Tag: virtual

  • Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 4GB RAM, 2GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Cyan

    Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 4GB RAM, 2GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Cyan

    41Ifr lmW8L51mdHaQWCZL31yjwekGJ5L21yh2HSasfL31o3umanCZL
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 4GB RAM, 2GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Cyan
    6.3″ HD+ screen
    Android 12 Go Edition with 2 years of quarterly security updates

    [ad_2]
    #Nokia #C12 #Pro #Android #Smartphone #Dual #SIM #Day #Battery #Life #4GB #RAM #2GB #RAM #2GB #Virtual #RAM #Android #Edition #Cyan

  • Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 5GB RAM, 3GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Mint

    Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 5GB RAM, 3GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Mint

    419UrPoHZDL518+EGZf1tL41Hl7KTFXtL31hzL6EbuzL21e8+oFbD3L
    Price: [price_with_discount]
    (as of [price_update_date] – Details)

    ISRHEWs
    [ad_1]
    Nokia C12 Pro Android Smartphone, Dual SIM, All Day Battery Life, 5GB RAM, 3GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM, Android 12 Go Edition | Mint
    6.3″ HD+ screen
    5GB RAM with 3GB RAM + 2GB Virtual RAM
    Android 12 Go Edition with 2 years of quarterly security updates

    [ad_2]
    #Nokia #C12 #Pro #Android #Smartphone #Dual #SIM #Day #Battery #Life #5GB #RAM #3GB #RAM #2GB #Virtual #RAM #Android #Edition #Mint

  • Hyderabad: Alliance seekers prepare for virtual matchmaking event

    Hyderabad: Alliance seekers prepare for virtual matchmaking event

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Siasat Matri is set to release a new episode of its video matrimonial series, offering hope to individuals struggling to find their life partners through a virtual matchmaking event in Hyderabad. This episode will be free to access on Zoom at 3 pm on March 19, featuring profiles of potential brides and grooms from diverse backgrounds along with contact numbers of their respective family members. This makes it easier for viewers to get in touch with the profiles that interest them and increase the chances of finding a suitable life partner.

    Topic: Du-Ba-Du & SiasatMatri Presents Episode 47 of Video Matrimony Series
    Time: Mar 19, 2023 03:00 PM India

    Join Zoom Meeting
    https://us05web.zoom.us/j/86916085315?pwd=NThETk9qS2h0NUxWV1Y5SENlSFhIUT09

    Meeting ID: 869 1608 5315
    Passcode: ZVp7t8

    With 46 episodes already released, the video matrimonial series has provided a platform for individuals seeking life partners. Siasat Matri offers a personalized approach and commitment to help users find happiness, making it a trusted resource for many in their quest to find a life partner.

    Those interested in having their profile featured in the next episode can register with Siasat Matri (click here) and choose a membership plan (click here). The platform’s experienced staff will analyze the profiles and suggest matches based on the user’s expectations.

    All services can be availed through the Siasat Matri Android (Download Now) or iOS app (Download Now), available for download from the Google Play store or Apple Store. For any assistance, individuals can contact the Siasat Matri team by dialing +917207524803, +917207244144, or +919550494556.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Alliance #seekers #prepare #virtual #matchmaking #event

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘It is disturbing’: SC on Chief Justices of HCs not allowing virtual hearing

    ‘It is disturbing’: SC on Chief Justices of HCs not allowing virtual hearing

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: The Supreme Court on Monday asked all Chief Justices of high courts to take a favourable view on the infrastructure in place for virtual hearings and not insist on physical presence of lawyers before the court.

    A bench, headed by Chief Justice of India D.Y. Chandrachud, said: “What some of the Chief Justices are doing is… all the money which we have spent, they’re just disbanding the technological infrastructure which we have created for virtual hearings”.

    “Irrespective of whether a Chief Justice is technology-friendly or not, this is not how you deal with public money. You have to ensure that infrastructure is available.”

    The top court noted the government has announced in the budget that Rs 7,000 crore would be made available for e-courts, which will be used for infrastructure improvement in all the district courts also.

    The bench, also comprising Justices P.S. Narasimha and J.B. Pardiwala, stressed that the high courts need to learn that technology has to be used and this is public money (budget allocation). It further pointed out that some of the Chief Justices are not allowing virtual hearings and it is disturbing.

    It said the judges must understand that technology is not just for the pandemic, instead it is here to stay for future and they should not insist on physical presence of lawyers.

    “We’ll formulate an order and pass.”

    “Our mission is to reach out to people. Lawyers who cannot understand English. We will translate judgments for them. Technology is doing that…” it said.

    The bench asked Bar Council of India Chairman Manan Kumar Mishra on why he cannot call a report from Bar Councils of various states on steps to be taken to improve the use of technology for the lawyers. The bench told Mishra, “Technology should not result in exclusion and you can collect the data and place it before the court…”

    The top court made these observations while hearing a matter for declaring a virtual hearing as part of fundamental rights.

    [ad_2]
    #disturbing #Chief #Justices #HCs #allowing #virtual #hearing

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • High Court Rolls Out Virtual Case Hearing For Ladakh

    High Court Rolls Out Virtual Case Hearing For Ladakh

    [ad_1]

    JAMMU: Under the effervescent patronage and guidance of Acting Chief Justice, High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, Tashi Rabstan, the High Court today rolled out an initiative of taking up the Judicial matters of UT of Ladakh through virtual mode by allowing the parties and lawyers to appear and plead their cases from Ladakh itself.

    In its first kind of initiative, the Court of Justice Tashi Rabstan today heard the matters of UT of Ladakh virtually, in which the lawyers and government representatives who were petitioners and the respondents in the listed cases appeared on virtual mode from Leh and pleaded their cases.

    As many as, six (6) matters of the UT of Ladakh were listed today before the Bench, in which the virtual proceedings were conducted.

    In the today’s era of technology, conducting the proceedings of a case virtually by connecting different locations on one platform is going to be a big boon in the judicial dispensation. Rolling out such a facility for the people of Ladakh by the High Court is aimed at easing out the sufferings of the litigants and the lawyers who earlier had to physically travel to Jammu and Srinagar for appearing in their respective matters. This will save time besides being financially viable for both parties of the case.

    “In future, hearing of the matters of Ladakh willl be done virtually by allowing the parties to appear and plead their cases from the UT itself and it will be a regular feature”, stated Anoop Kumar Sharma, Registrar Computers (IT), High Court of J&K and Ladakh.

    [ad_2]
    #High #Court #Rolls #Virtual #Case #Hearing #Ladakh

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • High Court Rolls Out Virtual Case Hearing For Ladakh

    High Court Rolls Out Virtual Case Hearing For Ladakh

    [ad_1]

    JAMMU: Under the effervescent patronage and guidance of Acting Chief Justice, High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, Tashi Rabstan, the High Court today rolled out an initiative of taking up the Judicial matters of UT of Ladakh through virtual mode by allowing the parties and lawyers to appear and plead their cases from Ladakh itself.

    In its first kind of initiative, the Court of Justice Tashi Rabstan today heard the matters of UT of Ladakh virtually, in which the lawyers and government representatives who were petitioners and the respondents in the listed cases appeared on virtual mode from Leh and pleaded their cases.

    As many as, six (6) matters of the UT of Ladakh were listed today before the Bench, in which the virtual proceedings were conducted.

    In the today’s era of technology, conducting the proceedings of a case virtually by connecting different locations on one platform is going to be a big boon in the judicial dispensation. Rolling out such a facility for the people of Ladakh by the High Court is aimed at easing out the sufferings of the litigants and the lawyers who earlier had to physically travel to Jammu and Srinagar for appearing in their respective matters. This will save time besides being financially viable for both parties of the case.

    “In future, hearing of the matters of Ladakh willl be done virtually by allowing the parties to appear and plead their cases from the UT itself and it will be a regular feature”, stated Anoop Kumar Sharma, Registrar Computers (IT), High Court of J&K and Ladakh.

    [ad_2]
    #High #Court #Rolls #Virtual #Case #Hearing #Ladakh

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • No going back: Canada’s work-from-home MPs fight to preserve virtual Parliament 

    No going back: Canada’s work-from-home MPs fight to preserve virtual Parliament 

    [ad_1]

    “Imagine if… [your] employer said you’re allowed to see your kids on Saturday. And we need you to work that day. That’s the current life under the old system,” said Liberal MP Terry Beech, who represents a riding in the western province of British Columbia. “I don’t think any Canadian would see that as reasonable.”

    Since the height of the pandemic, when working remotely was the rule, many members of Parliament have returned to Ottawa on a regular basis, preferring to stand in the House of Commons than to appear on a screen.

    But some have not. POLITICO reached out to a group of MPs who’ve chosen to mostly stay home, based on an analysis of travel expense reports since the last federal election in September 2021.

    Some have had serious health problems, and say working remotely was their only option. Some still worry about contracting Covid. But some, like Beech, say they don’t plan on returning to the way things were.

    Beech and Nathaniel Erskine-Smith, both Liberal MPs with young children, are open about choosing to spend more time away from Ottawa.

    “I’ve spent a large majority of my time in the constituency,” said Erskine-Smith, who lives in Toronto. “If you want serious people, younger people, people who want to be good spouses and be good parents to do this job … there has to be a certain level of flexibility to work remotely.”

    If Parliament went back to fully in-person proceedings, he added, “there is no chance I would run again.”

    This may be a moot point, given that Erskine-Smith is seriously considering a run for the leadership of the provincial Liberal party in Ontario. But he’s not alone. Last fall, NDP MP Laurel Collins, who has a young daughter, told the parliamentary committee considering the future of hybrid Parliament that she wasn’t sure she’d run again after the next election if virtual appearances weren’t an option.

    Beech said the pre-pandemic system was particularly unfair for MPs from western Canada, who travel long distances to Ottawa. As a parliamentary secretary — essentially an assistant to a Cabinet minister — Beech had to be in the House of Commons on Fridays, while many MPs head back to their ridings on Thursday evenings. After arriving home late Friday night, he would have Saturday to see his family and do constituency work, before heading back to Ottawa on Sunday.

    The hybrid Parliament has changed all that. “Managed correctly, you have more time to hit the gym, kiss your wife and pick up your kids from childcare,” he said in written comments to POLITICO. “I have to say I really enjoy attending national caucus meetings on my treadmill from time to time.”

    Beech said his new schedule also allows him to spend more time attending events in his constituency.

    Others view things differently, however. The opposition Conservatives have long called for a full return to in-person proceedings, claiming the hybrid option allows the government to dodge accountability. Still, some within their ranks have relied heavily on virtual appearances and remote voting.

    Conservative MP Todd Doherty said he wants to be back in the House of Commons full-time, but a serious injury has prevented him. Shortly after the 2021 election, he had knee-replacement surgery. Then, during the first week of the parliamentary session, he slipped on a wet floor and damaged his leg so badly he was at risk of losing it. He’s now recovering from a second surgery last December.

    “I took full advantage of hybrid because it was out of necessity,” he said.

    Despite a 17-hour commute between Ottawa and his northern B.C. riding, Doherty said he wants to get back to the way things were. “There’s not many Canadians that can say that they’ve been able to deliver speeches on the floor of the House of Commons,” he said. “And I think there’s nothing that will ever take that place.”

    If hybrid proceedings hadn’t been an option, he said, “I would have made it work. There’s no two ways about it — I would have done the best I could.”

    A few other Conservatives have also been conspicuously absent. Manitoba MP Ted Falk, one of a small group of Conservatives who disappeared from the House of Commons after a Covid vaccination requirement was imposed in the fall of 2021, appears to have spent very few sitting days in Ottawa between the election and the following summer break. Falk did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

    Other MPs say illness or fragile health has kept them on Zoom and out of Ottawa. Liberal MP Parm Bains, who has spent almost no time on Parliament Hill since he was elected as a rookie in 2021, has spoken openly about the dialysis treatment and kidney transplant that have kept him home in Richmond, B.C.

    “If it were not for the hybrid Parliament provisions, I could not have safeguarded my health and kept my commitment to represent my constituents in Parliament,” he wrote in a recent op-ed.

    Hedy Fry, another Liberal MP from B.C., told POLITICO she’s immunocompromised and has been staying home in Vancouver to avoid catching Covid. But Fry, 81, said it isn’t the same as being on the Hill, where she’s been an MP for nearly 30 years. “It has been difficult not to see [my] colleagues,” she said. “You can’t build relationships, either with your constituents or other people, when you’re always on a Zoom with them.”

    Erskine-Smith said there’s likely a “distinction on generational grounds” when it comes to how MPs view remote work.

    Tracking the physical presence of legislators in Parliament is challenging. Unlike with the American proxy voting system, data on remote voting in the House of Commons is not publicly available. Travel expense reports shed light on when MPs are in Ottawa, but they aren’t always up to date and can be difficult to interpret.

    Still, there are other cases that stand out. Liberal MP Serge Cormier, who represents a riding in Atlantic Canada, appears to have spent roughly five sitting days in Ottawa between the fall of 2021 and the summer of 2022. He did not respond to multiple interview requests. Neither did Toronto-area Liberal MP Shaun Chen, who seems to have spent about 10 sitting days in the capital.

    NDP MP Niki Ashton, who represents a remote riding in northern Manitoba, also appears to have been in Ottawa for about 10 sitting days. She did not respond to POLITICO’s requests, though she has previously proclaimed that “a family friendly Parliament means a hybrid Parliament.”

    The decision of some lawmakers to spend much less time in Ottawa raises other questions. Many of the MPs who’ve been more often in their home ridings, including Beech, Erskine-Smith, Doherty, Fry, Chen and Ashton, still claim expenses for apartments or condos in the nation’s capital, often charging between C$1,000 and C$2,500 a month.

    Erskine-Smith said he’s been trying to sell his condo for more than a year. Beech said he needs to keep his home base in Ottawa, even though he’s spending less time there, so that his wife and kids have somewhere to stay when they join him.

    But Doherty said it weighs on him. “It is definitely something that you think about all the time,” he said. “These dollars aren’t ours. These dollars are taxpayer dollars.”

    The Liberal government must now decide whether to propose permanent changes to the rules governing the House of Commons. But in a possible indication of the direction it will take, Government House leader Mark Holland has spoken out forcefully in favor of hybrid provisions. He told the committee last fall about the impact that being a parliamentarian had on his personal life early in his career, including a failed marriage and a suicide attempt.

    Divorce and mental health issues are all too common among federal politicians, Beech told POLITICO. “I am so happy to still be married to my wife… to be able to watch my kids grow up,” he said. “Hybrid needs to stay… the country will be better for it.”



    [ad_2]
    #Canadas #workfromhome #MPs #fight #preserve #virtual #Parliament
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )