This 15-Year-Old Takes on Cyber Bullies. And Makes Them Rethink Their Actions Too. …..

ReThink is an innovative technology that detects cyber-bullying, or hurtful and bullying words – on text messages, emails, social media communications and any app that uses a keyboard – and gives a chance to the person writing them to rethink his or her actions. The developer is a 15-year-old adolescent who deserves kudos for her mature thinking and innovation.

Trisha Prabhu was just 13 when she heard about an 11-year-old girl who jumped off her town’s water tank and committed suicide because she was repeatedly cyber-bullied. The incident had a deep impact on her.

I was shocked, heart-broken and angry. How could a girl younger than myself be pushed to take her own life? This was unacceptable! I knew I had to do something to stop this from ever happening again,” says Trisha, now 15, who lives in Naperville in the US.

Trisha started working on the project when she heard about a girl's suicide due to cyber bullying.

The incident reminded Trisha about the time she too was cyber bullied. “I had received offensive messages about my wardrobe choices. I am what you’d call thick-skinned, so I just brushed it off and moved on. But after reading this story, I realized that many adolescents get really affected, especially if the cyber-bullying is repeated and targeted,” she says.

This is when Trisha started researching the issue of cyber-bullying and found that more than 50% of adolescents who go online are cyber-bullied. Victims suffer from depression, low self-esteem and anxiety and are often afraid to go back to school; they eventually drop out. Over 38% of the victims suffer from suicidal tendencies.

It was during her research that she read an article, which gave her the idea that can potentially change the lives of hundreds of adolescents who are cyber-bullied.

“The article said an adolescent brain was like a car with no brakes. No pausing! No thinking! Just acting! It’s all too well-known that adolescents make impulsive, rash decisions. I further researched this topic to identify why adolescents make impulsive decisions. There is a part of the brain called the pre-frontal cortex. It is the part that controls decision-making and is not fully developed until the age of 25,” she explains.

The revolutionary idea and how it works

rethink2

rethink1

She then thought: What if these kids are given a chance to reconsider before they actually post a message on social media? What if they are given a warning to think about their actions? This mature thinking gave birth to the revolutionary idea of ReThink, a software that filters offensive messages and gives a person a chance to change them before posting.

The software has patented, sophisticated context-sensitive filtering that detects hurtful messages as they are typed and pops-up a non-intrusive alert that gives adolescents a second chance to pause, review and rethink before sending that hurtful message.

The app, called Rethink – Stops Cyberbullying, can be downloaded for free from the Google Play store. Parents can also download the app and install it on their young children’s phones and computers to enable them to rethink the posts they make.

The software works on all apps and platforms — including text messages, social media, emails, etc. — any device that uses a keyboard.

“The ReThink solution not only helps the victim, it also helps the bully change his or her behavior. It helps kids develop key decision making skills on and off the internet. ReThink allows teens to become responsible digital-citizens,” says Trisha.

The astonishing results

Trisha's initiative has shown 93 percent success rate.

Trisha tested the prototype on about 1,500 users, all adolescents, and the results were amazing. Over 93% of the time, adolescents changed their minds and decided not to post offensive or hurtful messages after they received notifications or alert messages from ReThink.

“I think this was a huge success for me. Parents and teachers often find themselves trying to resolve bullying situations AFTER bullying has occurred. But this software will address the issue at source and not after the damage is done,” she says.

What seems like a simple yet powerful solution wasn’t easy to implement since Trisha is still a school student. She had familiarize herself with technology to create this app, and work while managing her hectic school schedule simultaneously. “I loved every bit of it though,” she quickly adds.

The app, which has been downloaded by about 100 people so far, still needs more recognition and Trisha hopes more children and parents will use it on their digital devices.

Her innovation won her a spot as a Google Science Fair 2014 global finalist, and also won several other awards. The award money that she received from these competitions went towards refining her prototype.

The future

In the future, Trisha wants to make ReThink available on iStore as well. Her goal is to roll out ReThink to all adolescents, schools, libraries, and communities for free.

“If I make a positive difference in the lives of many in the next 10 years, I would consider myself to be on the right track. I would love to continue on my path to social entrepreneurship and be a change agent for issues that are affecting our society. I definitely would continue to work on unravelling the secrets of the brain and understanding how they affect behaviour,” she says.

As for other young innovators like her, she has a powerful message for them too: “You don’t have to wear a white lab coat or have Albert Einstein’s hair to be a scientist. Just look around yourself, find a problem that you are passionate about and take on the cause to solve the issues. As Steve Jobs said: simple is much harder than complex, original much harder than derived. In the end, when you get there, you can move mountains.”

You can download the ReThink app here. Want to know more about her work? Contact her at contact@trishaprabhu.com – or check out her website.

Source….Shreya Pareek…www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

Why a Government School in Rural Chhattisgarh Can Change the Way Schools Are Run All over India…

Anusuya Jain, the highly dedicated 51-year old headmistress of Government Primary School in Motwada, Chhattisgarh has introduced some great ideas to ensure higher participation and lower lower drop out rates in the school. Here’s more on the success story.

As far as schools go, the Government Primary School in Motwada village in Kanker district, Chhattisgarh, is innovative, unusual, progressive, and inclusive. That’s a whole lot of adjectives to describe a learning institution located in the otherwise violence-affected and poverty-ridden North Bastar region but then the amazing work being done here by Headmistress Anusuya Jain, 51, and two other committed women teachers simply cannot go unnoticed.

From the impeccable, landscaped grounds to the neat and clean building to the cheerful classrooms, the school has indeed created a reputation for being a model institution.

The Government Primary School in Motwada village in Kanker district, Chhattisgarh, brings a wave of fresh change as women teachers and a committed headmistress make learning fun for students here. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS)

The Government Primary School in Motwada village in Kanker district, Chhattisgarh, brings a wave of fresh change as women teachers and a committed headmistress make learning fun for students here. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS) –

“And not just the facilities, but the informal environment and interactive lessons encourage local children to come to school regularly, which is a definite change from the usual absenteeism and high drop out rates among government run institutions,” points out Jain proudly.

At the Government Primary School in Motwada, classroom learning certainly takes on a whole new meaning. Instead of the customary chairs and tables, students and teachers sit together on the floor, interact with each other as equals and there is a concerted effort towards making lessons fun and informative for the young ones.

Besides the classes, the modest campus, too, is lively and filled with creative artwork, alphabets, numbers and stories painted on the walls.

“We apply the Multi Grade Multi Level (MGML) teaching method here, which enables children to enjoy their class work and also develop confidence in their abilities. These are small children from the village and to engage directly with them and make them comfortable we sit with them on the floor like their parents do at home,” she explains.

It was in 2007-08 that MGML was introduced on a pilot basis in select government schools in the district with an idea to improve the quality of education and the learning abilities of the children.

Instead of the customary chairs and tables, students and teachers at the Government Primary School in Motwada, sit together on the floor, interact with each other as equals and there is a concerted effort towards making lessons fun and informative for the young ones. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS)

Instead of the customary chairs and tables, students and teachers at the Government Primary School in Motwada, sit together on the floor, interact with each other as equals and there is a concerted effort towards making lessons fun and informative for the young ones. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS) –

Under the MGML method, student groups are created as per their existing knowledge and learning capacities and then they are promoted once they master a level.

Although, unfortunately, due to the lack of teaching materials and proper training, this programme has now been discontinued, the school in Motwada, which was one of the first ones to be chosen for the experiment, has been able to continue the good work.

When Jain, a mother of two grown-up sons, had come to Motwada five years back, things were being done quite differently. “Whereas children were coming to school, it was not the inviting and stimulating place it should be. Moreover, there was no involvement of the parents in either the running of the school or what was being taught to their children. A School Management Committee (SMC) was in place but it was inactive,” she recalls.

For starters, Jain decided to do a small survey of the village to gather data, like the number of families, what they did for a living, the educational qualification of the parents, and so on. With the assistance of her colleagues and a few members of the SMC she embarked upon this mission to better understand the mindset of the parents as well as their living conditions.

Her findings were definitely enlightening – no one in the village had studied beyond Class 10 and most of the teenagers and elders were employed as daily wage farm labourers.

But while their day-to-day life was tough, most harboured dreams of a better life for their children. “That attitude and hope is what has brought about the transformation. Right at the onset, I called a meeting of the parents and told them: ‘Do you want your children to become labourers? If not, then you have to pay attention to what your children are doing and play a part in the working of the village school’. The revival of the SMC has given a great boost to our work,” shares Jain.

Truly, the 16-member SMC, of which 14 are women, is functioning in tandem with the school authorities. It’s not uncommon for Committee President Godavari Yadav and her deputy, Sabita Yadav, to drop by the campus to discuss the progress of the children, get an honest feedback from the teachers and even talk about any pertinent administrative issues that may need to be addressed.

Elaborates Godavari, “We have learnt a lot by interacting with Anusuya didi. We have understood the value of good quality education and also know that as parents we need to be involved in the functioning of the school. After all, our cooperation can facilitate the teachers to give our children a better learning experience.”

Apart from that, these days, most mothers, including Godavari and Sabita, are keen on sitting with their children as they do their home assignments.

 Headmistress Anusuya Jain has generously shared her time and tapped into years of experience to ensure that the school delivers on the promise of quality learning and also make Motwada a better place to live. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS)

Headmistress Anusuya Jain has generously shared her time and tapped into years of experience to ensure that the school delivers on the promise of quality learning and also make Motwada a better place to live. (Credit: Purusottam Singh Thakur\WFS) –

On their part, villagers like Ramkumar Kuldeep are quick to acknowledge her contribution, “Madam has transformed the school and has even enthused our children to work hard and do well. Her dedicated approach is appreciated by everyone in the village.”

“Anusuya didi has motivated us to sit with our kids while they are reading and doing their studies. Even if we don’t really understand what they are saying or writing, our attention eggs them to perform better and we, in turn, learn something new,” says Godavari.

Of course, the synergy between the school and the villagers has gone beyond dealing with matters of education. The SMC and the panchayat members seek Jain’s opinion and advice on tackling other issues as well.

Ramkumar Kuldeep, who is a member of the SMC, reveals, “Everyone is of the unanimous view that Anusuya madam and the other teachers are our well wishers and can provide sound guidance on a variety of issues. Just recently, when there was a proposal before the panchayat to merge Motwada into the Kanker Municipality, we were not sure what this would mean for our the village, whether it was a beneficial move. After we came together and consulted with her we decided to reject the proposal and went confidently to the District Collector. Anusuya madam is always ready to talk to us and share her personal point of view. We can take our personal problems to her, too.”

Be it information on maintaining good health and hygiene or how to support children in their education or learning the right social etiquette, Jain is at hand to show them the way. She vividly recalls how she patiently taught her students the value of cleanliness and the merits of keeping the school grounds neat – something that has had a ripple effect in the entire village.

Today, our campus is green and we have planted a variety of colourful flowers and plants. No one plucks flowers or litters in the garden. Earlier, this was not the case. Parents used to ask their children to pick flowers to offer in the temple. So I decided to tell students to take saplings and plant them at home. Once they had their own flowers they stopped plucking. One has to think of easy, workable solutions instead of dwelling on the problems,” smiles Jain.

The first one to come everyday and the last one to leave, Jain has generously shared her time and tapped into years of experience to ensure that the school delivers on the promise of quality learning and also make Motwada a better place to live.

On their part, villagers like Ramkumar Kuldeep are quick to acknowledge her contribution, “Madam has transformed the school and has even enthused our children to work hard and do well. Her dedicated approach is appreciated by everyone in the village.”

It was a decade ago that the National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) had created a revised National Curriculum Framework (NCF) with the express idea of building a schooling system that would reduce children’s burden and, at the same time, facilitate learning. The Government Primary School in Motwada is among the few schools that have been able to realise this goal.

Written by Purusottam Singh Thakur for Women’s Feature Service (WFS) and republished here in arrangement with WFS

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

Indian Railways is Changing for the Better….

Indian Railways is taking several innovative steps to be in line with the ‘Digital India’ campaign and to make the experience for passengers as comfortable as possible. Here are the three latest IT initiatives that have been launched by the ministry.

Taking one step further towards consumer satisfaction, the information technology (IT) arm of the Railway Ministry, Centre for Railway Information Systems (CRIS), has developed three new initiatives. These are the initiatives which were launched by Railway Minister Suresh Prabhu, this Tuesday.

Paperless Unreserved Ticketing through Mobile Phone between New Delhi – Palwal Section

railwayapp1

As the name implies, unreserved tickets authorise a journey but do not offer any reserved seats. They are also not specific to any particular train service and the tickets are often useful for short distance travels. The paperless unreserved ticketing system through a mobile app has been developed with the view of saving time for the passengers. The system was launched for Chennai and Mumbai suburban sections in April and July this year. According to the minister, it will soon be expanded to other sections as well.

In the Delhi-Palwal section, the system covers 11 stations over a distance of 57 km. The app, ‘utsonmobile’, can be downloaded both on Android and Windows-based platforms. Payments can be done with the help of the ‘railway wallet’ feature of the app. Other than the unreserved tickets, passengers in Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata and Chennai will also be able to book Monthly Season Tickets (MST) and platform tickets with the help of a mobile application very soon. The app can be downloaded here.

Currency Coin cum Card operated Automatic Ticket Vending Machines (CoTVM) at New Delhi Railway Station

station

Photo Credit: Srinivasan G/Flickr

The automatic ticket vending machines are unmanned self-operating kiosks. This initiative is a part of the ministry’s ‘Operation five minutes’, and will help the passengers buy unreserved tickets themselves, without having to stand in long queues. Tickets can be purchased with coins, currency notes and smart cards. As per the ministry’s plan, the machines will be available at all major stations in the next 3 months. As of now, 450 machines are being installed by CRIS. With useful graphic interface for transaction, the kiosks will be very easy for everyone to operate. The machines will issue non-concessional second class journey tickets for non-suburban section, second/first class journey/return tickets for suburban section and platform tickets. They can also be used for the renewal of non-concessional season tickets and recharge of smart cards.

-Parichaalan – Mobile Application for Freight Operations –

goods train

Photo Credit: Ashwin John/Flickr

This app has been developed by CRIS to facilitate easy decision making on freight operations, with improved management operation system. The information available on the app will be current and dynamic, unlike the reports generated by the Freight Operations Information System (FOIS). Also, with the help of pictorial and graphical display of data, the information will be easy to understand. The app will help senior decision makers of the department to plan freight operations on real time basis. It will be provided to other operating officers on the field after the initial experiment.

The app provides mapped movement of freight trains and also offers brilliant search tools to look for specific trains and their services. There is also a planning tool which helps in planning the movement and loading, and gives live updates about the trains.

“The new initiatives are directed towards improving passenger and customer services on Indian Railways. The IT applications which have been inaugurated today are an indication that Indian Railways is constantly moving towards e-Governance,” said Suresh Prabhu during the launch.

-Source….Tanaya Singh…www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

Fish Can Now Snack On Ganesh Idols Made From Fish Food…. Great Initiative !!!

If you live in Maharashtra, you must be knowing that Ganesh Chaturthi is celebrated with such aplomb and on a large scale. People go crazy and pray to Lord Ganesha for their well-being. Towards the end, the Ganesha idols are the immersed in water (Visarjan). But does it end here? NO.

The main problem with Ganesh Chaturthi is the immersion of idols. It affects the marine life after it is immersed in water.

Sprouts Environmental Trust, with support from a private company, has come up with an idea of creating Ganesha idols which are eco-friendly –  a way to keep oceans clean and also FEED THE FISH.

Ganesha idols were first made with Plaster of Paris (PoP). In 2004, a company resorted to making these idols with clay so that it doesn’t pollute the environment.

But this time idols will be made by vegetarian food and corn so that aquatic organisms can devour that and not be killed. Also, these food items will be coloured in an innovative way with turmeric, Chandan, and geru. Isn’t this amazing?

The founder of NGO Sprouts said that they have made around 40 idols and they are receiving orders from across the country.

How Visarjan ruins the water bodies?

 

The materials that are used to make these idols ruin the aquatic life as these react with organic matter. The Plaster of Paris material that is usually used lessens the oxygen level of marine life and the chemicals like sulphur, phosphorus, and magnesium act as a spoilt sport.

If you wish to buy one of these idols, you can refer to this.

How was this idea implemented?

1. A Campaign named God save the Ocean was designed by two senior creative directors. A lot of ideas were put and an extensive research followed.

2. Soon, they came across a person from Nagpur who makes idols out of chocolate. While this idea seemed good, but wasn’t implemented.

3. After this, vegetable powder seemed a feasible idea but even that had a potential to deteriorate the environment. And thus, vegetarian food seemed plausible. And thus, this was the solution – An idols that fish can eat! The small fish can consume this and larger fish can consume small fish, which is a healthy cycle and saves the environment.

 

After seeing these reactions, I hope this trend catches on and people buy this idol because even Gods want us to save marine life.

News Source: Hindustan Times

source…Aparajita Mishra….www.storypick.com

Natarajan

அன்பாசிரியர் – சித்ரா: அஞ்சல் அட்டை முதல் யூடியூப் வரை அசத்தும் ஆசிரியை!

உற்சாக மாணவர்களுடன் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா.

உற்சாக மாணவர்களுடன் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா.

| மாணவர்கள் மீதான அன்பாலும் அக்கறையாலும் அர்ப்பணிப்புடன் தனித்துவமாக கற்பிக்கும் அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியர்களின் நல்லடையாள அணிவகுப்புத் தொடர் இது. |

“பெரிய அளவில் பணம் சம்பாதிப்பதற்குப் பதிலாக, பெரிய மாற்றத்தை விதைக்க ஆசைப்பட்டேன். அதனாலேயே ஆசிரியர் ஆனேன்!”- தகவல் மற்றும் தகவல் தொடர்பு தொழில்நுட்பத்தில் சாதித்ததற்காக குடியரசுத் தலைவரிடம் தேசிய விருது, அப்துல் கலாமின் பாராட்டு, மைக்ரோசாப்ட்டின் உலகளாவிய மன்ற, தேசத்தின் சாதனையாளர் விருது, நல்லாசிரியர் விருது மற்றும் ஏராளமான தேசிய, மாநில, ஊரக விருதுகள் பெற்ற சித்ரா என்னும் அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியரின் வார்த்தைகள் இவை.

இனி சித்ராவின் பயணம், அவரின் வார்த்தைகளிலேயே…

“1996-ம் ஆண்டு விக்கிரவாண்டி ஊராட்சியின் வாக்கூர்பகண்டை என்னும் ஊரின் தொடக்கப் பள்ளியில், என் ஆசிரிய வாழ்க்கை தொடங்கியது. அப்போது நான் ஒன்றாம் வகுப்பு ஆசிரியை. வழக்கமான அ, ஆ தானே என்றிருந்த எனக்கு, மாணவர்களே பாடம் சொல்லிக் கொடுத்துவிட்டார்கள், அவர்கள் எழுதிய ‘அ’வையும், ‘ஆ’வையும், படிக்க கூடுதல் முயற்சி தேவைப்பட்டது.

அப்போது பேருந்தில் பள்ளிக்கு வந்து சேர ஒன்றரை மணி நேரம் ஆகும். அந்த சமயத்தில் குஜராத்திய எழுத்தாளர் ஒருவர் எழுதிய ‘கனவு ஆசிரியர்’ என்ற புத்தகம் கிடைத்தது. அதில் கூறப்பட்டிருந்த வழிமுறைகளையும், அறிவுரைகளையும் எனக்கு ஏற்றாற்போல மாற்றிக் கொண்டேன். மாணவர்களுக்குச் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க, அரசு நடத்திய பயிற்சி முகாம் அதிக உதவியாக இருந்தது. ‘விளையாட்டு வழி’ கல்வி முறையைப் பின்பற்ற ஆரம்பித்தேன்.

மாணவியிடம் கற்ற பாடம்

குச்சி, புளியங்கொட்டைகளை வைத்து கணக்கு சொல்லிக் கொடுத்தேன். மாணவர்களை அருகில் இருந்த வயல்களுக்கு அழைத்துக் கொண்டு போய் அறிவியல் சொல்லிக் கொடுப்பதும், வகுப்பறையிலேயே விதைகள் இட்டு செடிகள் வளர்ப்பதும் வழக்கமாய் இருந்தது. மாலை நேரங்களில் பாட்டு மூலம் பாடம் கற்றுக் கொடுக்கத் தொடங்கினேன்.

ஒரு முறை ஆர்வமிகுதியில் மூன்றாம் வகுப்புக் குழந்தைகளுக்கு மினி கிரைண்டர் மாதிரி செய்து எடுத்துக் கொண்டு போனேன். “இது எதுக்கு டீச்சர்? இதுதான் எங்க வீட்டுலயே இருக்கே!” என்றாள் ஒரு மாணவி. அப்போதுதான் சிரமப்பட்டு கடினமான எதையும் செய்து காட்டுவது தேவையற்றது என்பதை உணர்ந்தேன்.

மனம் நெகிழ்ந்த தருணம்

மெல்ல மெல்ல கற்றலின்பால் குழந்தைகளுக்கு ஆர்வம் ஏற்பட்டது. பள்ளி மாணவர்கள், மாவட்ட ஆட்சியர் அலுவலகத்தில் நடைபெறும் விழாக்களில் ஆவலுடன் கலந்து கொள்ள ஆரம்பித்தனர். சுதந்திர தினம், குடியரசு தினம் என அரசு விழாக் கொண்டாட்டங்களிலும் திருக்குறள் ஒப்பித்தல், பாட்டுப் போட்டி மற்றும் விளையாட்டுப் போட்டிகளிலும், பங்குபெற்றனர். குக்கிராமத்தில் இருந்து வெளியே கூட சென்றிருக்காத அக்குழந்தைகள், முதன்முதலாக ஆட்சியர் அலுவலகம் போய் பரிசுகளுடன் திரும்பி வந்தனர்.

பரிசுகளை வென்றதாகக் கேட்ட தருணத்தில் எங்கள் கால்கள் தரையிலேயே படவில்லை. ஒவ்வொரு விழாவிலும் போட்டிகளில் கலந்து கொள்வது வழக்கமானது. நீர்ப்பிரச்சினைகள், உடல்நலப் பிரச்சினைகள், சுகாதாரம் குறித்த விழிப்புணர்வு குறித்த கார்ட்டூன் கதைகளை ஒவ்வொரு வாரமும் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க ஆரம்பித்தேன். பாண்டிச்சேரி வானொலி நிலையத்திலும் எங்கள் மாணவர்கள் ஏராளமான நிகழ்ச்சிகளில் பங்கேற்றனர்.

எனக்காக போராடிய கிராமத்தினர்

‘பள்ளிக்கு யார் வந்தாலும் பயப்படக்கூடாது. இயல்பாக அவர்களை வரவேற்று, பள்ளியைச் சுற்றிக் காண்பிக்க வேண்டும்’ என்று சொல்லியிருந்தேன். ஒரு முறை மாவட்ட ஆட்சியர் எங்கள் பள்ளிக்கு திடீர் வருகை தந்தார். மாணவர்களே அவரை வரவேற்ற விதத்தைப் பார்த்து அசந்து போனவர், அடுத்த நாளே எங்களுக்கு விருதளித்துச் சிறப்பித்தார்.

ஒரு முறை நான், விடுமுறை காரணமாக வெளியூருக்குப் போய்விட்டு, திங்கட்கிழமை காலையில் பள்ளிக்குத் திரும்பினேன். சைக்கிளில் வேகமாக வந்து கொண்டிருந்த என்னைப் பார்த்து கிராம மக்கள் புன்முறுவல் பூத்தனர். எனக்கு எதுவுமே புரியவில்லை. பின்னர் தான் அந்தச் சிரிப்பின் பின்னால் இருக்கும் அன்பும், நம்பிக்கையும் புரிந்தது.

இரண்டு நாட்களுக்கு முன்னால், நான் மாற்றலாகி வேறு ஊருக்குச் செல்ல உத்தரவு வந்திருக்கிறது. ஆனால் கிராம மக்கள், என்னை அனுப்பக்கூடாது என்று தொடர்போராட்டம் நடத்தி, உத்தரவைத் திரும்பப் பெற வைத்திருக்கின்றனர். நான் வாங்கிய எல்லா விருதுகளின் ஆனந்தத் தருணத்தை விட, இந்தத் தருணமே என்னை அதிகம் சந்தோஷப்படுத்தியது” என்கிறார்.

கற்பித்தலில் எளிமைகளும் புதுமைகளும்

கற்றலிலும் கற்பித்தலிலும் எளிமையையும், புதுமையையும் விரும்பினார் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா. ஆரம்பப் பள்ளி மாணவர்கள் எழுதிப் பழக வேண்டுமென்பதற்காக, தமிழ் மற்றும் ஆங்கில எழுத்துகளை அச்சிட்டு, முத்திரையாக்கினார். அதை ஒவ்வொரு குழந்தையின் நோட்டுப்புத்தகத்தில் அச்சு வைத்து எழுதக்கற்றுக் கொடுத்தலில் புதுமை படைத்தார். வகுப்பில் கல்வியைத் தாண்டி நல்ல பழக்கங்களையும் கற்றுக்கொடுப்பதை வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டவர், கழிவறைகள் தேவையைக் குறித்த விழிப்புணர்வை ஏற்படுத்தியதற்காக, மத்திய அரசின் சுகாதாரத்துறை விருதையும் பெற்றிருக்கிறார்.

கலாம் தந்த வியப்பு

பள்ளியில் ‘கடிதம் எழுதுதல்’ பகுதியை நோட்டிலே எழுதித்தான் பழக்கப்பட்டிருப்போம். ஆனால் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா, அருகில் உள்ள தபால் நிலையத்தில் இருந்து அஞ்சல் அட்டைகளை வாங்கி கடிதம் எழுதக் கற்றுக் கொடுத்திருக்கிறார். அதன் நீட்சியாக, மாணவர்கள் சிலர், குடியரசு தின மற்றும் பொங்கல் வாழ்த்துக் கூறி, டெல்லி ஜனாதிபதி மாளிகைக்குக் கடிதம் எழுதி அனுப்பியிருக்கின்றனர். சற்றும் எதிர்பார்க்காத ஆச்சரியமாய் டெல்லியில் இருந்து பதில் கடிதம் வந்தது. அதில் அப்போதைய ஜனாதிபதி அப்துல் கலாமின் கையொப்பம் இடப்பட்டு தமிழில் பதில் அளிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.

கணினி… சாதனையின் தொடக்கப்புள்ளி!

பள்ளி மெல்ல மெல்ல வளர்ச்சி அடையத் தொடங்கிய நிலையில், ஆசிரியை சித்ராவுக்கு வேறு ஊருக்கு மாற்றல் வந்தது. 2008-ம் ஆண்டில் காஞ்சிபுரம் மாவட்டத்தில் உள்ள அஸ்தினாபுரம் ஆரம்பப்பள்ளிக்கு வந்து சேர்ந்தார். கணிப்பொறியின் ஆக்கிரமிப்பு தொடங்கியிருந்த காலம் அது. ஆர்வமாய்க் கணினி கற்கத் தொடங்கினார் சித்ரா.

நினைத்த வேலைகளைக் குறுகிய நேரத்தில் செய்துவிட முடிகிற உலகத்தினுள் நுழைந்ததாய் உணர்ந்தார். தான் கற்றதை மாணவர்களுக்கும் சொல்லிக் கொடுக்க ஆசைப்பட்டார். ஆனால் அது மிகப்பெரிய சாதனையின் தொடக்கப்புள்ளியாக இருக்கும் என்பது அப்போது அவருக்குத் தெரிந்திருக்கவில்லை.

பள்ளியில், மதிய உணவு இடைவேளைகளில் விருப்பமுள்ள மாணவர்கள் கணினி கற்றுக் கொள்ளலாம் என்று அறிவித்தார். கணிப்பொறியை எப்படித் திறப்பது, இயக்குவது, மேலும் அடிப்படையான எம்.எஸ்.ஆபிஸ் குறித்தும் மாணவர்களுக்குக் கற்றுக் கொடுத்தார்.

தனது பயணம் குறித்து மேலும் பேசுகிறார் சித்ரா.

“2010-ல் இணையத்தில் உலவிக் கொண்டிருந்த போது, சோலார் குக்கரின் செயல்முறையைப் பார்த்தேன். விளையாட்டாய் மாணவர்களிடம் காண்பித்து, அதை முயற்சித்துப் பார்க்கச் சொன்னேன். அவர்களும் சில முறைகள் முயன்றனர், ஆனால் அரிசி வேகாமல் அப்படியே இருந்தது. அடுத்தடுத்த நாட்களில் திரும்பத் திரும்ப அவர்கள் முயற்சிக்க, சோலார் குக்கர் வெற்றிகரமாக இயங்கியது.

சமூக சேவகி கிரண் பிர் சேத்தியின் ‘டிசைன் ஃபார் சேஞ்ச்’ அமைப்பு சிறந்த கண்டுபிடிப்புகளை நிகழ்த்தும் பள்ளி மாணவர்களுக்கு ஒவ்வோர் ஆண்டும் விருது வழங்குகிறது. அதன் சிறந்த 20 கண்டுபிடிப்புகளில் ஒன்றாக எங்களின் கண்டுபிடிப்பும் தேர்வாகியது. அச்சம்பவம், அங்கீகாரத்தை எதிர்பார்க்காமல், மாணவர்கள், புதிது புதிதாய்க் கண்டுபிடிப்புகள் நிகழ்த்த ஏதுவாக அமைந்தது.

பல ஆசிரியர்கள் பாடப்புத்தகத்தை, பைபிளாகத்தான் பார்க்கின்றனர். அதைத் தாண்டி வேறு எதையுமே மாணவர்களுக்குச் சொல்லிக் கொடுப்பதில்லை.

தொழில்நுட்பம் அதன் போக்கில் வளர்ந்துகொண்டே இருக்கிறது. அதன் நன்மைகளை உணர்ந்து பயன்படுத்துவது எப்படி என்பதை மாணவர்களே எங்களுக்குக் கற்றுக் கொடுக்கின்றனர்” என்கிறார்.

ஆசிரியப்பணி தவிர, பள்ளிக் கல்வித்துறையின் சமூக அறிவியல் பாடத் திட்ட உறுப்பினராகவும் இருக்கிறார் சித்ரா. பாடத்திட்டங்களை உருவாக்கும் சமயத்தில் இரவு பகலாக உழைத்து, புத்தகத்தை வடிவமைத்ததில் இவரின் பங்கும் தவிர்க்க முடியாததாய் இருந்திருக்கிறது. மாணவர்களைத் தன் இரு கண்களாய் பாவித்த கலாம் மாணவர்களுக்குப் பதிலளித்த சம்பவம், தற்போது மூன்றாம் வகுப்பு சமூக அறிவியல் பாடத்தில் சேர்க்கப்பட்டிருக்கிறது.

ஆசிரியர்களை ஊக்குவிக்கும் பணி

சத்தமின்றி இன்னொரு முக்கியப் பணியையும் இவர் செய்து வருகிறார். தனக்கு ஏதோ ஒரு வகையில் தெரிந்த, அறிந்த அரசுப் பள்ளி ஆசிரியர்களில் எவரேனும் கற்பித்தலில் புதுமைகளைக் கையாண்டு வந்தால், அவரை அடையாளம் கண்டு பள்ளிக் கல்வித் துறையின் பாடத் திட்டக் குழுவில் இணைக்கும் வேலைதான் அது.

தனது கற்பித்தல் முறையையும், தன்னுடைய மாணவர்களின் திறமைகளையும் தமிழகம் முழுவதும் உள்ள ஆசிரியர்களிடம் கொண்டு சேர்த்து, அவர்களுக்கும் தனது உத்திகள் சென்றடைய யூடியூபை நாடியிருக்கிறார் ஆசிரியை சித்ரா. அவ்வப்போது அதில் வீடியோ பதிவுகளை அப்டேட் செய்து வருகிறார். அரசுப் பள்ளி மாணவர்களின் ஆக்கங்களைப் படம்பிடிக்கும் சித்ராவின் யுடியூப் பக்க இணைப்புhttps://www.youtube.com/user/chitra137

Source….க.சே. ரமணி பிரபா தேவி – தொடர்புக்கு: ramaniprabhadevi.s@thehindutamil.co.in      www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Inventing Emoticons….

Inventing Emoticons

“Emoticons,” short for “emotive Icons,” (emotive meaning “appealing to or expression emotion” hence “icons that express emotions”) have been around in vertical form for some time. However, sideways emoticons seem to be a surprisingly recent invention, going back just about three decades.

“B4″ the days of LOL and apps to aid parents in understanding their teenager’s “textspeak”, a man named Scott E. Fahlman wanted his colleagues and students to understand the difference between a sarcastic joke and a nasty barb when typed.

Fahlman was part of a group of scientists and students at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) who frequently communicated via an early online newsgroup to discuss a wide variety of topics. In these groups, if someone failed to understand that some sentiment was meant to be sarcastic or a joke, they would “post a lengthy diatribe in response,” explains Fahlman, “that would stir up more people with more responses, and soon the original thread of the discussion was buried. In at least one case, a humorous remark was interpreted by someone as a serious safety warning.”

So Fahlman came up with a sideways smiley and posted it on the newsgroup in September of 1982. The following is a copy of the original post.

“19-Sep-1982 11:44 Scott E Fahlman 🙂
From: Scott E Fahlman
I propose the following character sequence for joke markers: 🙂

Read it sideways. Actually, it is probably more economical to mark things that are NOT jokes, given current trends. For this, use :-(“

Fahlman thus became the first known person to use the 🙂 and 😦 emoticons. (Although, many have since claimed that they used it before him, without having any documented evidence to support their claims.)  Of course, Fahlman himself thinks it highly probable that other people were using these particular notations before him, being a very simple idea.

Regardless if they did, it was Fahlman’s post that popularized and spurred on the creation of new emoticons.  The idea caught on quickly at CMU and it soon spread to dozens of other universities, research labs, and computer networks. Some people even made a hobby out of compiling all sorts of smileys expressing various sentiments.

Fahlman didn’t archive the original thread, since he had no way of knowing it would ever prove to be of interest to anybody, let alone help change the way people communicate digitally.
So how do we know about it today? In 2001, Mike Jones of Microsoft sponsored a serious dig into the thread archives stored on old backup tapes to see if someone could find the origin post by Fahlman.  Jeff Baird, Howard Wactlar, Bob Cosgrove, and David Livingston at CMU managed to not only find the tape backups, but also to find a machine capable of reading the old tapes and decoding the information on them.  The original thread was found on those tapes on September 10, 2002, just nine days before the 20th anniversary of the post.

How has all this affected Fahlman? Well, Fahlman never made a dime off of emoticons, and throughout the birth and growth of the emoticon, he has remained with CMU, primarily working in Artificial Intelligence. “I am trying to create something that will have a greater impact than that stupid thing,” Fahlman says. That’s a tall order. 🙂

Bonus Emoticon Facts:

  • In an 1881 edition of the publication “Puck”, they suggested the vertical emoticons seen on your right.
  • Another early instance of a vertical emoticon was suggested in 1912 by Ambrose Bierce: \__/!  This vertical emoticon was to indicate a smile with an exclamation point at the end to indicate it was an ironical smile, thus to be used as an alternate punctuation for sentences that were referring to things ironic in nature.  While this may seem not very self evident, Fahlman states that a CMU research group was using \_/ to indicate a smile around the time he suggested the sideways smiley, though he wasn’t aware of it when he made his suggestion and it isn’t clear whether that usage came before his.
  • Yet another earlier emoticon was suggested in the New York Times in 1969 when Vladimir Nabokov was asked “How do you rank yourself among writers (living) and of the immediate past?”  He responded, “I often think there should exist a special typographical sign for a smile — some sort of concave mark, a supine round bracket, which I would now like to trace in reply to your question.”
  • Abbreviations like “lol” and the like didn’t just come about because of the internet. According to the April, 1857 edition of The National Telegraphic Review Operators Guide, in Morse code, the number 73 was used to succinctly say “love and kisses”.  This was later changed to mean “best regards” and “love and kisses” got changed to the number 88.  There were numerous other shorthand codes used in Morse code “chatspeak”.
  • One of Abraham Lincoln’s speeches may have included an emoticon or it may have simply been a typo (read: it almost certainly was a typo).  The transcript of the speech was printed in the August 7, 1862 edition of theTimes, where it stated, there is this line “… but it is also true that there is no precedent for your being here yourselves, (applause and laughter 😉 and I offer, in justification of myself and you, that I have found nothing in the Constitution against.”

Harvey Ball got forty five dollars for designing the first yellow smiley face. Ironically, the smiley face was born in unhappy days at the State Mutual Life Assurance Company. The company had purchased the Ohio firm, Guarantee Mutual, and the takeover made working conditions in the company unfriendly and almost hostile. The State Mutual Vice President suggested a “friendship campaign” and hired Ball to design something that would boost morale at the company and asked him to design something “smile” oriented.  After Ball’s death in 2001, the LA Times wrote about his work. “Ball started sketching. Fearing that a grumpy employee would turn the smile upside down into a frown, he added the eyes. He settled on yellow for the background because it was a ‘sunshine’ color. The work took about 10 minutes.”  The company distributed 100 pieces of this smiley in 1964 and asked employees to smile while they answered phones and dealt with customers. Before long, the yellow smiles were so popular that the company kept on reordering them in batches of 10,000 to fill requests by companies and agents. Soon the yellow smiley face was a popular culture icon.The LA Times reports that “By 1971, more than 50 million smiley face buttons had been sold, and the image was popping up on coffee mugs, stickers, T-shirts and countless other items.” Ball never trademarked or copyrighted the design and made no money on it after the initial $45.  Others profited immensely from it, including some in other countries who did manage to acquire the rights to the yellow smiley and sue others who were using it without paying.

Source…www.todayifoundout.com

Natarajan

 

India Is Home To The World’s First Completely Solar-Powered Airport….

 

One of the world’s three biggest polluters just took a big step toward reducing its greenhouse emissions and embracing renewable energy sources.

India’s fourth-largest airport, the Cochin International Airport in the southern city of Kochi, announced on Tuesday that it is now “absolutely energy neutral,” The Economic Times reports. The airport is co-funded and operated by the Indian government through a public-private partnership.

The airport’s energy neutrality is possible thanks to a 12-megawatt solar system consisting of more than 46,000 panels installed on a 50-acre site. The system can generate up to 60,000 units of electricity daily.

According to Al Jazeera America, the project took six months to build and cost $10 million, which the airport anticipates it will recover within five years. The panels are expected to last 25 years.

<span class='image-component__caption' itemprop="caption">The Cochin airport's solar panels as seen from above in Kochi, India in the southern state of Kerala.</span>

The Cochin airport’s solar panels as seen from above in Kochi, India in the southern state of Kerala.

The panels were designed and installed by Bosch Ltd., which has a five-year partnership with the airport, according to Catch News.

The airport began testing solar energy in March 2013, when it installed a small solar plant on the arrival terminal’s rooftop, according to The Economic Times.

The project has been seen as a model for the rest of India, and the government is urging other airports to follow suit.

India’s goal is to ramp up solar capacity to 100 gigawatts by 2022. Its current capacity is four gigawatts.

India has a broader goal to derive 15 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2022, with 3 percent coming exclusively from solar. Earlier this summer, the government rolled out new incentives to encourage developers to turn to renewable energy.

Source…..Chicago Editor, The Huffington Post,….www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan

A Green Taxi of Kolkata…”Rooftop Garden on an Ambassador Car.”..!!!

Dhananjay Chakroborty, a taxi driver in Kolkata, has decided to use his green hands and transform his taxi into a miniature, mobile garden. A green crusader on the move.

Imagine our surprise when we came across Mr. Dhananjay Chakraborty, a taxi driver in Kolkata, who has created a rooftop garden on his cab and has a mini green cavern in the trunk of his car with potted plants. It was truly an amazing and awe-worthy sight. He calls it the ‘subuj rath’ or the green chariot.

11167977_1434920233476298_4783039778295666790_n

The car has metal containers on the rooftop whose bottom is laid with soil, white sand and stone chips and the original green grass grows up with the aid of those mechanizations. It weighs about 65 kgs and cost Mr. Chakraborty about Rs. 22000 to build. It continues to cost him with the increased fuel consumption because of the added weight. However, Mr. Chakraborty said he does not mind it.

The Kolkata cabbie is 40 years old and works from the taxi stand at Tollygunge Karunamoyee in Kolkata. In fact, he has planted flowers at the taxi stand too.

His Taxi, an Ambassador, apart from having a green grass-bed on the roof, has eight potted plants in the trunk and has a green interior completely to promote the message that trees and plants should be planted and taken care of.

10897050_1376593789308943_6898522744511849688_n

Mr. Chakraborty’s project came to fulfillment in parts. It began three years ago when he potted a money plant in a beautiful glass bottle that a passenger had left behind in the back seat. Mr. Chakraborty took care of it and nurtured it, while keeping it in the Taxi.

The bigger idea of a green garden taxi, came from one of his friends who found something similar on Internet and suggested the initiative to Chakraborty. He, being so much in love with nature and trees, decided to give it a try.

1510041_1433449920289996_7066905048024457448_n

Making of the green taxi. Mr. Chakrobarty, with help, adjusting the metal tray onto the roof. His inspiration also came from fellow passengers who appreciated the small money plant that he had begun with. –

11205091_1433449970289991_1012660167758205488_n

The painting of the metal tray on the Subza Rath. He has also been distributing leaflets with messages and sketches that he has made to passengers who are curious and delighted by his initiative. –

He has also been distributing leaflets with messages and sketches that he has made to passengers who are curious and delighted by his initiative. –

11229960_1433449953623326_4358720428597478899_n

However, Mr. Chakraborty does not own the Taxi that he has morphed into a mobile awareness masterpiece on environmental preservation and conservation. He had to sell his taxi, about eight years ago, when he required funds for his treatment post an accident.

But the owner, Mr. Amrish Singh, who owns some five more taxis, has stood up in full support of Chakraborty’s efforts. He says that Dhananjay is one of the safest drivers out there, and since this is for a good cause, he cannot do anything but extend his full support

10422290_1376612839307038_9126793043859879048_n

This is how the Taxi looked before it underwent the transformation to become a miniature mobile garden.

Although, it was not an easy ride, some fellow drivers ridiculed him. In fact, most people before looking at it in a deeper perspective thought he was crazy to even think of such a thing. But Mr. Chakraborty did not pay it any mind, and decided to go on with the project anyway.

Mr. Chakraborty gives an added message. According to him, planting trees is not enough; taking care of them and nurturing them is crucial. Because tree planting initiatives keep happening but most of the saplings just wither away due to lack of water. It is time people, all of us, begin doing our bit.

10885530_1376612842640371_103575272624805763_n

Apart from being an eye opener on environment, there are other benefits of the plants and the grass in the car. Mr. Chakraborty drives a Non- AC Taxi and because of the plants, his taxi remains much cooler than any other non-AC taxi. –

Also, we believe people would be fascinated with such an idea. We know we are. So, the next time you are in Kolkata, do not miss a ride in the green taxi, or as Mr. Chakraborty likes to call it, the ‘sabuj rath’. –

Source….Surabhi Katyal….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

” Eat With it…and Then Eat it…” !!!

When Narayana Peesapati became aware of the harmful effects of plastic, not only to the environment but also to our health when used as cutlery, he was stunned. But he did not stop there. He came up with a solution that most of us wouldn’t have thought of, and actually made it happen!

“Whenever I travelled, I used to feel terribly guilty about using plastic cutlery because it created so much plastic waste. Why couldn’t we create an alternative?” asks 48-year-old Narayana Peesapati, the founder and Managing Director of Bakey’s Food Private Limited. Today, he has found a way to replace plastic cutlery with edible cutlery.

Ok, so plastic is bad for the environment. Everyone knows that. But what’s wrong with not washing plastic cutlery and putting it in one’s mouth? Narayana says it is because we “abuse and misuse plastic; plastic should not be applied to food.” He has said as much in this talk, where he gives many reasons as to why plastic, especially cutlery, should be taken out of our lives. Some of these reasons have to do with the manufacturing process for plastic cutlery (explained further down) and others with hygiene.

So does he have an alternative then? He does, and Narayana has been developing it since 2010. Bakey’s manufactures edible cutlery, including spoons in different shapes and chopsticks.

Edible spoons

Edible spoons

Bakey’s edible cutlery is made from a mix of jowar (sorghum), rice and wheat flour. The spoons and chopsticks do not get soggy if placed in water and food. They only soften after some time (10-15 minutes), and thus can be eaten easily at the end of the meal. Even if discarded, they decompose within five to six days, if not eaten by insects or rodents.

The idea about how to make the cutlery struck Narayana during a flight from Ahmedabad to Hyderabad, when he saw a passenger using a piece of Gujarati khakra as a spoon to eat dessert.

Why is plastic bad for your health?

Narayana Peesapaty at a Bakey's stall.

Narayana Peesapaty at a Bakey’s stall.

Plastic consists of many chemical components which are toxic and carcinogenic, and can leech into food. Narayana, who has been to several manufacturing units of plastic cutlery in the country, has observed that the way in which it is manufactured is not very safe for use with food.

“The irony is that there are very stringent food safety norms in India. But there are no norms when it comes to manufacturing the utensils in which we consume food,” he says.

In this very competitive market, he says, hygiene has become the first casualty of cost cutting. The process of cleaning the cutlery by manufacturing units in India that he visited, involved just a rag of cloth being used to wipe the final products that came out of the mould in which molten plastic was injected.

This, he feels, leaves consumers at the risk of plastic intake.

bakeys6

“Even after scraping the extra plastic, there are chances that some micro-granules of plastic get dislodged and can enter the body with our food if a spoon is not washed,” he says.

A thought even scarier than this struck Narayana when he noticed that in spite of such a huge consumption of plastic spoons, they are nowhere to be seen in the same numbers after disposal. This, he found, was because they were being reused, which makes plastic cutlery a source of bacterial contamination as well.

Why edible cutlery could be good for you

The spoons do not get soggy in food.

The spoons do not get soggy in food.

Prior to becoming a manufacturer of edible cutlery, Narayana was a researcher at the International Crop Research Institute for Semi Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Hyderabad. Here, he undertook research on groundwater management, studying why groundwater levels were reducing. He concluded that producing less rice and more dryland crops like jowar would help stabilize the levels of groundwater. It was soon after this that he started thinking about creating a huge market for jowar, and this is one of the main reasons why jowar is the chief ingredients in edible cutlery.

With the product being widely acclaimed, Narayana has been able to communicate the ill effects of plastic to a wide audience.

Bakey’s cutlery has made a mark in the international market as well, with orders coming in from the US and UK.

Edible chopsticks

Being a new concept, working on the idea was a challenge initially, as there was no established technology. Everything had to be developed with learning and research. According to this report, it cost Narayana more than Rs. 60 lakhs to develop the prototype machines and moulds and get started (he had to sell two homes he owned to raise the money). But one of the bigger challenges now is to create an awareness about the harmful health effects of plastic. The use of plastic is also a behavioural issue according to Narayana—people accustomed to using plastic products will not find it easy to switch to edible cutlery.

Other than selling the cutlery directly from their website, Bakey’s also sets up stalls at places like organic bazaars and exhibitions. The company is only breaking even as of now and has not started making a profit, says Narayana.

Once it does, he hopes to develop an automatic machine for manufacturing the cutlery.

Edible dessert spoons

Based out of Hyderabad, the manufacturing unit is an all-women enterprise, which Narayana’s wife, who is currently working as a director in the company, will soon be taking over.

To know more about this initiative, you can write to Narayana at info@bakeys.com or visit their website here.

– See more at: http://www.thebetterindia.com/30465/edible-cutlery-in-india/#sthash.i0VEdVb7.dpuf

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

Two Indians Have Designed A Garbage Bin That Will Reward Users With Free WiFi…

Realising the need of the Internet in everyday life, two commerce graduates decided to give free WiFi to people in exchange of a cleaner surrounding with an unique initiative — a ‘WiFi Trash Bin’.

“When somebody dumps trash into a dustbin the bin flashes a unique code, which can be used to gain access to free WiFi, says Prateek Agarwal, one of the two founders of the initiative.

Mumbai-based Agarwal and his partner Raj Desai, a self taught programmer, travelled extensively to countries like Denmark, Finland, Singapore etc and realised that keeping surroundings clean needed apart from a difference in structure, a change in the attitude of people.

“We took a lot of help from countries like Finland, Denmark, Singapore etc and decided to build a system similar to that,” says Prateek Agarwal.

The duo hit upon the idea while visiting the NH7 Weekender a music festival which is spread around a large area and as music festivals go is home to music food drinks and of course a lot of garbage.

” …It took us six hours to find our friends. Since there was no network, we could not reach them through a phone call.

It was the trigger for the idea and we thought why not provide free WiFi to people using hotspots,” says Mr Agarwal.

Keeping the place clean and helping to connect with their friends were the driving force behind their innovative project.

The self-funded experiment with support from operator MTS proved to be a success at the various Weekender Festivals held in Bangalore, Kolkata and Delhi but is not operative at the moment.

The founders say they have received queries from GAIL and talks are in due process.

“We wanted to change the attitude of the people and how things are structured, thus affecting an individual’s behaviour,” says Raj Desai.

The venture, though not operative now aims to satisfy the need of Internet at every step in the modern day world.

“… We want to work more for it,” says Mr Agarwal.

The duo say they tend to setup a network of WiFi bins thus helping to bring about a behaviourial redesign among people.

The venture was recently showcased at “Networked India”, a unique initiative by Ericsson and CNN-IBN that aims to identify and facilitate clutter-breaking innovations in the field of connectivity and mobility.

Source…..www.huffingtonpost.com

Natarajan