Finding Indian food in ‘alien’ land….

Finding Indian food in 'alien' land

Long vacations in the UK, US and south-east Asia no longer involve the culinary nightmares of 20 years ago for Indian tourists. When they tire of bland local fare, there’s no dearth of Indian restaurants, run by the vast Indian diaspora and reasonably authentic, to get a taste of home.

The news, though, is that these destinations are becoming passé. Increasingly, it’s to countries in Indo-China, the Balkans, West Asia (the parts that are still peaceful, that is) and South America to which rich and upper middle-class Indians are heading to spend the generous forex allowance the Indian government now permits.

But as a Vietnamese restaurateur once told me, “Indians no eat all foods; velly big ploblem”. True enough, Indians with their many particularities of diet can find mealtimes a chore in many countries off the regular tourist beat. Yet where many Indians go boldly, can be far behind?
As the listing here shows, there are Indian options available in cities from Dubrovnik to Peru for tourists who are so inclined. The names can be misleading, however: Oh Calcutta in Auckland, an award-winning restaurant, bears no resemblance to the well-known Bengali restaurant chain in India.

The restaurant, run by a chef called Meena Anand, has the standard north Indian/Mughlai fare. This, sadly, is true of almost all the menus on offer — the infinite varieties of the Indian sub-continent are largely absent. In Luang Prabang, the stunning UN heritage town in Laos, Nisha restaurant will give you an authentic dhaba experience: it offers, among other things, aloo ghobi, aloo mutter, “Dhal Fry” and rotis. It could be a comforting break from a bewildering local menu that may contain: dog, frog and, yes, even beef!

A gourmet itinerary

 

Vietnam
Mumtaz Restaurant
Ho Chi Minh City

 

Foodshop 45
Hanoi

 

Laos
Nisha Restaurant
Luang Prabang

 

Taj Mahal Restaurant
Vientiane

 

Cambodia
Dosa Corner
Phnom Penh

 

Taste Budz
Phnom Penh
Samsara
Siem Reap
Croatia
Royal Indian Restaurant
Zagreb
Incredible India Cuisine
Dubrovnik
Iran
Taj Mahal
Tehran
Jordan
Tandoori Oven
Amman
Peru
Guru Kebab & Curry
Lima
Brazil
Taj Bar
Iguasu
Gopala Hari
Sao Paulo
Veggie Govinda
Rio
Mexico
El Tandoor
Mexico City
New Zealand
Oh Calcutta
Auckland
Chilis Bistro and Tandoor
Wellington
Maharaja Indian Restaurant
Christchurch
The Spice Room
Christchurch
China
Masala Art
Shanghai
Punjabi Indian Restaurant
Beijing
South Africa
Royal Punjab
Johannesburg
Bukhara
Cape Town
Portugal
Passage to India
Lisbon
Data courtesy: Ashish Chadha, group managing partner, Leisure Ways, New Delhi
 Source…www.business-standard.com
Natarajan

Message for the Day….” What is the True Divine Offering …’ ?

How amazing is this! You can get sacrifices of the highest order performed by yourself or through scholars versed in Vedic ritual. You can visit and praise the holiness of diverse shrines and inspire others to journey thereto. Similarly you can master the highest scriptures and teach them to many and make them experts. But how many of you have succeeded in mastering your own bodies, senses and wayward minds, and turned them inward to gain perpetual and unchanging equanimity? You embark upon an undertaking with a purpose, goal, or an end in view. But the endeavour is sublimated into a yajna (sacrificial rite) only if the purpose, goal or end is the glorification of God. God is the yajna,for He is the Goal. His grace is the reward. His creation is used to propitiate Him; He is the performer as well as the receiver. Every act, where the ego of the doer does not surface, becomes a Divine offering.

Sathya Sai Baba

Meet This Man who had an opportunity to own Rs 10 Million …Yet He Denied it …


Read why Sudhakaran, who barely earns Rs.10,000 every month working hard in his small shop, once gave away the opportunity to pocket Rs. 1 crore. Not only this, he also once found a gold chain in a train which he returned to the police. Know more about the amazing man who has restored our faith in humanity.

Today was a specially blessed day for me—I met a truly blessed man this morning. I first heard about him some months ago, and when I recently discovered that he worked in the town where I’ve been staying for the last month or so, I decided I just had to meet him.

45 year-old K. Sudhakaran runs a little shop, selling sweets, juice, cold-drinks and lottery tickets, in a market in Kanhangad, a town in northern Kerala. This soft-spoken, unassuming man shot into the news last year when he did something truly remarkable. One morning, P. Ashokan, a regular customer of his, called him up and asked him to set aside ten lottery tickets for him. Later that day, Sudharakan learned that one of those tickets had won the first prize—a whopping ten million rupees!

Sudhakaran outside his shop.

Sudhakaran rang up his father at once. “Call up Ashokan right away and give him the news!” his father told him. Sudhakaran did as his father instructed. Ashokan could hardly believe his ears when he learnt what had happened!

Ashokan had not paid for the tickets. Nor had Sudhakaran told him the ticket numbers. And so, Sudhakaran didn’t have to tell him that one of the tickets that he had set aside for him had won the bumper prize. He could easily have pocketed the money had he wanted to—that wouldn’t have been considered illegal. Had he wished, he could have bagged the ten million rupee prize for himself.

What was it, I asked Sudhakaran, that had led him to choose the course that he did.

Lottery tickets for sale.

Lottery tickets for sale.

My father always told me that if you need to, you can even beg, but you must never snatch other people’s rights,” he replied.

Did he at all hesitate to call Ashokan? Did he think twice about what his father had told him to do? Was he, at least for a moment, tempted to claim the money for himself?

No, not at all! I knew that what my father had said was perfectly right,” Sudhakaran said as he drew out a passport-size picture of his father from a note-book and handed it to me to see. “My parents taught me to be honest, to do what is right, to consider everyone, rich and poor, as equal,” he continued. “My mother and all my other relatives were all very happy with what I had done. They all said that I had done the right thing.”

A couple of months ago, Sudhakaran was back in the news—and for a similar reason. He had found a gold chain while travelling in a train and handed it to the police, who managed to trace its owner!

Sudhakaran’s little shop—which he’s taken on rent—is the sole means of livelihood for his family of six, including a daughter who is physically-challenged. Sudhakaran manages to earn around Rs. 10,000 a month from it, and it’s demanding work. He is up every morning, at around 4:30, and takes the train from his village to Kanhangad—a journey of more than two hours each way. He works seven days a week, taking a day off only once in a while.

This man could have been a millionaire had he not listened to his heart and his father and kept the prize-winning lottery ticket for himself instead. But he has no regrets at all about his decision.I know what I did was just what I should have,” he says unhesitatingly.

Try to do as much good as possible and to refrain from doing bad—that way, you can lead a happy, meaningful life, Sudhakaran tells me as he hands me a lemonade and gets back to work.

I slowly sip the lemonade as I watch this amazing man dealing with his customers. I’ve never seen anyone like him before. I know I am truly blessed to have met him—and I’m sure you agree!

– Roshan Shah

Source….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

மனிதனை உயர்த்தும் கொலுப் படிகள்….

நவராத்திரிப் பண்டிகை என்று ஒன்பது நாட்களைக் குறிக்கும் இப்பண்டிகையைக் கொலுப் பண்டிகை என்ற பெயரிலும் பொருத்தமாக அழைப்பது இப்பண்டிகைக்கே உள்ள தனிச்சிறப்பு.

நவராத்திரி பண்டிகையின் நோக்கமே இக, பர வாழ்வின் உயர்வுதான். அந்த உயர்வினைப் படிகள் மூலம் விளக்குவதே கொலுவின் முக்கிய அம்சம். இந்தப் படிகள் ஒன்று, மூன்று, ஐந்து, ஏழு, ஒன்பது என ஒன்றைப்படையில் அமைந்திருக்க வேண்டும். அவரவர் இடம், பொருள் ஆகியவற்றின் வசதியைப் பொறுத்து இந்த எண்ணிக்கைகளில் படிகளைத் தேர்ந்தெடுத்துக்கொள்ளலாம். ஆனால் பொம்மைகளின் வைப்பு முறையில் இயன்றவரை ஒன்பது படிக்கான முறையைப் பின்பற்ற வேண்டும்.

உயிரினங்கள் ஓருயிரி முதல் ஆறறிவு மனிதன்வரை வளர்ச்சி அடைவதையே இவை நினைவுபடுத்துகின்றன. பின்னர் மனிதன் தன் எண்ணம், செயல்களால் மேலும் உயர்ந்து இறை நிலையை அடைய வேண்டும் என்பதையும் நினைவுறுத்துகின்றன. இதற்காக சக்தியின் அம்சங்களை எண்ணிப் பூஜித்தால் வாழ்வின் அனைத்து வளங்களையும் பெறலாம் என்பது ஐதிகம்.

நவராத்திரி கொலுவின் கதை

மகாராஜா சுரதா, எதிரிகளை வெல்வதற்குத் தனது குருவான சுமதாவிடம் ஆலோசனை கேட்டார். அதன்படி சுத்தமான ஆற்று மணலைக் கொண்டு காளிரூபத்தைச் சிலையாக வடிக்கிறான். அதை அலங்காரம் செய்து உண்ணா நோன்பிருந்து மனமுருக வேண்டுகிறான். காளி அவனது பூஜையால் மகிழ்வுற்று அம்மன்னனின் பகைவர்களை அழித்து ஒரு புது யுகத்தினை உருவாக்கி அளிக்கிறாள். தன் ரூபத்தை மண்ணால் செய்து பூஜித்தால் சகல சுகங்களும், செளபாக்கியங்களும் பெறலாம் என்று அம்பிகையான தேவி அருளுகிறாள்.

தேவி மகாத்மியம்

ஆதிபராசக்தியான தேவி அசுரர்களை அழித்து தேவர்களையும், பாபங்களை அழித்து மனிதர்களையும் காப்பவள். இவள் கொண்டிருக்கும் ரூபங்கள் மூன்று: தடைகளை நீக்கும் துர்க்கை, ஐஸ்வர்யங்களை அருளும் லஷ்மி, கல்வியையும், ஞானத்தையும் அருளும் சரஸ்வதி.

அசுரர்கள் தேவர்களுக்குத் துன்பம் இழைக்கும் வழக்கத்தைக் கொண்டவர்கள். அவர்கள் வரம் கேட்கும்பொழுதே, பெண்கள் வலிமையற்றவர்கள் என்று நினைத்து, தாங்கள் எந்த ஆணாலும் கொல்லப்படக் கூடாது என்றே வரம் கேட்பார்கள். அதுபோன்ற வரங்களைக் கேட்ட அசுரர்கள் சண்டமுண்டன், ரக்த பீஜன், சும்ப நிசும்பன், மகிஷாசுரன். இவர்களை தேவி அழித்த நிகழ்வுகளே தேவி பாகவதம்.

முப்பத்து முக்கோடி தேவர்களும் தங்கள் சக்தியினைத் திரட்டி அம்பாள் போர் புரியச் செல்லும்பொழுது உதவுகிறார்கள். சக்தி அனைத்தையும் கொடுத்துவிட்டதால், பொம்மை போல் ஆகிவிடுகிறார்கள். அதுவே கொலு என்ற ஐதீகமும் உண்டு.

ஓரறிவு உயிர்களான புல், செடி, கொடி போன்ற தாவரங்களின் பொம்மைகளைப் படி ஒன்றில் வைக்க வேண்டும். இது தவிரப் பொதுவாகக் கொலு வைக்கும் இல்லங்களில் பூங்கா அமைப்பது உண்டு.

ஈரறிவு கொண்ட நத்தை, சங்கு போன்ற பொம்மைகள். அந்தக் காலத்தில் திண்ணைகளில் அமர்ந்து சோழி உருட்டி விளையாடுவது வழக்கம். இந்தச் சோழிகளையும், சோழிகளால் செய்யப்பட்ட பொம்மைகளையும் இந்தப் படியில் வைக்கலாம்.

மூன்றறிவு உயிர்களான கரையான், எறும்பு, சிறு பூச்சிகள், மண் புழு ஆகியவற்றின் பொம்மைகள்.

நான்கறிவு உயிர்களை விளக்கும் நண்டு, வண்டு, பட்டாம்பூச்சி ஆகியவற்றின் பொம்மைகள்.

ஐந்தறிவு உள்ள மிருகங்கள், பறவைகள் ஆகியவற்றின் பொம்மைகளை அழகுற வைக்கலாம்.

ஆறறிவு மனிதர்களின் பொம்மைகளை வைக்க வேண்டும். சாதனையாளர்கள், உலகத் தலைவர்கள் ஆகியவற்றை வைத்தால், இல்லத்திற்கு வரும் விருந்தாளிகள் அச்சிலையில் உள்ளவர்களின் சாதனைகளை நினைவுகூர முடியும்.

மனித நிலையிலிருந்து உயர்நிலையை அடைந்த சித்தர்கள், ரிஷிகள், மகரிஷிகள் ராமகிருஷ்ண பரமஹம்சர், விவேகானந்தர், ரமணர், வள்ளலார் முதலானோரின் பொம்மைகளை வைக்க வேண்டும்.

தேவர்கள், அஷ்டதிக் பாலர்கள், நவக்கிரக அதிபதிகள், இந்திரன், சந்திரன் ஆகிய தெய்வ உருவங்களை மண் பொம்மைகளாக வைக்கலாம்.

பிரம்மா, விஷ்ணு, சிவன் ஆகியோரின் சிலையுடன் அவ்வவர்களின் தேவியருடன் அமைந்திருக்குமாறு இந்த மேல் உச்சிப்படியில் வைக்க வேண்டும். இவற்றின் நடுவில் ஆதி பராசக்தி இருக்குமாறு அமைக்க வேண்டும்.

Source….விக்னேஷ் ஜி….www.tamil.thehindu.com

natarajan

Have you ever seen a Goddess Durga idol this tall?…..

This Durga Puja, the world’s largest Durga idol will be installed at the Deshapriya Park in south Kolkata.

Reportage: Indrani Roy/Rediff.com. Photographs: Abhiroop Dey Sarkar

Tallest Durga idol

Artisan Mintu Pal is working round the clock at the Deshapriya Park Puja Committee workshop in Kolkata.

 

Eto Boro? Shotti! (This tall? Really?)

A teaser advertisement like this was doing the rounds of Kolkata since August.

While some thought it to be a telecom company advertisement, others felt it was about the tallest residential building that is about to come up in Kolkata soon.

Durga idol

Artisans give shape to Goddess Durga’s bahana — the lion — at the Deshapriya Park Puja Committee workshop in Kolkata.

 

Star Cement revealed recently that the teaser was its campaign for the world’s largest Durga idol to be installed at Deshapriya Park in south Kolkata.

“This year, Kolkata will see an idol of Goddess Durga that will touch the sky. Star Cement and the Deshapriya Park Puja Committee are the joint organisers of this event,” said Sanjay Kumar Gupta, CEO, Star Cement.

Durga

Artisan Mintu Pal stands next to the idol of Mahishasura at the Deshapriya Park Puja Committee workshop in Kolkata.

“This is an exciting challenge for me,” he told Rediff.com

Idol

About 40 artisans were at work at the Deshapriya Park Puja Committee workshop in Kolkata.

 

The fibreglass idol will be transferred to a huge platform at the centre of the park.

Durga idol

An assistant rubs clay on the fibre-glass hand of the idol.

 

Pal earlier created a 62-foot idol at the Salt Lake FD Block Durga Puja in 2011.

This year, Pal is all set to break his own record. This idol will be close to 100 foot, the artisan said.

He was in China recently to witness the making of the tallest Buddha statue (250 feet).

The pandal under construction

Artisans give final touches to the pandal at the Deshapriya Park in Kolkata.

 

Though the organisers are not giving away details of the budget, Star Cement is said to have already spent Rs 2.5 crore (Rs 25 million) for the teaser ads.

“The idol alone would cost Rs 50 lakh (Rs 5 million),” a source told Rediff.com

Durga idol being chiselled

An artisan adds finishing touches to the idol.

 

The Puja committee is taking precautions for crowd management and security during the four days of the festival, starting October 19.

The Puja organisers have also applied for a certificate to the Guinness Book of World Records and eagerly await ratification.

Indrani Roy / Rediff.com in Kolkata

Source…..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

” Childhood is Wonderful …No Matter Wherever You Go …” !!!

No matter their cultural background, no matter their economic situation, kids will always find imaginative ways to have fun. Their wild imaginations and magical childhood moments, when captured on camera by talented photographers, can make for truly wonderful photos. These 33 images we collected will prove that childhood can be wonderful no matter where you go.

Many in the Western world fear that technology is making today’s children lose touch with nature and with their own creativity, and while there are arguments to be made for the intellectual stimulation that apps and programs for children can bring, there’s also something to be said for simply playing with a stick in the mud or chasing dandelion seeds though an open meadow.

For better or worse, the children in these photos seem entirely content making their own fun. For us adults, it’s important not to let our world-weary and jaded experience stifle our childish hopefulness and imagination!

Indonesia

Image credits: Ipoenk Graphic

children-around-the-world-70

Image credits: Agoes Antara

Image credits: I Gede Lila Kantiana

Image credits: Gede Lila Kantiana

Russia

Image credits: Светлана Квашинa

Image credits: Elena Shumilova

Burkina Faso

Image credits: Òscar Tardío

Myanmar

children-around-the-world-65

Image credits: Chan Kwok Hung

Tajikistan

Image credits: Damon Lynch

India

children-around-the-world-60

Image credits: Sandee Pachetan

chidren-playing-around-the-world-55

Image Credits: Sudharsan Ravikumar

Image credits: Mukund Images

Vietnam

chidren-playing-around-the-world-51

Image Credits: HT KëñShi

Ghana

children-around-the-world-61

Image credits: Terry White

Estonia

children-around-the-world-54

mage credits: Elika Hunt

Thailand

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

Image credits: Sarawut Intarob

South Africa

children-around-the-world-55

Image credits: Muhammed Muheisen

children-around-the-world-60

Source: tinosoriano.com

Peru

children-around-the-world-52

Image credits: Enrique Castro-Mendivil

Ethiopia

children-around-the-world-50

Image credits: Csilla Zelko

Italy

children-around-the-world-61

Image credits: Michael Potyomin

Israel

children-around-the-world-64

Image credits: Dima Vazinovich

USA

Image credits: Jake Olson

Indonesia #2

Image credits: Rio Rinaldi Rachmatullah

Image credits: James Khoo

children-around-the-world-53

Image credits: Hendrik Priyanto

chidren-playing-around-the-world-50

Image Credits: Mio Cade

Uganda

Image credits: John Van Den Hende

Romania

Image credits: Elena Simona Craciun

Russia

Image credits: Elena Shumilova

Source…..www.boredpanda.com

natarajan

 

How a Mobile App Is Bringing Better Maternal Health Care to Rural Karnataka in India….

An Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM) is often the first point of contact between a health centre and a mother or expectant mother in India. She takes care of activities as basic as registration of pregnant women to more advanced interventions like routine immunization, identifying medical complications and providing referrals. An ANM has a lot of responsibilities and this simple, mobile-based intervention, Suyojana, enables her to effectively carry out her duties.

Rohini, from Chamrajnagar, Karnataka, is an Auxiliary Nurse Midwife (ANM), working in rural areas of the state. Despite the fact that she is proactive and interested in her work, Rohini often finds herself struggling to remain on top of all the information required to serve her patients effectively. From tracking crucial health parameters to scheduling important visits for critical cases, Rohini finds herself swamped with details that she is unable to handle in an organized manner.

Recently, however, Rohini began using Suyojana, a mobile-based application that improves the decision-making processes in maternal and child care activities undertaken by ANMs.

“The Suyojana application guides me from one step to another, within examinations and investigations, and does not let me skip a single step. This has made my work way more organized and systematic. The application has also made it very easy to identify high-risk cases and refer the patients on time to better facilities. The tool helps me take the right decisions at the right time,” says Rohini.

ANMs can keep track of their patients in a better way and also take necessary actions on time.

 

ANMs can keep track of their patients in a better way and also take necessary actions on time. –

Rohini is just one among several ANMs who have benefitted from the simple technology, Suyojana, launched by Swasti, a health resource centre established to provide health services to socially backward communities, in collaboration with D-Tree International and Karuna Trust.

“Swasti has been working in this field for 11 years now and work on improving different aspects of public health. Since ANMs do such important work at the grassroots level, we thought it was necessary to make decision-making easier for them through this mobile intervention,” says Shama Karkal, Director, Swasti.

The issue

The app does not let an ANM update her patients' profile until all the fields in the app are filled.

The app does not let an ANM update her patients’ profile until all the fields in the app are filled. –

As par-medical professionals who are closest to the rural communities, ANMs play a crucial role. They are required to use their knowledge in order to take requisite actions on time.

Though ANMs undergo training, many times they are unaware of the basic practices they should follow. Shama recalls that ANMs met during the pilot did not carry blood pressure or weighing machines during home visits. “Everyone assumes that they know what they are doing. Even ANMs are not aware of what they could do better and there is no system to monitor the quality of the care they provide.

Without the application, ANMs can skip many of the examinations and other critical components of an ante-natal or post-natal visit.

This results in incomplete and in-accurate health monitoring of pregnant women and children.

The solution 

This is where Suyojana plays a crucial role. This mobile-based clinical-decision support system (DSS) provides ANMs with consistent guidance with antenatal care (ANC), postnatal care (PNC), and neonatal care.

The mobile app takes ANMs through all the procedures and guidelines to identify the person’s conditions and provides options for decision making. The app uses the national guidelines maternal and neonatal care to guide the ANM. The app also allowsANMs to track patients they have visited, their expected clinic visit dates, their medication, etc. This also helps ANMs to identify those women who are due for their next appointment, both in-clinic visits and home visits.

“The app has various forms which ANMs complete during different visits. The forms in the application include registration, antenatal history (for ANC clients), pregnancy outcome (for PNC clients), danger signs, physical examination, investigation tests, intervention, and counselling. Basic care and monitoring of the child is also included — from foetal heart rate to neonatal danger signs, pre-referral treatments and home-based new-born care counselling. Required fields in the app must be completed in order to complete the visit and record it. This way, every aspect of the care provided is tracked,” says Shama.

With the app the ANMs do not need to maintain multiple registers. The app generates the standard reports which can be further customized.

Another interesting aspect of the app is that it also runs offline and synchronizes with the server using general packet radio service (GPRS) for back up, reporting and analysis.

The impact

With the app the ANMs do not need to maintain multiple registers.

With the app the ANMs do not need to maintain multiple registers.

Thanks to the easily available data, a supervisor can track the details from the server and can identify maternal health trends in a particular area. This way ANMs can also take expert advice from remote locations and can decide the next step they need to take on time.

“This application will help us in quickly referring a complicated case to higher public health facilities and will replace the cumbersome procedure of checking registers and day books. All we would be required to do is click on the app to get all the details. This would be a great relief for us and reduce our workload,” says Saraswathi, yet another ANM from Karnataka.

The interesting initiative, which was launched as a pilot project in March 2014 in Chamarajanagar district, involved 31 ANMs in four districts of Karnataka, including Chamarajanagar, Ramanagara, Bijapur, and Chikkaballapur.

To make the app more user-friendly, all the information is available in Kannada. The ANMs are first given formal training before they actually start using this app. Once the training is complete, ANMs using this app and sync the data collected by them on a regular basis. There is also a full-time supervisor who assists the ANMs in case of difficulties.

“We launched it on mobile phones since they are easier to use and are more handy. Currently, we install the app on the mobile phones of ANMs and it is not available for the general public to use,” says Shama.

Though the simple mobile app looks like a feasible solution to address difficulties of ANMs and the quality of care provided by them, the team is still struggling to have it accepted with the government.

The pilot was funded by D-Tree International, has a small team of four members, who are looking forward to expanding the initiative to cover many more districts and ANMs.

To know more about the initiative, contact Angela at – angela@swasti.org or check out their website.

Source…..Shreya Pareek….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

Here’s How You Can Access Online Courses of 7 IITs. For Free….

The National Programme for Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL), an e-learning platform, is revolutionising the concept of internet based higher education in India.

Developed on the lines of the Open Courseware by Massachusetts Institute of Technology, to some extent, the National Programme for Technology Enhanced Learning (NPTEL) is bringing some of the best teachers of the country together, enabling students to access courses on engineering, sciences, technology, management, humanities and more, free of cost, all across the globe.

Content on the platform is being used by many educational institutions. Faculty members are using it as part of their lesson plan to teach university curriculum, and students are using it to prepare for jobs and competitive exams.

NPTEL

Picture for representation only. Photo Credit: Flickr

NPTEL is a joint venture of seven IITs (Indian Institute of Technology) and Indian Institute of Science (IISc), funded by the Ministry of Human Resource Development, Government of India. The seven IITs include IIT Bombay, Delhi, Guwahati, Kanpur, Kharagpur, Madras and Roorkee. It was developed with the aim of providing e-learning through course content in the form of web based supplements and video courses.

Up till Aug 2015, NPTEL had 420 web courses and 509 video courses, which can be accessed freely through the website nptel.ac.in. These include approximately 921 courses, and each course has about 40 video lectures, which are one hour long. There are online discussion forums as well where students can post and review questions. Courses are also accompanied by assignments, handouts, self-evaluations tasks, etc. Some of the disciplines include Aerospace Engineering, Biotechnology, Atmospheric Science, Chemical Engineering, Management, Humanities and Social Sciences, etc. There is no specific eligibility for the courses. The faculty member of a course may recommend some basic knowledge required for certain topics.

The video content is accessible free of cost. These videos can be downloaded through the official NPTEL website, in MP4, FLV and 3gp formats. They can also be streamed through the YouTube channel here. Students can obtain the video courses on hard disks as well, at the NPTEL office in IIT Madras.

The focus areas of the NPTEL project is to provide higher education, professional education, distance education and a continuous open learning atmosphere. It is a curriculum building exercise and the NPTEL content adheres to the syllabi of All India Council for Technical Education and the slightly modified curricula of major affiliating universities.

The courses are well structured and elaborate. Institutions are encouraged to build their own versions of NPTEL courses based on their curriculum using the NPTEL material available online. Thus the project is also meant to fill the gap between the current expertise level of faculty in institutions like  IITs and IISc, and those in other engineering colleges across India.

Certification courses are also offered in association with industry partners like Aricent, NASSCOM and Google. These courses are offered 2 or 3 times every year. Students need to give an exam by paying a nominal fee, and after completion of the course, they get a certificate. Till August 2015, 7,267 students had received such certificates.

To know more about NPTEL, visit here. 

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

Natarajan

9 Smartphone Myths ….

If you own a smartphone, you know the struggle of battery-life and performance issues in older models. Most of us were also told that there are certain ways we should treat our devices in order to keep them working in peak condition, preserve battery, etc. You’ll be surprised to learn that some of the things we all think to be true are in fact myths:

Smartphone Myths

Myth #1: Let the Battery Drain Before Recharging

Smartphone Myths

Letting your battery drain completely to extend its life was true when manufacturers were still using NiCAD and NiMH batteries. These days smartphones use lithium-ion batteries, which will last longer if you keep them charged. Some experts still recommend letting your battery drain completely once every three months, but this will not extend its life, only help calibrate the phone’s measurement of the charge.

Myth #2: Better Components Mean Better Performance

You would think that buying the newest phone with the best high-end specifications will mean you’ll enjoy a fast device with more battery time than before, and on the surface – you’d be right. However, it was shown on several occasions that some 12-megapixel cameras produced lower quality photos compared to their 8-megapixel counterparts. Additionally, a phone may have better technology on paper compared to the competitor’s device, but performance may vary due to several factors, such as build quality, application compatibility, and more.

Myth #3: Overnight Charging is Bad for the Battery

Smartphone MythsThis is yet another relic from older phones. Older batteries could not tell when they were full, which led to overcharging – a main cause for shorter battery lifespan. Modern devices monitor the battery’s charge levels and cut charging once it’s full, so there’s no need to worry about leaving your phone charging overnight.

Myth #4: Automatic Brightness Saves Battery

Modern smartphones usually come equipped with a light sensor that can automatically raise or lower the brightness of your screen according to lighting conditions. You may think that this component helps you save battery, but if you truly want to save battery, dim the screen manually, and only increase the brightness when necessary. The reason is that the sensor actually uses more power by communicating with the phone’s processor to decide on what the brightness should be.

Myth #5: Wi-Fi/Bluetooth Drain Your Battery

Smartphone Myths

In earlier models, leaving the Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or both switched on would drain your battery faster. While these transmitters do need power to function, newer generations use little-to-no power while not in active use. You’re still welcome to switch them on and off at will, but don’t expect to see a significant change in battery life.

Myth #6: Android Devices Are More Vulnerable

Apple’s iOS operating system, which powers their iPhones and iPads doesn’t allow you to install apps from anywhere other than Apple’s official App Store (Unless you’re using a “jailbroken” device). Android devices on the other hand, allow you to install apps from websites, and even download and install apps manually. While Android devices are actually more secure than iOS devices, they can still be vulnerable if you install applications from anywhere.

 

Myth #7: Only Use the Original Charger

Smartphone Myths

This myth is still propagated by phone manufacturers to get you to buy their chargers at a premium, instead of a knockoff. In fact, the accessory market is one of the most profitable for phone makers these days. Before buying, you should be aware that there is a difference between a poorly made knockoff charger and a replica charger from a reliable manufacturer. Using a cheap knockoff charger can be dangerous, and has caused fires and small explosions due to poor quality and use of substandard materials. But if you want to get a new charger for your phone, you don’t have to pay the manufacturer’s ridiculously high price, just opt for a reliable replacement from a reputable source.

Myth #8: People Want Smaller Phones

In the early days of cellphones, the devices were large, bulky and heavy, and were used for not much more than making calls and the occasional text message. During those years, consumers wanted smaller, lighter phones, which led to the development of very small cellphones. With the appearance of the smartphone, people suddenly could use their phones to play games, browse the internet, and more. This development meant that suddenly screen size became more important than device size. These days we’re seeing devices with 5” and 6” screens that can be a challenge to hold if you’ve got smaller hands, but offer greater comfort during use.

Myth #9: Close Background Apps to Boost Performance

Smartphones allow you to have programs running in the background to speed up multitasking, but more running programs use more battery, no? While true, you would be surprised to know that both Android and Apple devices don’t allow these background apps to use much of the phone’s resources at all. This myth has made many people, both tech-savvy and not, download “Task Killer” apps, which are designed to end any running tasks. These apps do their jobs, they terminate the apps you tell them to, but that does not mean they are actually improving your device’s performance or battery life.

Source….www,ba-bamail.com

natarajan