Monday, September 3, 2018

Why do people sneeze?

Why do people sneeze?

When you sneeze, you are likely to hear one of these responses, ranging in inspiration from the medieval to the hygienic. Different cultures throughout history have interpreted a sneeze as either an auspicious sign or a bad omen, but it may be said that both are right: Sneezing is the good that gets the ill out.
“Sneezing is basically ‘nature’s broom,’” says Dr. James Banks, an allergist and immunologist in private practice in Arnold, Md. “It is a way our bodies purge foreign matter that has invaded our noses.”
Particulates are the usual suspects, including dust and common allergens like pollen or animal dander. Sneezing also expels unwelcome germs when we are sick, which has given rise to the sanitary concerns about honking away in public places. And for good reason: a single sneeze can produce some 40,000 aerosolized droplets containing a hefty amount of infectious organisms, according to a 1998 article in the American Journal of Infection Control.
It’s not just allergies and illnesses that can produce that familiar tickling in the nose. Banks explains: “People sneeze for a lot of reasons other than just getting something up their noses. Clinically speaking, we consider sneezing a non-specific reaction, because there are a lot of sources that irritate.”
For example, some people experience a round of sneezing after a large meal, which has led to the coining of the term snatiation, a combination of sneeze and satiation. There is also a phenomenon with a known genetic basis called the photic sneeze reflex, which causes about one-third of people to sneeze from looking at a bright light source, such as the sun. Sigmund Freud has even speculated on the kinky psychological origins of an otherwise innocuous sneeze.
“Overall, it is not a clear-cut reflex,” says Dr. David Kaufman, an associate professor in the department of otolaryngology at New York University Medical Center (an otolaryngologist is most often referred to as an ear, nose and throat specialist).
Like blinking or breathing, sneezing is a semi-autonomous reflex, meaning we exercise some conscious control over its mechanism – we can try to restrain ourselves or submit and start reaching for a tissue.
The act of sneezing itself, technically called sternutation, usually begins as an electrical signal that is triggered by a trespassing particle’s contact with nerve endings in the mucous membranes of our sinuses. This neural message then travels to the brain stem, which is located in the lower rear of our head where the spine connects to the brain and controls rudimentary bodily functions such as respiration and swallowing.
Once the command for a sneeze has reached the brain stem, an all points bulletin” is sent throughout the body’s musculature and a powerful, coordinated contraction takes place. Our eyes are forced closed, and other facial, chest and abdominal muscle groups are recruited as well. Some muscles actually anchor and brace us while in the throes of a nasal outburst to avoid unintended bodily injury.
“They keep us from jet-action, throwing ourselves across the room,” says Banks.
A typical sneeze has a velocity of about 100 miles per hour (160 kilometers per hour), an impressive hurricane squall, while a regular breath idles along at just 5 mph. That 20-fold increase usually serves to eject whatever it is that is causing the offense, but some people have to blast out several sneezes, oftentimes hilariously, before finally getting a well-deserved break.
Scientists have yet to come up with a good explanation for why most people sneeze the predictable two or three times, while others are wracked by staccato attacks. But the answer seems to lie in an individual’s unique immunological and neurological constitution.
“Multiple sneezes are more common in allergenic individuals, especially those with an ongoing chronic stimulus of some sort,” says Banks.
What if you hold in a sneeze? There is the often-repeated fear that an internal backfiring can burst capillaries in the sinuses or eyes, injure the delicate inner ears or even cause a stroke.
Dr. Clark Kaufman, a pediatric allergist in private practice in Lancaster, Pa., thinks this is unlikely. “It’s not dangerous,” he says. “Most people do it all the time and get away with it.” But he cautions that as your body may be trying to dislodge something, it’s probably not a good idea to hold back on a routine basis.
So chances are you won’t do any permanent damage if you quash that sneeze during a job interview or a date. To help suppress the urge, try placing your index finger under your nose.
“This sends sense signals to your brain using the same neural pathways that a sneeze does,” advises Banks. By doing this, you can “overload your neural circuitry” and prevent the sneeze from occurring.
In lieu of putting a finger to the face in a gesture that unintentionally mimics a mustache, Banks also recommends breathing through one’s mouth, as this will decrease turbulence in the nose and may help thwart the impending “atchoo.”
On the other hand, if you have a sneeze that refuses to come out or go away, and you’re grimacing awkwardly in public, close your mouth and inhale through your nose to further excite the nerve endings. This will assist in getting you across the threshold so the sneeze reflex kicks in, and then you can just let ‘er rip.
After all, if Freud is to believed, sneezing is actually sort of sexy – though don’t expect to hear “hubba hubba” the next time you do.

How many muscles does it take to smile?

How many muscles does it take to smile?

Baby and mom both have smiles on their faces, but whose grin takes more effort?

You've likely been told (or read in a forwarded e-mail) that it takes fewer muscles to smile than it does to frown, and that, in light of this fact, you should smile more often. There are quite a few numbers that get tossed around when this line is used. Some claim it takes 43 muscles to frown and 17 to smile, but open Aunt Milda's chain letter and you might be surprised to learn it takes 26 to smile and 62 to frown. And some naysayers claim it's quite the opposite, that in fact it takes more muscles to smile than to frown.
When we make facial expressions, we're essentially transmitting a packet of information that can be received, read and interpreted by others. By contracting or expanding our facial muscles in different degrees and combinations, we can produce thousands of different messages that provide cues to our overall emotional state, our short-term feelings about our immediate environment, our mental well-being, our personality and mood, our physical health, our creditability and whether or not we view others as being creditable.

Skin Anatomy

Skin Anatomy

The skin is composed of several layers. The very top layer is the epidermis and is the layer of skin you can see. In Latin, the prefix “epi-” means “upon” or “over.” So the epidermis is the layer upon the dermis (the dermis is the second layer of skin). Made of dead skin cells, the epidermis is waterproof and serves as a protective wrap for the underlying skin layers and the rest of the body. It contains melanin, which protects against the sun's harmful rays and also gives skin its color. When you are in the sun, the melanin builds up to increase its protective properties, which also causes the skin to darken. The epidermis also contains very sensitive cells called touch receptors that give the brain a variety of information about the environment the body is in.
The second layer of skin is the dermis. The dermis contains hair follicles, sweat glands, sebaceous (oil) glands, blood vessels, nerve endings, and a variety of touch receptors. Its primary function is to sustain and support the epidermis by diffusing nutrients to it and replacing the skin cells that are shed off the upper layer of the epidermis. New cells are formed at the junction between the dermis and epidermis, and they slowly push their way towards the surface of the skin so that they can replace the dead skin cells that are shed. Oil and sweat glands eliminate waste produced at the dermis level of the skin by opening their pores at the surface of the epidermis and releasing the waste.
The bottom layer is the subcutaneous tissue which is composed of fat and connective tissue. The layer of fat acts as an insulator and helps regulate body temperature. It also acts as a cushion to protect underlying tissue from damage when you bump into things. The connective tissue keeps the skin attached to the muscles and tendons underneath.

Fantastic facts about the human body

Fantastic Facts about the Human Body




1. Approximately 80-90% of what we perceive as "taste" actually is due to our sense of smell.
2. Your heart beats about 35 million times in a year. During an average lifetime, the human heart will beat more than 2.5 billion times.
3. Your body has about 5.6 liters (6 quarts) of blood. This 5.6 liters of blood circulates through the body three times every minute. In one day, the blood travels a total of 19,000 km (12,000 miles)- that's four times the distance across the U.S. from coast to coast.
4. The heart pumps about 1 million barrels of blood during an average lifetime - that's enough to fill more than 3 super tankers.
5. If all arteries, veins, and capillaries of the human circulatory system were laid end to end, the total length would be 60,000 miles, or 100,000 km. That's nearly two and a half times around the Earth!
6. Even though its thickness averages just 2mm, your skin gets an eighth of all your blood supply.
7. The skull looks as though it is a single bone. In fact, it is made up of 22 separate bones, cemented together along rigid joints called sutures.
8. If a human adult's digestive tract were stretched out, it would be 6 to 9 m (20 to 30 ft) long.
9. Red blood cells may live for about four months circulating throughout the body, feeding the 60 trillion other body cells. Red blood cells make approximately 250,000 round trips of the body before returning to the bone marrow, where they were born, to die.
10. Human hair grows about 1/4 inch (about 6 millimeters) every month and keeps on growing for up to 6 years. The hair then falls out and another grows in its place.
11. The average healthy mouth produces about 600 milliliters of saliva each day. That's enough to fill a 12-ounce soda bottle.
12. The fastest nerve cells are carrying messages along their axons at an amazing 130 yards per second (268mph)

Secret of nail

The nail files: 30 things every woman should know

The nail files: things every woman should know

Women rely upon their nails to accessorise any outfit.
Yet they can also attract bacteria and infection - as well as revealing a great deal about our inner health.
Here, we present the secret nail files . . .
1. Nails are mostly made from keratin, a fibrous protein substance also found in hair. Although fingernails may seem brittle and easily broken, in fact because they are 96 per cent proteins, arranged in lengthwise, twisting strands, their structure is 40 times more resistant to fracture than stone.
2. Nails need to be pliable - if they were too tough they would simply split and crack. It is the presence of fat and water molecules between the layers of keratin that makes flexible as well as shiny.
3. The pink part of the nail is known as the nail bed. This contains the capillaries that bring nourishment to the area just beneath the cuticle, known as the matrix. The matrix is where new cells are generated, making nails grow.
The whole nail, from its white tip to its pink bed, is known as the nail plate, and the crescent moon at its base is called the lunula.

Disease from mouth

Discovering what lives in your mouth

Bacteria give clues to cancer and gum disease

our mouth is a great place for micropests to dwell. Glistening white plateaus, dark crevices, and slimy surfaces boast steamy temperatures of 95 degrees Fahrenheit. The microbes bathe in a saliva-induced humidity of 100 percent, and eat a lavish diet of sugar and other carbohydrates. It’s so lush and varied, researcher Donna Mager refers to it as a mini-jungle. Mager is a fellow in oral medicine at the Forsyth Institute, an independent research institution in Boston. Forsyth scientists, most of whom are on the faculty of the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, have found 615 different species of bacteria – and they’re still counting. “In one mouth, the number of bacteria can easily exceed the number of people who live on Earth,” notes Sigmund Socransky, associate clinical professor of periodontology at Harvard. Years of detecting and identifying mouth tenants have revealed that those living in healthy mouths can be remarkably different from those living in diseased mouths. Some bacteria increase in number, while others decrease. By comparing communities of microbes in healthy people with those in the mouths of those with oral cancer, Mager has found a pattern that she expects will lead to the early diagnosis of oral cancers.

Secrets of human hair

Secrets of human hair unlocked at Natural History Museum in London

Up to 150,000 sprout from each human head. Every strand grows at roughly one centimetre a month, making the gross product per head about 10 miles of hair each year.
After four years or so a strand reaches the end of its life and is shed: each human loses around 50 hairs a day. Uncut, it can reach huge lengths. The world record is held by a Hindu holy man in the late 1940s whose tresses were estimated at seven to eight metres (23ft to 26ft).
It can be cut, bobbed, braided, frizzed, combed out or gathered up. But it can only be artificially extended. Each strand is highly structured from the molecular to the cellular level, says Frédéric Leroy of L'Oréal Research, the sponsor of Hair, a new exhibition at the Natural History Museum in London.
"It is this structure which gives hair its exceptional, even unique properties," he said. "It's very easy to bend it, but very difficult to extend it."
Hair is strong. A single strand could hold 100g (3oz) in weight: the combined hair of a whole head could support 12 tonnes, or the weight of two elephants. Weight for weight, it is not as strong as steel: more like aluminium, or reinforced glass fibres or Kevlar, which is used to make bulletproof vests.
"So nature made these kinds of composite materials long before men could do it," said Dr Leroy.
Hair follicles contain specialised cells called melanocytes which make melanin, the sun-protecting pigment that keeps hair lustrous and coloured.
But these tend to decrease with time, according to Bruno Bernard, the head of hair biology research at Clichy in Paris, which explains the inexorable emergence of silver threads.
The melanin is still there, but not in enough quantities to keep hair from at least seeming grey. And of course there is a widely distributed phenomenon of male pattern baldness which begins with a thinning of the temples and ends with an eventual unsolicited tonsure.
Hair is also home to wildlife: notoriously head lice spread rapidly among schoolchildren. A female will live for a month laying eight eggs a day, according to Chris Lyal, an entomologist at the museum. "It means a fast build-up of lice are quite active, shifting from head to head quite readily. It also means they evolve quite fast, so they can develop resistance to insecticide, for example."
Hair in Asia is more likely to grow thick and long. Hair in Africa is likely to be fine and crinkly, entangling to provide insulation against the fierce sun.
But humans are - compared with their primate relatives - apparently largely hairless. In fact human body hair is so fine that compared with a chimpanzee or gorilla humans appear hairless.
Hair on the head could have survived as protection for a biped that now only walked upright, according to Christophe Soligo, an anthropologist at the museum. It could also serve as a sexual signal. "If my hair is shiny and healthy, I am all shiny and healthy and therefore our kids are going to be shiny and healthy. There are links between reproductive success and attractiveness."
· Hair is at the Natural History Museum, London SW7 from May 29 to September 26

Tongue print


Tongue-Print: A Novel Biometrics Pattern






The tongue is a unique organ in that it can be stuck out of mouth for inspection, and yet it is otherwise well protected in the mouth and is difficult to forge. The tongue also presents both geometric shape information and physiological texture information which are potentially useful in identity verification applications. Furthermore, the act of physically reaching or thrusting out is a convincing proof for the liveness. Despite these obvious advantages for biometrics, little work has hitherto been done on this topic. In this paper, we introduce this novel biometric and present a verification framework based on the tongue-prints. The preliminary experimental results demonstrate the feasibility of the tongue biometrics.

Friday, August 31, 2018

Diamonds were first mined in India

Diamonds were first mined in India

Initially, diamonds were only found in the alluvial deposits in Guntur and Krishna District of the Krishna River Delta. Until diamonds were found in Brazil during the 18th century, India led the world in diamond production.

Rabindranath Tagore also wrote the national anthem for Bangladesh

Rabindranath Tagore also wrote the national anthem for Bangladesh

Rabindranath Tagore is credited not only for writing the Indian national anthem,Jana Gana Mana, but the Bangladeshi national anthem, Amar Sonar Bangla, as well. He was also offered knighthood by the British but refused the honour after the Jalianwala Bagh massacre.


The human calculator

The human calculator

Shakuntla Devi was given this title after she demonstrated the calculation of two 13 digit numbers: 7,686,369,774,870 × 2,465,099,745,779 which were picked at random. She answered correctly within 28 seconds.

The first country to consume sugar

The first country to consume sugar

India was the first country to develop extraction and purifying techniques of sugar. Many visitors from abroad learnt the refining and cultivation of sugar from us.

The world's largest producer of milk

The world's largest producer of milk

India recently overtook the European Union with production reaching over 132.4m tonnes in 2014.

Largest number of vegetarians in the world

 Largest number of vegetarians in the world

Be it because of religious reasons or personal choices or both, around 20-40% of Indians are vegetarians, making it the largest vegetarian-friendly country in the world.

Water on the moon was discovered by India

Water on the moon was discovered by India

In September 2009, India's ISRO Chandrayaan- 1 using its Moon Mineralogy Mapper detected water on the moon for the first time.

The Indian national Kabaddi team has won all World Cups

The Indian national Kabaddi team has won all World Cups

India has won all 5 men's Kabaddi World Cups held till now and have been undefeated throughout these tournaments. The Indian women's team has also won all Kabaddi World Cups held till date.

Shampooing is an Indian concept

 Shampooing is an Indian concept

Shampoo was invented in India, not the commercial liquid ones but the method by use of herbs. The word 'shampoo' itself has been derived from the Sanskrit word champu, which means to massage.

The highest cricket ground in the world

The highest cricket ground in the world

At an altitude of 2,444 meters, the Chail Cricket Ground in Chail, Himachal Pradesh, is the highest in the world. It was built in 1893 and is a part of the Chail Military School.

A floating post office

 A floating post office

India has the largest postal network in the world with over 1, 55,015 post offices. A single post office on an average serves a population of 7,175 people. The floating post office in Dal Lake, Srinagar, was inaugurated in August 2011.

Friday, August 3, 2018

The Future Of VR And AR

                    The Future Of VR And AR

Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality are possibly two of the biggest trends in the entire tech world. We saw the rise of VR in gaming applications and mapping software, but what is the future of this technology? How will Virtual Reality impact on our day to day life? Is it going to be a scary matter or is the technology just moving a bit too fast? Let's try to break down the subject in a simple way. 
 SLAM, The Future of VR
 
Simultaneous Localization And Mapping is the biggest focus when it comes to development at the minute: this technology is able to instantly translate data from the real world (by using sensors) into the virtual one and vice-versa. This avenue is currently studied by many different mobile app development companies, given the fact that Niantic based its success on a very embryonic version of SLAM, which was translating the surroundings into the app by using a floor algorithm (the same one that is generally used for QWERTY codes).
 
Simultaneous Localization And Mapping is currently used in TESLA's autopilot and summon, two core elements of the car's technology that let the vehicle process the surroundings in order to avoid crashes, understand how much battery is left and other vital pieces of information. 
Edge Computing

Monday, July 30, 2018

mind bending technology and magic

Mind Bending Technology and Magic

Prepare to have your mind bent into places you didn’t think possible!
Have you ever thought about how technology has made us, in some ways, numb to its remarkable potential? Think about it, when was the last time you were stopped in wonder by new innovations in technology?
Yet, when we first try out something like virtual reality or think back to the first days of cinema, we remember that there are experiences that technology allows that are like no other
Image: Screen Capture from Box by Bot and Dolly of person walking into geometric shapes showing new innovations in projection technology

These are the final words from the remarkable video we are sharing with you today; a performance unlike any other we have seen, and one that pushes the boundaries of technology, magic, and art.
After watching this video of a live production (meaning there was no post-production involved) of Box by Bot & Dolly, you will understand the completely transformative power technology and magic can have on how we perceive the world.

saving the rainforest with old cell phones


Saving the Rainforest with Old Cell Phones

Rainforest Connection could be saving the rainforest with old cell phones!
Rainforests have some of the most complicated soundscapes on the planet. In this dense noise of insects, primates, birds, and everything else that moves in the forest, how can you detect the sounds of illegal logging?
The old cell phone you have sitting in your desk drawer may have the answer.
   Image: Topher White installing Rainforest Connection; an invention that is saving the rainforest with old cell phones
How do you go about saving the rainforest with old cell phones?
After a visit to the rainforests of Borneo, physicist and engineer Topher White was struck by the sounds of the forest. In particular, the noises he couldn’t hear.
While on a walk, White and others came across an illegal logger sawing down a tree just a few hundred meters away from a ranger station.
This incident set White thinking that perhaps the best way to save the Earth’s precious rainforest is to listen to its loggers and poachers. The innovation he came up with, Rainforest Connection, uses old cell phones to help to save the planet in a big way.

Friday, July 20, 2018

The future of moblie phones

The Future of Mobile Phones

The reason most cell phones are so cheap is that wireless carriers subsidize them so you'll sign a long-term contract. Open access could change the economics of the mobile phone (and mobile data) business dramatically as the walls preventing certain devices from working on certain networks come down. We could also see a rapid proliferation of cell phone models, with smaller companies becoming better able to make headway into formerly closed phone markets.

When is it coming? Open access is partially here: You can use almost any unlocked GSM handset on AT&T or T-Mobile today, and Verizon Wireless began certifying third-party devices for its network in July (though to date the company has approved only two products). But the future isn't quite so rosy, as Verizon is dragging its feet a bit on the legal requirement that it keep its newly acquired 700-MHz network open to other devices, a mandate that the FCC agreed to after substantial lobbying by Google. Some experts have argued that the FCC provisions aren't wholly enforceable. However, we won't really know how "open" is defined until the new network begins rolling out, a debut slated for 2010.

The future of your pc's software

The Future of Your PC's Software

64-Bit Computing Allows for More RAM
In 1986, Intel introduced its first 32-bit CPU. It wasn't until 1993 that the first fully 32-bit Windows OS--Windows NT 3.1--followed, officially ending the 16-bit era. Now 64-bit processors have become the norm in desktops and notebooks, though Microsoft still won't commit to an all-64-bit Windows. But it can't live in the 32-bit world forever.
What is it? 64-bit versions of Windows have been around since Windows XP, and 64-bit CPUs have been with us even longer. In fact, virtually every computer sold today has a 64-bit processor under the hood. At some point Microsoft will have to jettison 32-bit altogether, as it did with 16-bit when it launched Windows NT, if it wants to induce consumers (and third-party hardware and software developers) to upgrade. That isn't likely with Windows 7: The upcoming OS is already being demoed in 32-bit and 64-bit versions. But limitations in 32-bit's addressing structure will eventually force everyone's hand; it's already a problem for 32-bit Vista users, who have found that the OS won't access more than about 3GB of RAM because it simply doesn't have the bits to access additional memory.

When is it coming? Expect to see the shift toward 64-bit accelerate with Windows 7; Microsoft will likely switch over to 64-bit exclusively with Windows 8. That'll be 2013 at the earliest. Meanwhile, Mac OS X Leopard is already 64-bit, and some hardware manufacturers are currently trying to transition customers to 64-bit versions of Windows (Samsung says it will push its entire PC line to 64-bit in early 2009). And what about 128-bit computing, which would represent the next big jump? Let's tackle one sea change at a time--and prepare for that move around 2025.

Computer and information technology

COMPUTER AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

analyzing a CAT scan
  • Multimedia on the Web introduces the basics of web communication, webpage function, and design. Students become familiar with digital media including graphics, animation, video, and sound, and use software to create interactive multimedia documents.
  • Introduction to Artificial Intelligence explores theory and specific examples of knowledge-based computer systems.
  • Database Systems is an introduction to database design and access, with a focus on database concepts, data modeling, normalization, data warehousing, query languages, and the formulation of complex queries.
  • Cryptography is an introduction to coding theory and the process of scrambling plain text into ciphetext.
  • Network Security gives an overview of network security issues, looks at several of the most representative security problems, and investigates commonly practiced solutions.
  • Programming Languages explores syntax and semantics with a focus on scope rules, environments, stores, denoted and expressed values, procedures, and parameters.
  • Data Mining offers an introduction to the basic issues, algorithms, results, and applications of data mining through a study of methods for data management, feature selection, statistical modeling, and data clustering.

Mater growth hacking

Master Growth Hacking

Master Growth Hacking: The Ten Growth Hacking Techniques
Generating traffic to your website or for your app by spending huge amounts of money is often not sustainable. Expensive initiatives often generate a one-time increase in the metrics which is temporary and phases out with time.
The real challenge is to achieve consistent and sustainable growth which cannot be achieved using paid media push alone.
Today, the real need is to discover and perfect techniques which enable consistent customer acquisition and help in retaining those customers frugally. And, that is what growth hacking enables.  This self-powered virtual machine is more of a mindset which helps in achieving growth by leveraging growth hacking techniques.
Often, marketers refer to multiple sources to learn the nuances of growth hacking techniques. While those sources can be a good starting point for theoretical learning but the real learning comes when marketers start practicing the growth hacking techniques themselves.
During the process of implementation, they often end up discovering and inventing many hacks basis experimentation.

Hollywood gets right and wrong about hacking

What Hollywood gets right and wrong about hacking


Hacking is most often portrayed as a frantic exercise, with fast-paced music to raise the tension while boxes flash up on screen. In one episode of the fantasy series Arrow however, the protagonists are able to continue “hacking” despite not being able to see their screens, and eventually this ridiculous hack-war turns into a tennis match with both hackers sending power surges back and forth until the antagonist’s computer is blown up.
It’s pretty far-fetched but hacking as a means of destruction isn’t fictional and it has been portrayed better in the tech drama series Mr. Robot. In one episode, the protagonist Elliot uses a planted device to upload software onto back-up energy storage devices owned by the shadowy corporation, ECorp. This software is then used to trigger explosions – entirely reasonable as these gadgets usually use lead acid batteries which can emit explosive hydrogen gas when overcharged.
Most of the time though, MovieOS capabilities don’t accurately reflect the abilities or uses of real-life operating systems. Being able to draw a line between fantasy and reality is useful in film, but it can also cause problems when dealing with people’s expectations of computers and their understanding of how hacking works, particularly common hacks that non-technical people are vulnerable to.

Java virtual machine

Java Virtual Machine: Critical Metrics You Need to Track

Java Virtual Machine (JVM)There are two important types of JVM memory to watch: heap and non-heap memory, each of these with its own purpose.
The heap memory is where the JVM stores runtime data represented by allocated instances. This is where memory for new objects comes from, and is released when the Garbage Collector runs.
When the heap space runs out, the JVM throws an OutOfMemoryError. Therefore, it’s very important to monitor the evolution of free and used heap memory to prevent the JVM from slowing down and eventually crashing.
The non-heap memory is where the JVM stores class-level information such as the fields and methods of a class, method code, runtime constant pool and internalized Strings.
Running out of non-heap memory can indicate there is a large number of Stringsbeing internalized or a classloader leak.

Identifying “Operations” in Your Windows Services

Identifying “Operations” in Your Windows Services

Windows Services usually follow several common usage patterns. By identifying these patterns, you can quickly evaluate the best way to identify operations in your code.
Think of an operation as a unit of work that is repeated over and over. You need to identify them and then potentially monitor each different operation that your service executes.
Common usage patterns:
  • Queue listener – App continuously listens on a queue and each message picked up off a queue would be a unique operation.
  • Timer based – Many Windows Services use timers to repeat a specific operation every few seconds like polling a database.
  • Job scheduler – It is possible to embed a job scheduler like Quartz within your Windows Service to trigger small jobs and scale them across servers.
Most Windows Services are likely to perform multiple operations. I would suggest breaking them down to the smallest logical units of work. It is better if you monitor smaller units of work. This is similar to monitoring each web request in your ASP.NET application versus monitoring the performance of the application as a whole.
For example, our monitoring agent for Windows is a Windows Service. It does a ton of different operations on a schedule every few seconds. Each one of those tasks that it performs should be defined as unique operations so you can track everything that it does.

How to monitor windows

How to Monitor Windows Services: Performance, Errors, Usage

It seems like everyone these days is writing cool ASP.NET web applications. However, we all know that a lot of the real work is still done behind the scenes in background services.
Buying something on Amazon no doubt kicks off a waterfall of tasks that are done behind the scenes to fulfill a single order. Including verifying stock, shipping, contacting product vendors, recording sales statistics, and much more. Background service applications are used by many developers to handle all the less glamorous details of critical business transactions.

For example, at Stackify, we have probably three times as many servers that do background processing than we do web servers. Our web servers receive a lot of data and simply queue it up for Windows Services to process behind the scenes. Monitoring our Windows Services and their business transactions is mission-critical to us.
In this guide, we are going to walk through how to monitor your critical Windows Services.