Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Pakistan players ruled out of IPL

Pakistan players will not feature in the second edition of the Indian Premier League commissioner Lalit Modi has confirmed.

Eleven Pakistan players who participated in the IPL last year while five more had been included on a list of over 100 players drawn up for an auction ahead of this year`s tournament. But Pakistan's Foreign Office, however, refused to grant permission to players to travel to India due to deteriorating diplomatic and political ties between the countries.

"We have informed the IPL and the Board of Control for Cricket in India of the Pakistan's government's decision not to allow players to travel to India for the IPL," Pakistan Cricket Board's chief operating officer Saleem Altaf said.

The five players included for Friday's auction were removed from the list, which was trimmed down to just 43 players overall.

"The Pakistan Cricket Board has informed us that no Pakistan players will be allowed to play in the IPL," Modi confirmed.

"This is something which is beyond our control."

The majority of Pakistan's players who had participated in the first edition have three-year contracts in place with the IPL.

Champions Rajasthan Royals will be the hardest hit as they will now be without left-arm seamer Sohail Tanvir, the highest wicket-taker in the Twenty20 competition last year with 21.

The Jaipur-based team have two other Pakistan players in their ranks, while Kolkata Knight Riders have the maximum number of four.

But the Pakistan's government's decision also means the IPL franchisees will not have to pay these players.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Google's blunder ever



Google did a blunder of their life today when by mistake the search engine placed the entire internet on a blacklist which caused every site, that appeared as a search result in the search engine's result pages, to be marked as potentially harmful and dangerous.

This caused the Search giant an embarrassment and a search advertisement loss of $2-3m. The problem affected internet pages across the world, and lasted for around 40 minutes before engineeers were able to fix it.

Google blamed "human error" when an engineer tried to add one web address to the list of those deemed suspicious, and mistakenly added them all.

"We periodically receive updates to that list and received one such update to release on the site this morning. Unfortunately (and here's the human error), the URL of '/' was mistakenly checked in as a value to the file and '/' expands to all URLs. Fortunately, our on-call site reliability team found the problem quickly and reverted the file," Google said in its official blog.