion. This will increase proportionately with programs such as the $12-billion-plus contract for 126 medium multi-role combat aircraft contract, the $4 billion Boeing P-8I maritime surveillance aircraft program, Boeing’s Harpoon anti-ship missile and the$4.1 billion deal for 10 Boeing C-17 Globemaster aircraft for the Indian Air Force.Further, contracts for basic jet trainers, light helicopters and towed artillery are close to being signed.

Public-private sector partnerships are expected to play a key role in the future. Clarity on the long-delayed joint venture policy to increase foreign participation from 26 to 49 percent is awaited. The potential of Defense Private Sector Units (DPSUs) as large-scale offset discharge vehicles remains uncertain, especially given the capacity and current orderbook mismatch. A choked orderbook for DPSUs looking to honor delivery timelines and future order absorption capacity is a concern.

“India’s largest defense manufacturer Hindustan Aeronautics currently has an orderbook of $18 billion… Its ability to absorb additional orders remains uncertain, given the historical structural issues, even after adjusting for complexity for the order pipeline, currently faced by HAL,” concluded a report by consultancy Aviotech. The comparable order backlogs for other major aerospace firms is around three years for Embraer and around one year for Lockheed Martin.

A letter addressed last year to the India minister of defense by various international associations, including U.S. Aerospace Industries Association and GIFAS of France, recommended increased FDI, wider permission for dual-use technologies and expand the scope of offsets–many of which the MOD has adopted. The letter asks for multipliers in offsets contracts especially in TOT and production-license-based projects and FDI. The letter also calls for “one clear offset authority” outside of the Defense Acquisition Council with decision-making power to “approve contracts in a predictable, efficient and transparent manner.”

“We improve it [the policy] every year, with suggestions from industry and vendors…and refine [it] as we go along,” said Pallam Raju, state minister for defense.

Recently, at a public forum, Raju acknowledged that DPSUs lack program management skills. “ [Improving the skills] is a painful process. It will take some time to gather the requisite skills as programs mature gradually,” he said, while adding that the government is committed to encouraging private participation in defense production, with the ministry focused on strengthening and widening the defense industrial base.

“The Indian aerospace industry is exposed to some risk from its limited expertise in materials science,” said Rahul Gangal, Aviotech’s director for defense advisory and investments. For example, capability has not evolved in the composites precursor and fiber segments of aircraft design and production. Keeping this in focus, the new offsets policy is expected to include certain areas where TOT is required in India, including nanotechnology, single crystal blades, titanium honeycomb and investment casting for barrel manufacture.

Courtesy -www.facebook.com/indiandefencefans

Russia to Increase Number of 5G Fighters in Test Flights




Russia to Increase Number of 5G Fighters in Test Flights
14, 2012
by-RIA NOVOSTI



The number of Russia’s Sukhoi T-50 5th generation fighters involved in test flights will be increased to 14 from three by 2015, Russian Air Force Commander Col. Gen. Alexander Zelin told RIA Novosti on Monday.

“There are three fighters already in tests, another three are expected to be tested in the nearest future. The entire number of aircraft planned for test flights is 14,” Zelin said.

The T-50, developed under the program PAK FA (Future Aviation System for Tactical Air Force) at the Sukhoi aircraft design bureau, made its first public appearance at the MAKS-2011 air show near Moscow on August 17, 2011.

The fighter, which is being developed in partnership with India, made its maiden flight in the Russian Far East in early 2010.

Zelin also said that Russia’s T-50 outstripped its U.S. and Chinese analogues.

“After a comparative analysis of the fighter’s characteristics with the U.S. F-22 Raptor and Chinese J-20 stealth aircraft, we can conclude that PAK FA exceeds the foreign analogues in maximum speed, flight range, maximum takeoff weight and the maximum overload value,” Zelin added.

Russia has been developing its fifth-generation fighter since the 1990s. The country’s top military officials have said the stealth fighter jet, with a range of up to 5,500 kilomeeters, should enter service with the Air Force in 2015.



Courtesy-www.facebook.com/indiandefencefans

Raytheon Delivers First International Maritime Surveillance Radar to Boeing for Indian’s P-8I aircraft


Raytheon Delivers First International Maritime Surveillance Radar to Boeing for Indian’s P-8I aircraft


by-IDF
February 14, 2012




AMERICAN RADAR VARIANT PICTURE

Raytheon Company has delivered the first international version of its APY-10 surveillance radar to Boeing. The radar will be installed on the P-8I aircraft Boeing is building for the Indian navy.”Our APY-10 radar will provide the Indian navy with proven, low-risk technology built on generations of successful Raytheon maritime radar systems,” said Tim Carey, vice president for Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance Systems at Raytheon’s Space and Airborne Systems business. “Adaptable and configurable, the APY-10 radar is a premier example of Raytheon’s ability to meet key customer requirements.”

The APY-10 radar delivers accurate and actionable information in all weather, day and night, for anti-submarine and anti-surface warfare, and for intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance missions.

To meet unique requirements for the Indian navy, Raytheon has added an air-to-air mode, which provides the detection and tracking of airborne targets, allowing customers to detect threats in the air as well as at sea. In addition, an interleaved weather and surface search capability has been added to provide the cockpit with up-to-date weather avoidance information while performing surveillance missions.

With reduced weight and power consumption, the APY-10 radar has improved the average mean time between failure by six times over earlier generation radars. In addition to the new capabilities, the design can accommodate significant future growth. Raytheon is under contract to produce eight APY-10 radars for the Indian navy.

About Raytheon Raytheon Company, with 2011 sales of $25 billion, is a technology and innovation leader specializing in defense, homeland security and other government markets throughout the world. With a history of innovation spanning 90 years, Raytheon provides state-of-the-art electronics, mission systems integration and other capabilities in the areas of sensing; effects; and command, control, communications and intelligence systems, as well as a broad range of mission support services. With headquarters in Waltham, Mass., Raytheon employs 71,000 people worldwide



Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Funding's for foreign education



Only the very rich  people will be able to finance their children’s overseas education in full. Higher education in the universities in countries such as the U.S. and the U.K. is so high-priced that those in the middle or even in the higher income brackets in India cannot meet the expenses by themselves. They will have to seek support from scholarship providers.
There are certain institutions in India which offer scholarships to students for their study abroad. But the amounts given are usually inadequate to meet the heavy expenses. Many universities have schemes for providing scholarships to international students. Right at the time of applying for admission, you may indicate to the professor or other admitting authority that you may need financial support for undertaking the study.
Of course, students will be able go for part-time jobs subject to the norms of their university. There will be restrictions in terms of the number of hours of part-time work. In many cases, graduate students may be given teaching assignments in the undergraduate classes. Even after getting fellowships or scholarships, you may have to go for bank loans.



Sources
The following are some of the sources for scholarships giving support to students for higher studies. You can get detailed information from the websites, and later get in touch with the organisations for help and assistance.
Ford Foundation - www.fordfound.org/fields/
education/overview
International Financial Aid - www.iefa.org
gates-millennium-scholar.aspx
Sallie Mae (Loans) - www.salliemae.com
Commonwealth Scholarship & Marshall - www.acu.ac.uk
Chevening - www.chevening.com (U.K. scholarship)
corporate.htm
Rotary Foundation - www.rotary.org/foundation/
education/amb_scho
www.international
scholarships.
com
www.international
StudentLoan.





com
www.internationalstudent.
com/
scholarships
http://scholarship-positions.
com
www.educationuk.org – U.K. scholarships
www.australianscholarships.gov.au – Australian scholarship
www.moe.gov.sg/education/scholarships - Singapore scholarships
www.sport-scholarships.com - Sports scholarships
French Government Scholarships (six sites) -
European Union Scholarships - http://eacea.ec.europa.eu/
erasmus_mundus/funding/
scholarships_students_




academics_en.
php
Rhodes Scholarship - www.rhodesscholarships-india.com (Higher studies in Oxford)
Gates Cambridge Scholarship - www.gatesscholar.org (Higher studies in Cambridge)
External scholarships arranged by the Department of Higher Education, Government of India, in China, South Korea, Israel, Japan, Czech Republic, Slovakia, New Zealand, Commonwealth countries, Belgium, Italy, Mexico, Norway, and Turkey - www.education.nic.in
You should remember that investment in appropriate higher education is perhaps the best form of investment. The fine qualifications you acquire can hardly be evaluated in terms of dollars or rupees. The rate of return or yield from investment in tertiary education may not be worked out as in a commercial endeavour, since the enhancement of your personality, social status, prestige, culture, thought processes and quality of life brought about through educational refinement cannot be quantified in terms of money.
Where do you start?
You should have a clear picture of how you should proceed to secure admission in a foreign university. The entire process has to be taken up with the seriousness it deserves. You have to be prompt and punctual in responding to the professors or other admitting authorities overseas. Many of us have a casual approach to the need of doing things on time. Giving some excuse for not doing something in time may result in your rejection.
You should invariably meet all deadlines with promptitude. You will find that professors in the U.S. and many other countries respond to you through e-mail promptly. You should not give room to an excuse such as “I am sorry, I had not opened my mailbox for a week; otherwise I would have answered your query earlier.” Even one response of this kind may be interpreted as lack of your interest in the admission.
You may be trying to secure admission not in one university, but half-a-dozen of them simultaneously. You should maintain separate files or directories for each. There should not be any confusion or mistake through sending a mail to a wrong addressee. The information you give should be accurate and comprehensive. Normally you should not have to send supplementary information.
Provide as much relevant information as possible to the professor or other admitting authorities, enabling them to make a well-informed decision in your favour. In case of doubt, seek advice with regard to the information required by the university. There should not be any occasion when you have to send a correction.









The application material will be almost the same for all the universities in your favoured list. But there may be some differences. That is why you should pay particular attention to each piece of correspondence. Once an e-mail is sent, you cannot take it back. Also, you should ensure that you send your application sufficiently in advance, so that it receives necessary attention before the seats are filled up. The early bird catches the worm.
Your certificates, examination scores, statement of purpose, and the letters of recommendation will paint your picture before the admitting authorities. They may sometimes speak to you over the telephone. As you would know, telephone interviews are quite common these days for job recruitment. That style may be used by certain universities.
Interview
Normally no university would ask you to fly to its centre for taking a face-to-face interview for selection to an undergraduate or graduate programme. However, if you are being considered for a research degree such as Ph.D, you may be called for a face-to-face interview. Also, if you are in the country where the university is located, you may be asked to go for a direct interview.
The object of a pre-admission interview is to check and confirm your claims in the application material you have furnished: ability for grasping complex ideas, ability for analytical thinking, ability for independent work, ability to undergo the programme successfully, knowledge level in the subject of study, suitability for the programme, passion for the subject, ability for application of knowledge in a new situation, ability for innovation, aptitude for research, language skills, commitment and dedication, etc.

Courtesy:www.hindu.com -GUIDANCE PLUS
Funding your foreign education
B.S. WARRIER 

Monday, 23 January 2012

Eye Sky (Mugila kannu) Project

Its my  privilege to bring one of our successful  project Mugila kannu (Eye of sky) in this blog...


   The project is headed by our Professor and guide  Mr.Prithviraj .U..


Let me add media explanation to it ...












An ‘eye’ on sky

Sandhya C D’Souza, Mangalore, January 21 2012, DHNS:








(Me extreme right  with my Team)
The International Kite Festival which kicked off at Panambur beach was a visual treat  and many were seen glaring into the sky with their sunglasses. However, a person who was busy staring into a weird equipment in his hand caught everyone’s attention.


Many started peeping into the equipment and were filled with awe to see a bird’s eye view of the entire Panambur beach.


Prithivraj U, Associate Professor of Applied Mechanics and Hydrolics at NITK has created ‘Mugila Kannu,’ The Eye in the sky, an aerial camera mounted on a kite. This is the first time in India, that such equipment is being mounted on the kite to get an aerial view, he claims.


Explaining his equipment, Prithviraj said that he has mounted a Canon 450 series camera on a kite with a transmitter and the equipment in his hand is a receiver. “The camera records the images, and I can also click pictures. The video is transmitted through a radio frequency of 900 MHz. We can also pan and tilt the camera to get a 360 degree view with a joystick. This is controlled by another radio frequency of 2.4 GHz. I get the display captured by the camera in a small TFT Monitor,” he explains.


Manufacture cost
Prithviraj accompanied by his project staff Sanjay and Mohan have been working on Mugila Kannu for more than six months and the equipment costs Rs 75,000. 


The 12 megapixel camera can record the view of 1.25 kilometers.


“We had visited Mangalore Kite Festival two years back. A person from France had brought a similar equipment and we were fascinated with it. We decided to build a similar equipment by the next Kite Festival. We have got a lot of support from Team Mangalore, especially from its member Janardhan ,” says Prithiviraj. 


Most of the equipment was fabricated at NITK. 


However, some parts had to be imported. “This device can be quiet handy in terms of security. One can simply hoist the camera, if the wind is good and keep watch for hours,” he concludes.

Daijiworld Media Network - Mangalore

Mangalore: 'Mugila Kannu' - An 'Eye in the Sky' at International Kite Fest

Mangalore: 'Mugila Kannu' - An 'Eye in the Sky' at International Kite Fest
Prakash Samaga
Daijiworld Media Network - Mangalore

Mangalore, Jan 22: While everyone was enthusiastically flying their kites in the open sky at Panambur beach during the International Kite Festival on Saturday January 21, Prathviraj Umesh was standing with a TFT-monitored remote controller and was controlling a camera attached to a kite.
An assistant professor from the applied mechanics and hydraulics department in NITK, Surathkal, he prepared this unique device which he named ‘Mugila Kannu’ (meaning ‘eye in the sky’) which gives a bird's eye view of the beach on his monitor connected through a wireless signal.
Aerial views  Captured by unit

From right :-Me(Mohan) ,Janardhan Roa,Prof-Prithviraj,Umesh,Bangalore team member and Sanjay
Ground Controlling and Operating unit
Aerial unit  with our Kite
Professor  with media people
Guide and Professor Prithiviraj.U

It is for the first time in the country that this sort of an aerial camera connected to a kite has been produced. Prathviraj was helped by project heads Sanjay and Mohan as well as Janardhan of ‘Team Mangalore’. There are two devices—one to receive the signals and another to transmit the signals—and the picture is displayed on the TFT screen in the ‘Mugila Kannu’.


The device has two different radio signals—one to transmit the image or video taken by the camera and another to pan and tilt the camera for a customized image. The camera fixed in the kite has a resolution of 12 mega pixels which is good enough to give a commanding view from the top. The frequency of the camera is 2.4 GHZ and for video recording it is 900 MHZ. It has a 360 degree view to capture the image.


Asked about what influenced him in making this unique device, he said that in the last international kite festival held here, a kite flyer named Nicolas from France had brought such a device and this made him create his own such apparatus to enjoy the kite flying from up in the sky.
Prathviraj and his team men took one year to make this device as they did it during their free time. The expenditure was about Rs 75,000 as some of the equipment used is imported. He also has plans to make it available for any security purposes if demanded by the defense department. Prathviraj, however, adds that the cost of each device will come down with mass production and he would make it for a reasonable price as it is not his business but only a hobby.




WWW.Mangalorean.com

Mangalore: 'An Eye in the Sky' at Kite Festival Affords Sharp View from Top

 
By Akram Mohammed, Team Mangalorean [ Published Date: January 22, 2012 ]
Mangalore: A majority have not visited the International Kite Festival on the Panambur beach here and the majority who have witnessed it might not have noticed a kite with a camera in the sky. Of course, there are too many beautiful kites in the sky with attention rarely resting on one particular kite alone.
Call it a bird's eye view or better even a 'kite's eye view', a kite is a also bird, after all.
Mugila Kannu - Eye in the Sky
Aptly named 'Mugila Kannu' (an eye in the sky in Kannada), the camera mounted on a kite is a project by Pruthviraj U, assistant professor, department of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics at NITK-Surathkal, which he is displaying at the International Kite Festival. 'I have developed it as a hobby', he said.
The camera has some unique features. Mugila Kannu is composed of two units, first being the unit to transmit the pan and tilt of the camera and the second unit to trigger the camera to capture photographs. Prithviraj says that he is able to control the pan and tilt of the camera in any angle he wants. This is an exciting prospect for a gadget hanging 50 metres up in the sky and controlled by two joysticks.
Mugila Kannu is connected to a main kite rope. This is where the expenses in creating such a kite tend to sink in. The kite rope or the thread comes at a cool Rs 25,000 and is able to withstand a tension pull of up to 45 kilogrammes. The thread is made of Kevlar, a synthetic fibre strong enough to be used in bullet-proof body armours. What speeds of winds can the kite with the camera withstand, with such a tough thread to support it? It depends on the size of the kite, says Pruthviraj.
The camera is suspended on a seven-foot kite made of rip-sail cloth. As ignorant as I was about the 'rip sail cloth', Pruthviraj explained that rip-sail cloth are used in parachutes around the world. The cloth is preferred for its light weight and its strength to withstand wind speeds. It has been imported from the Netherlands and cost not more than Rs 20,000.
Canon Powershot A480 series with a resolution of 10 megapixels is probably among the cheapest apparatus in the whole kite. Though the resolution of the camera is not quite to a pixel perfectionist's liking, one can fit any DSLR camera.
The camera is suspended using a mechanism called Picavet. In one of the photographs in the album one can see Pruthviraj displaying the camera suspended in a Picavet. The Picavet keeps the camera parallel to the ground irrespective of the wind pulling the kite hither and thither.
The whole unit weighs 1.5 kilogrammes and is slightly lighter in weight than some large kites you can see if you visit the kite festival.
Camera Operation
The camera is operated from the ground by an operator. The signals to capture an image, and the 'viewpoint' of the camera are being transmitted in a wireless mode. A 900-MegaHertz transmitter weighing a mere 25 grammes is also suspended along the camera to ensure transmission of signals.
There are three sets of batteries too. The first set keeps the battery running for a good four hours, second set are for the motors that control the pan and tilt of the camera and the third set of batteries are for transmitting video. Can one transmit videos as seen by the camera to a screen. Yes. But they haven't done it this time. There are still more tweaks to do, as experience grows with such exposures.
The team of Pruthviraj has captured around 380 photographs on day 1. They expect to capture better photographs on day 2, as night kite flying with lights is expected today.

Heard from the crowd:

"This is fabulous. Some gadget of this kind should be permanently flying over the city to monitor public disturbances, traffic jams and the like."
"At all kinds of festivals and gatherings, this should be flying and the images should be projected on an LCD screen. It would be fun."


courtesy:Deccan Herlad,www.daijiworld.com,www.Mangalorean.com