Short Term Buy Call For Dish TV India
December 4, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under Technology
Stock market analysts have maintained ‘buy’ rating on Dish TV India stock with a short term target.
According to analysts, interested investors can purchase the stock on declines with a stop loss of Rs 18. If the stock market remains positive in the coming days, the stock pricing becomes more attractive, and reach above Rs 25.
Today (Jan 27), the company’s shares opened at Rs 18.60 on the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), as against its last closure at Rs 18.40 on Friday (Jan 23). The share price has seen a 52-week high of Rs 75.80 and a low of Rs 11.75 on BSE.
It is clear from the charts of Dish TV that it has been on an intermediate-term up trend from its 52-week low (Rs 11.75), which was recorded in late October 2008.
The company’s stock, on December 10, conclusively came through a key resistance level of Rs 18 by gaining 16%.
Presently, this resistance level is acting as a major level of support for the stock.
Taking twin support from an important support level at Rs 18 and the intermediate-term up trend line, the company’s stock surged 3.5% along with good volume on January 23. This positive move has further strengthened the bullish momentum.
The daily relative strength index (RSI) is going up in the neutral region in the direction of bullish region.
Considering that the intermediate-term up trendline continues to be intact, analysts are confident on the stock from a short-term viewpoint.
They think the stock to gain further until it hits their said target of Rs 21 in the forthcoming trading sessions.
Short Term Buy Call For Dish TV India was first posted on January 27, 2009 at 1:06 pm.
Google To Expose traffic Chokers
December 4, 2009 by Trend PK
Filed under Technology
Google has begun offering tools to expose Internet service providers that choke traffic or shift users into slow lanes while allowing others to zip along at high speeds.
The online search and advertising king is an unabashed champion of “net neutrality” in which all Internet traffic is treated equally instead of letting service providers give preferential treatment to privileged clients.
“At Google, we care deeply about sustaining the Internet as an open platform for consumer choice and innovation,” Google chief evangelist Vint Cerf and principal engineer Stephen Stuart wrote in an online posting.
“No matter your views on net neutrality and ISP network management practices, everyone can agree that Internet users deserve to be well-informed about what they’re getting when they sign up for broadband.”
The PlanetLab Consortium, and academic researchers to create an online Measurement Lab (M-Lab) that researchers can use to detect Internet traffic manipulation.
“When an Internet application doesn’t work as expected or your connection seems flaky, how can you tell whether there is a problem caused by your broadband ISP, the application, your PC, or something else?” Cerf wrote.
“It can be difficult for experts, let alone average Internet users, to address this sort of question today.”
M-Lab went online Wednesday with three diagnostic tools running on computer servers near Google headquarters in Mountain View, California.
The tools are available to help users “diagnose common problems that might impair their broadband speed, as well as determine whether BitTorrent is being blocked or throttled by their ISPs,” according to Cerf, a computer scientist often called “father of the Internet.
ISPs argue that such measures are necessary to manage growing congestion on the Internet highway. Google has been among those advocating against fettering online traffic, saying that doing so stifles Internet innovation and growth.
M-Lab is in a nascent phase and through the year Google will add servers in a dozen locations in Europe and the United States. More diagnostic tools will be added and results made public, according to Google.
“M-Lab is intended to be a truly community-based effort, and we welcome the support of other companies, institutions, researchers, and users that want to provide servers, tools, or other resources that can help the platform flourish,” Cerf wrote.
Google To Expose traffic Chokers was first posted on January 29, 2009 at 10:57 am.

