Image of the Day….” Selfie with a Drone …” !!!

Selfie with a drone

What do you call a selfie acquired with a drone? A “dronie,” says Manish Mamtani Photography.

View larger. | Photo by Manish Mamtani Photography.  Visit Manish on Facebook.

View larger. | Photo by Manish Mamtani Photography. Visit Manish on Facebook.

Our friend Manish Mamtani acquired this image this month and posted it to EarthSky Facebook. He called it a drone … a selfie taken with a drone. He wrote:

Enjoying the snow in New Hampshire.

Shot with DJI Phantom 3 Pro.

Source…….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

Message for the day…” How discipline and knowledge sail together …..” ?

Sathya Sai Baba

Many argue about how discipline (as described in the scriptures) can result in the dawn of knowledge. Aren’t these mere bodily limitations, they ask. Knowledge can arise only by the realisation of the principle that guarantees self-realisation, they argue. But this line of thought is based on a big mistake. Through these physical regulations, traits (vasanas) are destroyed and concentration is established. One-pointedness is essential to establish spiritual wisdom firmly in the heart, and this one-pointedness can easily be gained by bodily disciplines and austerities (tapas) prescribed in the Upanishads. External control helps internal control in many ways. To succeed in external controls indeed is more difficult than to achieve success in controlling the internal! In a working car, the wheels will always follow the direction of the steering. A turn of the steering wheel in one’s hand in any direction makes the wheels of the car, which are not in your hand, move in the same direction of the steering wheel – isn’t it?

Here Are Few Old Republic Day Pictures That Will Warm Your Heart…

F or most Indians, it’s been customary to be glued to the television every Republic Day. The grand parade at the  Rajpath, with all its frills,  is a visual treat. The celebrations have changed over the years. Here’a trip down memory lane:

Nepal king

King Tribhuvan of Nepal was the Guest of Honour for the Republic Day in 1951.

Photo source: Twitter

Lama Dance from – West Bengal –during the Republic Day parade in 1956.

Photo source: photodivision.gov.in

jacque chiraq

Jacques Chirac, President of France, was the Guest of Honour for Republic Day in 1998

Photo source: Twitter

kiran republic

IPS Kiran Bedi leading Delhi Police in Republic Day Parade in 1975.

Photo source: Facebook

nelson mandela R Day

Nelson R. Mandela, President of South Africa, was Guest of Honour on Republic Day in 1995.

Studio/Jan.52,A52h A view of the Republic Day Cultural Pageant – Republic Day (January 26, 1952): Tableau showing ‘Youth & Progress’ – The machines depict growing development in transport and industry. The plough symbioses rural economy and the urge to grow more food.

A view of the Republic Day Cultural Pageant – in 1952. This tableau is depicting ‘youth and progress.

Photo source: photodivision.gov.in

Studio/Jan.52,A52h Republic Day Celebrations (January 26, 1952): Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the President of India, driving in State towards the Saluting Base.

Dr. Rajendra Prasad, the President of India, driving in State towards the Saluting Base, during Republic Day celebrations in 1952.

Photo source: photodivision.gov.in

The first Republic Day parade in 1950.

Photo source: Facebook

Studio/Jan.52,A52h Republic Day Cultural Pageant (January 26, 1952): A section of he huge crowds that witnessed the Parade.

A section of the huge crowd that witnessed the Republic Day parade in 1952.

Photo source: photodivision.gov.in

chariot r day

Kenneth Kaunda, President of Zambia, was the Guest of Honour for republic Day in 1975.

DPD/ Jan.’ 56, A52h CULTURAL PAGENT IN THE REPUBLIC DAY CEREBRATION , AT NEW DELHI (1956) The tableau from Madhya Pradesh was a replica of Mahatma Gandhi’s hut (Bapu Kuti) at Sevagram.

The tableau from Madhya Pradesh was a replica of Mahatma Gandhi’’s hut (Bapu Kuti) at Sevagram, during Republic Day in 1956.

Photo source: photodivision.gov.in

Source…..Meryl  Garcia  in http://www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Image of the Day….” View from space…”

View from space: Mississippi River flooding

Two satellite images show the contrast between the flooded Mississippi River this month and the same area last year. Check out the difference!

View larger. | January 11, 2016. Image credit: NASA

View larger. | January 11, 2016. Image credit: NASA

In early January 2016, communities along the southern reaches of the Mississippi River faced severe flooding from rains that fell weeks earlier and well to the north. These two NASA satellite images show the Mississippi River as it runs through southern Mississippi and Louisiana. The above image was acquired on January 11, 2016. The image below shows the river at a normal level last January (January 24, 2015.)

View larger. | January 24, 2015. Image credit: NASa

View larger. | January 24, 2015. Image credit: NASa

Heavy rains in December 2015 drenched parts of Missouri and Illinois, and the pulse of fresh water has finally reached Louisiana and Mississippi. On January 11, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers opened the Bonnet Carré Spillway near New Orleans in preparation for the southward-moving pulse of flood water.

Substantial flooding is unusual on the Mississippi River in winter. As reported by Weather Underground, this event was only the second time that a winter flood has made the top-40 list of flood crests at St. Louis in more than 200 years of records. (The other flood occurred in December 1982 during a major El Niño.)

Before/after images of Interstate 44 flooded in Valley Park, Missouri.  Credit: AP Photo/Jeff Roberson and Google Earth

According to John Kimball, a hydrology, ecology, and remote sensing expert at the University of Montana, the soil within the upper Missouri basin remained largely frozen. There was no rapid thaw or snowmelt that helped raise the river’s level. But elsewhere in the Mississippi Basin, precipitation that might typically fall as snow in December and January instead fell as rain. Kimball said:

There has been much higher than normal rainfall over the southern and central portion of the Mississippi basin this winter, attributed to the strong El Niño. This led to soil saturation and more rapid and abundant runoff than in a normal winter.

The saturated ground set the stage for the central and southern Mississippi basin to feel the effects of the approaching flood water.

Over the course of a few weeks, the excess water (with contributions from the Ohio and Missouri rivers) made its way south. When the top image was acquired on January 11, river gauge observations and forecasts for the Mississippi River in Natchez, Mississippi, showed that the river stood at about 16.5 meters (54 feet)—about 2 meters above flood stage—and still rising.

Farther south in Louisiana, the Bonnet Carré Spillway was opened for the 11th time in its history to reduce pressure on levees in southeast Louisiana. The spillway was erected in 1931 to control flooding in the Lower Mississippi Valley by diverting water to Lake Pontchartrain. According to Richard Kesel of Louisiana State University, the Morganza Spillway to the north had not been opened—indicative that flooding was not anticipated to be a huge problem.

Bottom line: Two satellite images show the contrast between the flooded Mississippi River in January, 2016 and the same area last year, when the river was at a normal level.

Source…….www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

” மனிதநேயத்தை மதிப்பிட எங்களிடம் கருவி இல்லை: ஒரு ஹோட்டல் பில் சொல்லும் செய்தி”

 

சாப்பிட்ட உணவுக்கான கட்டணத்துடன் கூடுதலாக அந்த வரி இந்த வரி என்று பில் போடும் ஹோட்டல் உரிமையாளர்களிடம் இருந்து மாறுபட்டு மனிதநேயத்தோடு நடந்து கொண்டவருக்கு அதே மனிதநேயத்தைக் காட்டிய கேரள ஹோட்டல் உரிமையாளரைப் பற்றிய செய்தி இது.

கேரள மாநிலம் மலப்புரத்தில் உள்ள ஹோட்டல் ஒன்றுக்குள், பெயர் குறிப்பிடாத ஒரு நபர் நுழைகிறார். அன்றைய நாளின் பணிச் சுமையால் சற்று தளர்வாக ஹோட்டலுக்குள் சென்று சாப்பிட உணவை ஆர்டர் கொடுத்துவிட்டு ஜன்னல் பக்கம் திரும்புகிறார்.

அங்கு இரண்டு சின்னஞ்சிறு குழந்தைகள் ஹோட்டலில் உள்ள மேஜைகள் மீது பரிமாறப்பட்டிருக்கும் உணவுகளை ஏக்கத்தோடு பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்ததை கவனித்த அந்த நபர், குழந்தைகளிடம் உங்களுக்கு என்ன வேண்டும் என்று கேட்க, அவர்கள் மேஜை மீதிருக்கும் உணவுகளைச் சுட்டிக்காட்டுகின்றனர்.

அவர்களை உள்ளே அழைத்து, அவர்களுக்கான உணவுகளையும் சேர்த்து ஆர்டர் கொடுத்து, அவர்களை கைகழுவ வைத்து, அவர்களை சாப்பிட வைத்தார். அண்ணன், தங்கைகள் இருவருமே ஒருவரை ஒருவர் பார்த்து புன்னகைத்துவிட்டு சாப்பிட்டு முடித்தனர். ஆனால், தனக்கான உணவை சாப்பிடாமலேயே சாப்பிட்ட முழு திருப்தியை அடைந்த அந்த நபர், உணவுக்கான பில்லைக் கேட்கிறார்.

அந்த பில்லில் 100, 200 என எண்ணிக்கைகள் இல்லாமல், மலையாள எழுத்துக்கள் மணிமணியாக கோர்க்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.

அந்த பில்லில் கூறப்பட்டிருந்தது இதுதான்,”மனிதநேயத்தைக் கணக்கிட எங்களிடம் எந்த கருவியும் இல்லை. ஒரு நல்ல விஷயம் உங்கள் மூலமாக நடந்துள்ளது.”

இந்த தகவல், பில்லின் புகைப்படத்துடன் சமூக வலைதளமான பேஸ்புக்கில் அதிக நபர்களால் பகிரப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Source……..www.dinamani.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” A Devotee Must Place all his burden on God and surrender fully to HIS Will …”

The path of surrender is like the life of a kitten. Just as the kitten places all its burdens in the mother cat, so too the devotee must place their complete trust on the Lord. The mother cat holds the kitten in its mouth and transports it safely at all times, including very narrow passages. So too, the devotee must place all their burdens on the Lord and surrender fully to His will. Lakshmana is a great exemplar of this path. To serve Rama, Lakshmana renounced all obstacles in his path, like wealth, wife, mother, home, even sleep and food for full fourteen years. He felt that Rama was his all, his happiness and joy, that Rama would grant everything he needed, and his life’s purpose was only to follow Him, serve Him, and surrender his will to Him. If you place all burdens on the Lord and adore Him continuously and consistently, He will certainly provide everything you need.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message for the day….” The Time You will clearly understand the Truth …”

Sathya Sai Baba

To attain the knowledge of righteousness (dharma), first, you must receive training under wise people, who are imbued with righteousness (dharma). Next, you must aspire to purify yourself (Atma shuddhi) and practice truth (sathya). Thirdly, you must realize the value of knowledge of the scriptures(Vedas), which is the voice of God. When these three steps are completed, you will clearly understand the truth and discriminate it from untruth. This enquiry into truth must be done in amity and cooperation. Everyone is entitled to attain spiritual wisdom. Everyone must be equally eager to discover the truth and benefit from it. All opinions must be tested on the touchstone of dharma, of universal goodness(sarvaloka-hitha). The principles that pass this test alone must be chosen and practiced, and shared with the world. Then will help humanity to progress. Then, everyone will develop joy and happiness in equal measure. All of you must use this method and perform noble and pure deeds consistently.

 

5 reasons why this R-Day parade will be different….

This year’s Republic Day parade will witness some changes.

The duration of the parade this year, for instance, will be shorter — from 115 minutes to nearly 90 minutes.

Rediff.com presents changes one will witness this R-Day parade.

1. Indian Army dog squad

IMAGE: The Indian Army’s dog squad during rehearsals. Photograph: Atul Yadav/PTI

After 26 years, the Indian Army’s dog squad, which has saved the lives of many soldiers in counter-terrorism operations, will march down Rajpath.

The army, which has about 1,200 Labradors and German Shepherds, has selected 36 canines to march down Rajpath with their handlers.

2. French contingent

IMAGE: French soldiers practise ahead of the main event. Photograph: Amit Dave/Reuters

For the first time in the history of the Republic Day parade, a foreign contingent — 130 French soldiers — will march down Rajpath along with Indian troops in presence of French President Francoise Hollande, the chief guest this year.

The gesture reciprocates one from France to India back in 2009. On July 14 that year, one of the oldest regiments of the Indian Army — the Maratha Light Infantry — marched down the Champs Elysee in Paris with the French army.

The occasion was Bastille Day — celebrated in memory of the storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, the symbolic start to the French Revolution.

3. All-women stunt contingent

IMAGE: The women will enthral the crowds with their daredevilry on two-wheelers. Photograph: PTI

While all-women contingents have been participating in the Republic Day parade for a while now, for the first time an all-women contingent of the Central Reserve Police Force will demonstrate their tandem motorcycle riding skills at the parade.

The contingent — the ‘Women Daredevils CRPF — comprises 120 women from the CRPF’s three women battalions and Rapid Action Force. It was created in 2014, and for the past two years, these riders have been training rigorously for this very opportunity — a chance to show they are as good as anyone else when it comes to stunts.

4. No camel contingent

]

IMAGE: Border Security Force troopers ride camels during the Republic Day Parade. Photograph: Daniel Berehulak/Getty Images

For the first time in the history of the Republic Day parade, the Border Security Force camel contingent will not amble down Rajpath.

The 90-member BSF camel-mounted troops and band contingent has not been practising during dress rehearsals for the event in the capital, in the absence of official directions.

The majestic contingent first became part of the national festival celebration in 1976 after it replaced a similar squad from the army which had been participating in the Republic Day parade since the first event in 1950.

5. No CRPF, ITBP contingents

IMAGE: A CRPF contingent marches during the 2011 Republic Day parade. Photograph: B Mathur/Reuters

Contingents of paramilitary forces like the Central Reserve Police Force, the Indo-Tibetan Border Police, the Sashastra Seema Bal will not be part of the 2016 parade.

Perhaps, this is being done to cut down on the time that the parade takes and trim the repetitive spectacle of marching contingents in almost similar uniforms.

Source….www.rediff.com

natarajan

Where the @ Symbol Came From….?

 

Ubiquitous today, until its use in email addresses, the @ symbol was never really all that popular, with this very fact being one of the reasons it was chosen to be used in electronic message addresses in the first place. So where did the @ symbol come from?

The earliest known example of @ is found in the 1345 Bulgarian translation of the 12th century Manasses Chronicle, which gives a brief synopsis of the history of the world up to the end of the 11th century. In it, @ was used as the symbol for “amin” (amen).

No (presently) known surviving instance of @ occurred again for a little over two centuries.

Seemingly independently “invented,” yet another early example, this time of a proto-@ (with just the outside swoosh, but lacking a defined center a), was used on a 1448 Spanish registry, Taula de Ariza, referencing a shipment of wheat from Castile to Aragon.

The earliest example of a full @ used in such a commercial setting was discovered in 2000 in a letter written by a Florentine merchant, Francesco Lapi, on May 4, 1536. In this letter, Lapi used @ to denote a unit of measure – an amphora (clay jar) of wine, which is equivalent to about 1/13th of a barrel.See: How Large is a Barrel of Oil and Why Do We Measure It That Way?)

According to professor Giorgio Stabile of Sapienza University of Rome, the discoverer of the letter in question, the flourish around the a for amphora was just one of many examples of such embellishment of script found in Florence at the time.

From here, Dr. Stabile theorized it was Italian merchants who popularized the symbol, with it traveling along with traded goods invoices and receipts throughout Europe.

However, whether it really was the Italians who popularized the symbol isn’t clear. For instance, also during the 16th century the @ symbol in Spain had progressed beyond the aforementioned 1448 proto-@ into the fully developed one, being used as the shorthand symbol for the unit of measure called an arroba, then equivalent to about 25 pounds or 11.3 kg. (The arroba is generally thought to have derived from the Arabic الربع pronounced ar-rub, which meant “a quarter.”)

Whatever the case, from here @ evolved to mean in a commercial setting “at the price of”- i.e. 26 bags of flour @ $1 (so a total of $26 for the purchase). The symbol was also occasionally used in other contexts, such as used to signify the French à at least as early as the 17th century.

It should be noted here that before the discovery of the 1345 and 1536 instances, it was generally thought (and many still posit, including the Oxford English Dictionary) that medieval monks were the ones that invented the symbol to use in place of the Latin ad, which meant at, toward, by and about. Lacking in any hard documented evidence pre-dating the preceding instances, the idea behind this theory is that the simple expedient of combining the two letters (essentially an a with the older ∂ form of the letter d) into a single, smaller mark would have saved time and materials during a period in history where every copy of every book had to be written out by hand.
Many other such shorthand symbols were created for just this reason. For instance, the ampersand (&) is shorthand for the Latin “et,” meaning “and.”  Another such classic shorthand was using “X” for “Christ.” The “X” in this case is actually the Greek letter “Chi,” which is short for the Greek, meaning “Christ”. Scholars began using this particular shorthand about a millennium ago.

In any event, the @ symbol labored in relative obscurity for several hundred years until one fateful day in 1971. In that year, engineer Ray Tomlinson was implementing his own version of a little program called SNDMSG. SNDMSG ran on the TENEX operating system and was, essentially, just one of many flavors of single-computer email- in other words, an electronic mail system only capable of sending messages from one user to another on the same computer.
While this might seem absurdly useless given the way people often use computers today, back then programs like this were incredibly handy.  For instance, the AUTODIN system created in the early 1960s had a facility for sending messages between users and, at its peak, handled nearly 30 million electronic messages per month. MIT’s Compatible Time-Sharing System (CTSS), also created in the 1960s, had a similar system that allowed its numerous users to login from some terminal and, among other things, exchange messages stored on this single machine.

Tomlinson thought it would be interesting to improve SNDMSG such that it could not only be used for sending messages to other users who could login to the same machine, but also be used to send messages from one computer to another via the budding ARPANET. Tomlinson stated he just thought this tweak to SNDMSG “seemed like a neat idea. There was no directive to ‘go forth and invent email’. The ARPANET was a solution looking for a problem. A colleague (Jerry Burchfiel) suggested that I not tell my boss what I had done because email wasn’t in our statement of work. That was really said in jest because we were, after all, investigating ways in which to use the ARPANET.”
While writing the code for this, Tomlinson had to decide how to designate that a message should be sent to another computer on the network, rather than a local account. He fatefully settled on @, a symbol that only made it on the standard keyboard in the first place because of its usage in commerce.

Why did he choose @ over some other symbol? For starters Tomlinson stated, “I looked at the keyboard, and I thought: ‘What can I choose here that won’t be confused with a username?’ If every person had an ‘@’ sign in their name, it wouldn’t work too well. But they didn’t. They did use commas and slashes and brackets.”

That left just a few symbols to choose from that weren’t being commonly used. He noted that, at the time, “The purpose of the at sign (in English) was to indicate a unit price (for example, 10 items @ $1.95).” So,

“…it made sense. [@] didn’t appear in names so there would be no ambiguity about where the separation between login name and host name occurred… [@] also had no significance in any editors that ran on TENEX. I was later reminded that the Multics time-sharing system used [@] as its line-erase character. This caused a fair amount of grief in that community of users…”

The resulting format was loginname@host (and later loginname@host.domain once the DNS system was developed). And so it was that what is generally credited as being the first true network email, at least as we think of it, was sent in late 1971 by Tomlinson.

Of this momentous occasion, Tomlinson said, “The first message was sent between two [DEC-10] machines that were literally side by side. The only physical connection they had (aside from the floor they sat on) was through the ARPANET. I sent a number of test messages to myself from one machine to the other. The test messages were entirely forgettable and I have, therefore, forgotten them. Most likely the first message was QWERTYUIOP or something similar. (Essentially quickly randomly typing gibberish on the keyboard.) When I was satisfied that the program seemed to work, I sent a message to the rest of my group explaining how to send messages over the network. The first use of network email announced its own existence.”

And the rest, as they say, is history.

Source…..www.today i foundout.com

Natarajan

 

Image of the Day….”Flower Blooms in Space “….!

Flower blooms in space

Here it is! A flower grown on the International Space station blooms.

First flower grown in space

On Saturday (January 16, 2016), International Space Station (ISS) astronaut Scott Kelly tweeted out an image of what he described as the first flower grown in space.

The orange zinnia – a plant related to the sunflower – is from a small garden on the ISS in theVEG-01 module – known as “Veggie” – an experiment focused on growing plants in space. The plant in the picture is the first of the zinnia’s to successfully flower.

On November 16, 2015 NASA astronauts activated the Veggie plant growth system and its rooting “pillows” containing zinnia seeds on the space station in the first-ever flowering crop experiment on the orbiting laboratory. In the days since, LED lights were on for 10 hours and off for 14 hours in order to stimulate the plants to flower.

In late December, Kelly tweeted that the plants weren’t looking too good, and told the ground team:

You know, I think if we’re going to Mars, and we were growing stuff, we would be responsible for deciding when the stuff needed water. Kind of like in my backyard, I look at it and say ‘Oh, maybe I should water the grass today.’ I think this is how this should be handled.

The Veggie team on Earth created what was dubbed The Zinnia Care Guide for the On-Orbit Gardener, and gave basic guidelines for care while putting judgment capabilities into the hands of the astronaut who had the plants right in front of him. Rather than pages and pages of detailed procedures that most science operations follow, the care guide was a one-page, streamlined resource to support Kelly as an autonomous gardener. By the first week in January, the flowers were on the rebound.

The Veggie plant growth facility was installed on the ISS in early May of 2014, and the first crop – red romaine lettuce – was activated for growth. The first growth cycle faced some issues, but the crew was able to harvest and eat lettuce from the second crop in August, 2015.

Although Kelly has made the claim that these are the first flowers grown in space, The Verge reports that this might not be true. Astronaut Don Pettit grew a sunflower on the ISS in in 2012 that looked like this.

NASA is maturing Veggie technology aboard the space station to provide future pioneers with a sustainable food supplement – a critical part of NASA’s Journey to Mars.

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Bottom line: On January 16, 2016, astronaut Scott Kelly tweeted out an image of an orange zinnia – the first flower grown aboard International Space Station (ISS).

Read more from NASA

Source………www.earthsky.org

Natarajan