Ghaziabad man shoots wife for not bringing ‘enough’ dowry
Ghaziabad man shoots wife for not bringing ‘enough’ dowry
A woman was shot dead by her husband following a dispute over dowry in Ghaziabad s Raj Nagar Extension area on Tuesday morning.
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UPDATED: June 2, 2021 02:34 IST
The victim identified as Sarika (24) got married to Kuldeep alias Mintoo in February last year. (Photo: India Today/Tanseem Haider)
A 24-year-old woman was allegedly shot dead by her husband after a heated argument over dowry demand in Ghaziabad s Raj Nagar Extension area, police said on Tuesday.
The incident took place in Sihani village on Tuesday morning.
Oracle ups the ante in MySQL competition while others maneuver for market share
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A commonly understood principle in the tech world is that over time, every industry ultimately gets disrupted. It’s MySQL’s turn.
The popular database technology was due for a shakeup after nearly 26 years. That disruption has recently been fueled by Oracle Corp., which released MySQL HeatWave in December. Other major cloud players and a growing ecosystem of smaller firms are seeking to raise MySQL’s profile in the future role of database tech for enterprise information technology.
In the past, MySQL was great for transactions, but data usually had to be moved via the so-called extract/transfer/load or ETL process for analytics. Transfers take time, and time is money. If the database got too big, performance would deteriorate.
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When Oracle Corp. acquired Sun Microsystems for $7.5 billion in 2009, there was some concern expressed in the tech community that the company would view Sun’s open-source database – MySQL – as a troublesome competitor, destined for oblivion.
Instead, Oracle has taken the MySQL car into the garage, added a new engine, fine-tuned the steering, and rolled out an in-memory database query accelerator, which the company claims is faster than anything else on the cloud market today.
The new service, which Oracle introduced last year under the name HeatWave, offers an intriguing new spin on a technology that made its first appearance over 25 years ago.
Highlights
They were allegedly selling Remdesivir injections for Rs 30,000-40,000
Police recovered 70 vials of Remdesivir injections along with Rs 36 lakh cash, a car and 2 motorbikes
Ghaziabad: A joint team of special weapons and tactics (SWAT) and Kotwali police have arrested three men, including a doctor working in Lucknow s King George s Medical University, for allegedly hoarding Remdesivir injections here, police said.
Mohammad Altamash (42), a resident of Delhi s Nizamuddin, had earlier worked at AIIMS Delhi and regularly delivered lectures to medical students in various medical colleges.
His two accomplices Kumail of Kaila Bhatta in Ghaziabad and Jazim Ali of Bara Hindu Rao in Delhi have been nabbed along with the doctor as the trio were searching for family members who were in dire need of the life-saving injection for COVID-19 patients and charged between Rs 30,000 to 40,000 per injection.