“Ready to Go to Mars “… Meet India”s Prospective Martians !!!

 

India may have just launched its satellite to Mars but there are 80,000 among us who are readying for their very own ‘mission’ to the Red Planet in the year 2023. Rediff.com catches up with a few space enthusiasts who worry little about the ‘one-way trip’.   

In PHOTOS: Meet India's wannabe Martians

In 2011, Bas Lansdrop did the unthinkable.

The founder and former director of a successfully running company which specialises in clean power, called Ampyx, sold all his shares two years ago to launch a project called Mars One. The objective of this project was clear — to set up a human colony on the red planet.

The catch: It’s a one-way ticket.

Mars One is a Netherlands-based non-profit organisation which began its search for ‘astronauts’ — volunteers who would be tested and trained to be the first human settlers on Mars — began in April 2013. Seventy eight thousand people across 140 countries signed up within the first two weeks. A total of 2,02,586 have signed up so far, of which roughly 10 per cent (8,107) are Indians.

Despite having only one space traveller in its history, India stands second when it comes to the amount of applicants, the first being the United States of America at 24 per cent.

And if selected, potential settlers will train for almost a decade before leaving Earth for Mars forever in 2023.

While the thought of surviving on a foreign planet in uninhabitable conditions might seem like a bit too much to handle compared to the comforts of Earth, for 31-year-old Jiten Khanna of Bengaluru, who has sent an application for the mission, it’s a challenge he would love to accept.

“I don’t think there’s anything that can stop me,” he says confidently. “I am very dedicated. I took a lot of time and did my research. I thought about it — whether I am ready, whether I have the will to survive. I filled out my form very carefully. I will not back out now.”

A self-confessed adventure sport addict, Khanna is confident that “if not the first four, then I’ll definitely get selected in the batch of the first 40.”   

   

Vinod Kotiya ,, a software engineer, who is currently working at National Thermal Power Corporation, isn’t as confident. “I think I can go through round one and two because I have already worked in the Himalayas near Gangotri in extreme weather conditions. But round three and four are in the public’s hand; it’s all about whom they vote for.”

It’s not just humans who will be launched into space. Mars One will complete a demonstration mission with an unmanned lander that will deliver cargo consisting of basic supplies to the red planet in 2016 before the settlers finally arrive in 2023-24.

It is entirely possible that the supplies may expire or become damaged. The possibility of perishing in the unknown is very real.

But the prospect of death has not deterred aspiring space travellers from reaching for their dreams. 

 

Amulya Rastogi (left) sounds optimistic about making it to Mars. He says the news of the mission gave him a purpose in life. “People want to be journalists, lawyers, engineers. I want to be an astronaut,” Rastogi, a mechanical engineering student, says.

Should he miss out on the opportunity to Mars, Rastogi said he’d probably pursue a doctoral degree in aerospace engineering and join one of the international space agencies “or ISRO”.

“I am resilient, patient and mentally stable and am capable of constructing a permanent settlement on Mars,” he says admitting that he’s hardly been away from his family and has led a fairly sheltered life.

As it happens he also has a girlfriend, a fact he admits with some hesitation. Needless to say, she hasn’t taken the news too well. “She doesn’t support the idea,” he says deflecting questions about the future of their relationship if he does go to Mars. “I’ll try to convince her to apply and hope that she comes around.”  

 

Rastogi is not the only one who’s facing resistance from loved ones. Arindam Saha, a BTech graduate from Kolkata, is another Indian who is adamant on becoming a Mars settler. “My goal is space,” he says, though his immediate concern is finding a job and pacifying his girlfriend who was rather put out when she learnt about his Martian dreams.

Perhaps that explains why Khanna has refrained from any talk about his space ambitions, “I have not told my parents yet. I know they will be worried. I’ll listen to their point of view and I will patiently tell them mine. I’m sure once they know the reasons why I am doing this and how much it means to me, they will understand.”  

 

Abhimanyu Singh (left) faces no such troubles. He works as a software developer in Mumbai and lives alone in a rented apartment in Malad, the city’s northern suburb, practising what he calls “isolation”.

He’s been hitting the gym to prepare for the mission and believes he’s the best choice for it.

Singh’s parents passed away some years ago and his tale is extraordinary even without the mission to Mars.  “My father was an agarabatti (incense sticks) salesman who drank and smoked a lot. I grew up with my mother and three sisters in a slum (in Mumbai),” he says.

Thanks to the generosity of the people who spotted his talent, Singh completed his graduation in information and technology and got a job in a multinational corporation.

Singh speaks in short sentences and says that he’s been reading about the planet and sharpening his problem-solving skills which he believes will come handy on Mars.

Even though he puts his chances to be selected “at 60 per cent”, he believes his age and his social conditions make him the most ideal candidate. “I am 26 now. By 2023, I will be 36. I also don’t have any family ties binding me here (his sisters are married). It makes perfect sense to send me to Mars,” he says.   

 

 Sourabh Roddey (left), a young software engineer from New Delhi, is more realistic. “There is a good possibility I won’t be the one going,” he says, “In some ways my application is a way of showing support (to the mission).”

Roddey says that there will come a time when humans will have to make home on other planets. “We are consuming resources at a fast pace; the earth is overpopulated. It really does come down to the question of survival,” he says.

Roddey’s statement makes one wonder if consuming the resources of Mars would be next after Earth.

But for Kotiya, forward is the only way to go. “I  t is progress!” he insists, “It is a part of evolution. We have to do this. You cannot stop this. To save the human race we have to do it. The first priority is survival of humans and only then we can think about resources.”

Mars One estimates that putting just the first four people on the red planet will cost a whopping $6 billion. But Lansdrop has devised a way to raise that money. Mars One plans to make the mission — from the selection to the settlement — the ‘biggest media spectacle in history’.

Advertisers are already lining up. Merchandise is selling. But all that the applicants can do is cross their fingers. The selection process is a gruelling one. Only people over 18 years of age may apply. In order to be selected, the applicant must not only be physically fit but also be emotionally stable. 

SOURCE::REDIFF.COM

natarajan 

“செவ்வாயில் செவ் வாய்க்கு மங்கல்யான் ” !!!

செவ்வாயில் செவ்வாய்க்கு.. களம் தேடும் கலம்

 

 

marsதேடல் தேடல் தேடல்

தேடல் ஒன்றையே
ஜீவனாய் கொண்டு வாழும்
மானுட இனம்!

தேடித்தேடி பெற்றது
ஏராளம்- இருப்பினும்
இன்னொரு தளம் தேடி
வேற்றொரு கிரகத்துக்கு
கலம் விடுகிறோம்…!

செங்கடலில் தோன்றி
செங்கடலில் மறையும்
நீலவானின் சூரியன் போல்

செவ்வாயில் புறப்பட்டு
செவ்வாய்க்கு சென்றது
மங்கள்யான்..!

பூமியில் சேர்த்தது
பூமியில் படித்தது
பூமியில் கண்டுபிடித்தது
எல்லாவற்றையும்..
முடிந்தால் இந்த பூமியையும்
செவ்வாய்க்கு கொண்டு சேர்ப்போம்..!

நாளைய தலைமுறைகள்
செங்கோலாட்சி செய்யட்டும்
செவ்வாயில்…!
அதற்கான வாயில் வகுக்கட்டும்
மங்கள்யான் !

source ::::  -கவிஞர். திருமலைசோமு  In Dinamani …Tamil daily

natarajan

A Kangaroo @ Melbourne Airport…And Now An Alligator@ Chicago Airport !!!

A small alligator found under an escalator at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport has left authorities puzzled.

A maintenance worker discovered the alligator, which is about a foot (30 centimeters) long, on Friday in Terminal 3, Chicago Police spokesman Jose Estrada said Sunday.

An officer captured the reptile by putting a trash can over it.

“We don’t know where it came from or how long it’d been residing in the airport facilities,” Estrada said. “It’s one of those random incidents.”

The gator is now being cared for by the Chicago Herpetological Society.

“It was in pretty bad shape,” said Jason Hood, the group’s president. “We’re trying to get it healthy and find a place for it.”

He said the gator would likely head to an out-of-state alligator farm once authorities give the organization the all-clear to release the animal.

No one was injured.

source::::NDTV.com

natarajan

Laughter The Best Medicine !!! ” We are Zulus ” !!!

Hahahaha, for the day…
A twin-engine passenger plane has an engine failure and the altitude and speed are decreasing rapidly. The pilot speaks over the intercom …

“I’m sorry things have come to this stage ladies and gentlemen, But unfortunately we are going to have to jettison the luggage in order for the aircraft to remain airborne “. Baggage is thrown out but still the plane’s altitude continues to decrease.

Once again the pilot gets on the intercom, “I hate to do this folks but in order to save the majority we are going to have to start off-loading some passengers. The only fair way is to do this Alphabetically, so we’ll start with the Letter ‘A'”.

“Africans? Are there any Africans on board?”
There was no answer so the pilot calls,
“Black people, are there any black people on board?” Again silence..”
Then on to alphabet C – coloured people………? Are there any coloured people on board?” Still there is silence.

A little black boy sitting near the rear of the plane turned to his mother and said, “Mum, ain’t we African? ….. Ain’t we black? ………Ain’t we coloured?”

She replied, “Yes, son but for the moment we are Niggers. Let them do the Americans….& the Australians first, ……….then the Bhutanese, …………the British, the Burmese ..the Canadians , the Chinese……in that order…..,till they reach the Muslims, …and so on and on all countries and people starting with M are done. After that…if the plane still needs more jettisoning…we are Zulus”. …..O.K?

source::::input from a friend of mine

natarajan

Plight of Pax in an AirFrance Flight …Is Air France Listening ?

Below is a blog post from http://jayharishshah.blogspot.in/2013/10/one-night-in-paris.html. I have no affiliation to the below post, but i believe it is a genuine post by an affected person.
————————————————– ————————————————– ————————————————- ———————————————– ———————-
OCT 28

An open letter to Mr Alexandre De Juniac, CEO of Air France-KLM

 

To,
Mr ALEXANDRE DE JUNIAC
Chairman & Chief Executive Officer,
Air France-KLMDear Alexandre,

Can I call you Alexandre? I hope you don’t mind if I call you by your first name, I understand only your close friends and family members would lovingly call you Alexandre. I’m sure by the time we’re through this entire incident; you’d feel like we’ve known each other for years. As was the flight delay time, on one of your aircrafts I had the misfortune of flying.

You know Alexandre, I seldom read and the only thing I’ve ever lamented online is the proliferation of religious ideologies. I don’t believe in throwing brickbats on any passing subject but I do believe in the fact that writing needs a sense of purpose, which I’ve rarely come across until now. So you should feel special Alexandre, very special.

The thing is I’ve started dreaming about Air France, Alexandre. I can’t seem to get over. It’s like we’ve been flirting for so long, I can’t take it anymore. Everyday I wake up and I check my inbox to see if I’ve received an e-mail from one of your Customer Relations Executive, I frantically search my mailbox to see if there’s any post from Air France regarding the incident that’s probably going to have lifelong implications on the goodwill of your Company. I can’t take it anymore Alexandre, I can’t.

Please allow me to provide specific details in a timeline format, so that you can either pursue your professional dispensation and seek to resolve these difficulties — or more likely (I suspect) you’ll probably bury yourself in the buckskin leather chair you have and pass this nonchalant piece of information to your interns.

9th October 2013

5.45 pm (New York): I message my older sister good-bye and board Air France flight AF 17 from JFK Airport, New York. More often than not, my trips abroad are marred with unforeseen events so I was pleasantly surprised when I left New York to go back home, and that nothing untoward occurred over the course of 4 weeks. But then again, “impossible” isn’t a French word Alexandre and I didn’t realize I was still far from home, which means, I had spoken too soon.

See, you’re getting to know so much about me already. Although, a lot of this might come as a surprise to you, but life is full of surprises, no? Okay never mind.

8.15 am (Paris): Everything seemed normal and I tried to sleep my way to Paris with little luck. We landed in Paris around 7.00 am and proceeded to Terminal K Gate 51 to board my connecting Air France Flight AF 218 to Bombay, which was to depart at 10.50 am. I’ve had an eventful experience while passing through Paris the last time and I wasn’t feeling any better this time around either.

10.15 am: The information screen finally comes to life and announces that Flight AF 218 scheduled to depart at 10.50 am for Bombay has been delayed and rescheduled for 12.20 pm. You know the funny part Alexandre? I don’t see any of your ground staff who should’ve shared this information with us. You guys have taken digitalization to a whole new level.

12.00 pm: It’s been 5 hours now since we’ve been at the Airport. Once again Alexandre, there is no word from Air France, it’s way past our Boarding time but I don’t see any of those failed medical experiments asking us to Board the Aircraft. I’m worried Alexandre, will I ever get home? I couldn’t tell.

12.45 pm: As more and more passengers panic, voices grow louder; finally two of your immaculately dressed French men come to the floor. The words they utter, go through my chest like a glass splinter, only you could’ve helped stop the pain. They say that the flight to Bombay has been cancelled indefinitely. No clear reasons are given, just a plain, meaningless statement “the aircraft has technical issues!’’ Do you feel the coldness Alexandre? It’s like your wife, sending you an SMS saying your marriage can’t work. She doesn’t say why, she doesn’t even tell you if there’s any possibility of it working out. She just bails out on you Alexandre, harsh, isn’t it? I know, I can feel you.

I’ve been away from my family for a month; do you know how eager I am to get home? You can’t! But as you will realize later in this letter, my eagerness to get back home is nothing compared to, with good reason, the emergencies faced by some of the other passengers.

1.30 pm: The French men have now completely lost it! They forget your beautifully worded guide to solving customer issues and are completely clueless about what’s going on. They stick their ears to their talking devices and arrogantly refuse divulging any information to the stranded passengers. The only thing they promise us is that we won’t be flying out of Paris until next day. How comforting, feels just like your Buckskin leather chair, NOT! 

Kindly note, we’re in Paris! It’s the hub of Air France. An alternate flight could’ve been arranged?!

1.45 pm: After some verbal altercations with the passengers, your staff finally decided it’s time for us to have lunch. They handed out meal vouchers which could be redeemed at one of the two restaurants in the Terminal but directed us towards Exki in particular since it was closer to the Gate and we had to assemble at the Air France Office at the lower terminal for further “instructions”.

2.15 pm: Passengers assemble at the office. After waiting for 45 minutes, we’re told that we’ll be given accommodation and Meal Vouchers for the stay. Passengers already holding a Schengen Visa are directed towards the Hotel whereas the rest of us are asked to submit our passports to apply for a Transit Visa.  As of now about 5-6 people have a Schengen Visa out of nearly 40 passengers in total.

Are you with me so far Alexandre? Don’t lose me now.

This is where things turn for the worse. This is where it get’s really serious! Godforsaken company.

3.30 pm: Passengers with emergencies try to get themselves placed on an alternate flight to India. Some are senior citizens, some are patients and some have personal issues to tend to.

27-year-old Mr S. Mishra, who is consumed with emotions, tries to negotiate a seat on any other flight to India but is flatly refused. I later realize that his father passed away in a car accident two days ago and his family was waiting for him to perform the last rites for his father in Bhubaneshwar. If that wasn’t enough, Bhubaneshwar was bracing itself for the worst Cyclone to ever hit the country, Phailin, two days later. I can’t imagine what’s going on in his mind. It’s just really sad!

Suddenly none of my problems hold any value compared to his, I’m taken aback with his helplessness and we try to persuade the Air France Officials to give him a seat on an alternate flight or airline. At this point, I realize the lack of courtesy, even on humanitarian grounds extended to him by the officials as they arrogantly refuse him a seat, saying many people have emergencies and they cannot afford to accommodate all of them. They immediately deny and say there are no flights going to India without making any calls or checking any monitors for alternate flights to India. Seems like this is the only information they’re sure of even though they have no clue when our flight would be departing the next day.

We are later told by one of the informed passengers that a woman flying Business Class on our flight was accommodated on an Air India flight to India.

6.00 pm: The Staff finally arrives with our Passports after 3 hours. To my utter disbelief, only 6-7 people are given the Transit Visa whereas the rest of us are denied. There is no proof of rejection on the passport, nor does it carry any form, that holds any evidence of rejection too. Most of us have traveled to Europe before and considering we were flying originally from New York, we also had US Visas apart from a number of other visas from countries world over. On what grounds were our Visas rejected? We’d never know.

Ironically the 6-7 passengers who received the Visa are only Senior Citizens as well as women with children. No one else and I mean NO ONE ELSE got the visa.

We’ve now been at the airport for nearly 12 hours and have just been informed that we can’t even travel outside the airport to rest at one of the Hotels. Everyone is furious and we try to reason the refusal of our Transit Visa. It made no sense logically or practically for a stranded passenger to have been refused a Transit Visa. Although, it made a lot of logical sense for the airline to have not applied for our visa at all considering it would help save Visa Fees and money spent for our Accommodation. How can you refuse a Transit Visa to a stranded Passenger? On what ground? This question is directed both, towards the French Embassy as well as Air France, whoever finally decided to refuse the Visa.

By now you’d feel that this is the worst your airline could’ve done in terms of Customer Care but did I say I’m in Bombay yet, No! It get’s even worse Alexandre. I’d be very worried if I were in your place, you see it’s not that complicated, it’s rather quite simple. These things happen world over and I’m sure you’ve faced them too someday. But think about it Alexandre, what would you do if you were Mr S. Mishra, can’t imagine, can you? He’s a 27 year old boy who hasn’t seen his father in months, the only reason he’s going to India is because his father suddenly passed away and all he wants, rather all he can do, is see his father, one last time! But by the grace of your ground staff and officials, he probably won’t even get to do that! Do you feel his pain, Alexandre? I don’t think so! I cannot curse your airline enough or the imbeciles running it. What’s your raison d’être? Please tell us, so we can all hear it.

Anyway, I digress.

We ask them for directions to their lounge. At first, they seem perplexed and then comes another one of those cold, illogical and insensitive replies, we’re told the Air France Lounge is only for Business Class passengers and they can’t allow us to stay there. We are asked to take an airport shuttle to the other terminal and fend for ourselves at the upper deck resting area.

Out of the 35 odd passengers, most of them are senior citizens and a lot of them can barely speak English. They are scared and eager to get back home. They cannot speak out for themselves. At 6.30pm we call for four wheel chairs for senior citizens who can hardly walk let alone go to the other terminal, which needs a train to reach. After waiting for over an hour and half, the ground staff arrives with one wheel chair saying they couldn’t find more wheel chairs, so we point out the 20 odd wheel chairs lying right across the hall in a section which was closed and we hear something that baffles all of us, “those wheel chairs are from another company and we cannot use them!” I recorded this on my Camera.

The thing that lingers at the back of my mind more than anything else right now is the gut wrenching fact that everyone you know who had traveled to France earlier warned you about this, you knew you were being targeted because of your race but you’re in denial thinking you’re being irrational. You wonder at this point how could it all go, so wrong, but you’re left with insidious and plausible deniability’s of the fact that you’re attacked for being from a particular ethnicity. You’ve traveled across the world, it’s never happened to you before, but you were warned and, it did.

A French gentleman probably my father’s age, flying Business Class apologetically said, “I’ve been flying since the past 35 years and I’m sorry but I’ve only seen this happen to certain people, I’m really sorry.” I made a few friends there since we all were stranded together, one of my friend Jo who is a Dutch National just e-mailed me saying she was offered a compensation package from KLM. Meanwhile, we are yet to hear from either KLM or Air France. Surprising, don’t you think? Considering we were the ones who were left to fend for ourselves at the airport without an iota of assistance from Air France?

It’s an incoherent mess. There was absolutely no assistance, ever. Every time we needed something, we would have to travel across Terminals, meet new Air France Officials each time and have to request them for all of our basic needs. There were really old, senior citizens, an old patient suffering from Asthma and perhaps, just out of customer care, couldn’t there have been an Official assigned to tend to our grievances personally?

7.45 pm: We get a Sandwich and a Soft drink from the Air France Office, thank god! The first proper morsel of food. Although we could probably have been sharing an Indian feast with our families back home, by now. Something is better than nothing.

10.00 pm: Mr S. Mishra, Ms Shruti Kore and I proceed towards the resting area on the upper deck of the Terminal where we are asked to retire for the night. We head to the Air France counter there and request for a Blanket and a Bed Sheet, once again we’re asked to wait incessantly as they’ve run out of bed sheets and blankets. After 45 minutes we get our “resting kit”. They also issue us a new Boarding Pass for the Flight tomorrow and inform us that they’ve arranged a completely new flight for us, which would be flying out at 10.50 am just like our original departure time. We complete the formalities and go back to the floor. We reunite with the rest of the Passengers. A few passengers manage to occupy the sleeping chairs whereas everyone else has to sleep on the floor. It is not surprising to notice that out of all the passengers in the entire upper deck resting area, we barely spot anyone from a nationality other than India.

12.00 am: Mr Mishra picks a corner to charge his laptop so that he could write to his family and is still overwhelmed with emotions because he isn’t sure if he’ll get to see his father one last time. By now, we’re all tired and exhausted but still in shock about the treatment meted out to all of us. By 1.30 am, I call it a night and put on my headphones to try and catch some sleep in bits and pieces.

10th October 2013

7.00 am: We head to Terminal K Gate 49 once again and go to Exki to redeem our Breakfast Vouchers.

We’re allowed 1 Danish pastry and 1 hot/soft drink. I grab a bowl of soup only, which is half the price of the voucher, since the pastry has eggs and I don’t drink tea/coffee or aerated drinks. I head to the Cashier, explaining and requesting her to let me take the bowl of soup instead of the two. She calls the Chef who is a young man not older than 30-34 years and perhaps, with a missing cerebrum. He is infuriated and with an overcompensating display of anger points out the only two things I am supposed to have as per the voucher. He doesn’t ask me to buy the soup, he doesn’t refuse politely but he raises his voice and tries to insult me in front of every one else. I raise my voice louder than his and tell him why I got the soup in the first place. The pastry has eggs, which I don’t eat, and they’ve run out of vegetarian food. I also point out lividly that anyone who has this voucher is someone who is stranded at the airport without a choice and showing some courtesy to anyone holding the voucher wouldn’t harm him in any way. I push aside the tray and move on. He’s completely startled; everyone around is also surprised with his behavior and they put in a word. 8.30 am: We meet the rest of the passengers who had gone to the hotels for the stay and wait for our flight.

That’s where I meet one elderly gentleman who is going to Baroda. I’m amazed at what he has to say. His flight from Newark to Paris on the 7th was delayed and therefore he missed his connecting flight to Bombay from Paris, so they put him on our flight only for that flight to have been cancelled too. I can’t believe it! He looks like he’s preparing himself for the role of Mr Viktor Navrovski from the movie Terminal. Imagine spending two whole nights at an airport you didn’t prepare yourself for! 9.45 am: Once again, as if this is an endless joke, our flight is delayed. We’ve lost all hope and I feel like I’m part of a stupid prank let alone a very expensive one. They say the flight will leave at 1.50 pm. Sick of their nonsensical replies and unrealistic reasons, I just want to get home but I’m having trust issues with this company on monolithic proportions.

1.30 pm: We realize we’re being accommodated in an existing, scheduled flight as against what was told to us, that a special flight was arranged only for us.

All the pieces of the ever so confusing puzzle finally fell into place. Air France never organized a special aircraft for us, why would they when they cancelled our flight due to under utilized capacity anyway? We were just being accommodated on a scheduled flight. Two flights in one? You do the math!

2.25 pm: We’re finally heading to Bombay.

Now let me throw some facts and figures.

Air France Flight AF 218 is an Airbus A330-200 Aircraft. The average seating capacity of this Aircraft is 209 passengers. The number of stranded passengers in all was not more than 45. The final aircraft we boarded on the 10th of October was on full capacity. Perhaps our original flight was cancelled due to the high number of empty seats? Was it easier to cancel an empty aircraft rather than fly one, resulting in huge savings? Also, it makes even more sense to accommodate two flights in one. Maximum returns? We were not even given accommodation or proper food. Could this be the reason?

My guess is as good as yours!

Getting back to you, Alexandre, I don’t think there’s much left to say.

I’m over and done with this debacle but not without spreading the word about your service amongst my friends and family. There’s no doubt that your company is not competent or professional enough to take passengers world over. You may get defensive and say that this is a one-off incident but unfortunately, it isn’t. Number of people have voiced a similar opinion about the treatment meted out to them by your company. It is rather unsettling. Don’t know the effect this letter might have on your customer service but rest assured, you can thoroughly deduct an average of 5000$ from your annual profits if not more. Although that might be just a whisker in your overall mess, it’ll be one which was done with due diligence. We’ve had enough of your staff’s condescending bullshit. We have encountered inadequacy of service, which I never knew was possible for such a big company along with ignorance and stupidity of humungous proportions.

Let me make it very clear, we don’t fly your airlines for free and more often than not are the only people flying on this particular sector. You might try and make some damage control but be completely sure, that we will never forget the way we’ve been treated at the hands of your staff. You have failed miserably in meeting the expectations of your customers based on the promises you’ve made to them.

I will be circulating this letter amongst popular press and media along with a court summons we’re in the process of filing. This is a true account of what happened in Paris, Charles De Gaulle Airport.

Au revoir. 

Your new best pal,
Jay Shah

http://europa.eu/legislation_summaries/consumers/protection_of_consumers/l24173_en.htm
Link to EU Law for flight cancellations.

Name: Shah Jay
Booking Reference Number: 4B7WMU
First Port of Boarding: John F. Kennedy Airport, USA
Connect Flight: AF 218
Flight cancelled at: Charles De Gaulle, Paris

Complaint Reference Number: 6741742001
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 source:::::link from facebook ….thro senthil natarajan

natarajan

Going to Granada or Grenada !!!….Double Check your Ticket !!!

A British Airways passenger ended up at the wrong destination due to a mix-up. Picture: Supplied

A British Airways passenger ended up at the wrong destination due to a mix-up.

 

AS SHE sipped her gin and tonic at 30,000ft, Lamenda Kingdon chatted to a fellow passenger about how much she was looking forward to visiting Spain.

She was aghast when her neighbour replied: “Not on this plane, you won’t.”

It was then that the grandmother discovered that, rather than heading for the historic city of Granada, her flight was bound for the Caribbean island of Grenada.

Thanks to a misunderstanding, instead of booking the 62-year-old on a two-hour flight to southern Spain, the air miles travel firm Avios had put her on a 10-hour journey across the Atlantic.

Mrs Kingdon had planned her trip to Granada, with its famous Alhambra palace, as part of a ‘bucket list’ of activities after she was diagnosed with breast cancer and a brain tumour.

She booked the flight over the phone using her late husband’s air miles and did not notice when the ticket arrived that the destination was one letter different – and some 6437 kilometres away – from the place she wanted to go to. Mrs Kingdon, a former life coach from Plymouth, packed her bags and boarded her British Airways flight at Gatwick last month, oblivious to the mistake until two hours after takeoff.

“After lunch and a gin and tonic I began to chatting to the lady sitting next to me,” she said. “I told her how much I was looking forward to seeing the Alhambra.

“She replied: ‘Not on this flight, you won’t be.'”

“She then grabbed the elbow of a passing stewardess and told her: “This lady thinks she’s going to Spain’.”

“I looked at the ticket and it did indeed say Grenada. I had noticed the departure and arrival times were vastly different – but I presumed that had something to do with the time difference.” The sympathetic flight crew ushered Mrs Kingdon into the first-class cabin and gave her champagne. At a scheduled stop in St Lucia, she was put on a flight back to Gatwick. There she was met by apologetic airline staff who put her in a hotel for the night and arranged for Avios, which has links to BA, to reimburse her points and fly her to Malaga, the nearest major airport to Granada, the following day.

Avios also apologised for the mistake and gave Mrs Kingdon enough points for her next dream destination – New Zealand. Since her return from Granada, Mrs Kingdon has been given the all clear by her cancer doctors and hopes to make the trip next year.

“Looking back on the Granada mix up, I genuinely don’t blame anyone,” she said yesterday. “The person on the other end of the phone probably just misheard me.

“I honestly didn’t notice the spelling difference.

“But I’m certainly not complaining. They treated me wonderfully once they found out what had happened.”

 

source:::::news.com.au

natarajan

” Is it Safe to Drink Water on Planes ” ?!!!

THEY are the myths and mysteries every passenger wants answers to.

From the safest seat on a plane to why some airlines don’t include row 13 and what really happens to your waste, we reveal the truth about air travel, with some help from flight deal websiteSkyscanner.com.

Is it safe to drink the water on planes?
Some planes have unwanted stowaways in their water supply, including bacteria that could make you sick, according to tests by the US Environmental Protection Agency in 2009. The water didn’t meet safety standards in one out of every seven planes tested, with bacteria associated with human faeces like coliform and E. coli found. Bacteria can grow in the plane’s water tanks and hoses, as the water is pumped on board through hoses that are difficult to clean. Best to be cautious on this!

 

Do you really get drunk quicker while in the skies?
Not true, according to studies. Dr. Bhushan Kapur from the University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine said passengers’ blood alcohol level doesn’t increase in the air. However, people do tend to drink more in a shorter time frame in the skies, which can leave them  more impaired. So where does the misconception come from? The onboard effects of hypoxia – less oxygenated conditions due to the low-pressure environment and high altitude – can cause passengers to experience symptoms similar to intoxication.

What happens to your waste?
Airlines are not allowed to dump their waste tanks in mid-flight, however leaks can occur. Numerous “blue ice” (frozen sewage material treated by a liquid disinfectant that freezes at high altitude) impacts have been recorded, including some where it has fallen through the roofs of people’s homes.

For example, one UK couple were reportedly sitting in their garden when blue ice hit the roof of their house before landing on their heads. It gave off a “particularly pungent whiff of urine” as if thawed.

Do flight attendants have to be a certain weight?
There are no strict rules according to waistlines, but cabin crew must have “weight in proportion to height”. They must be able to sit in the jump seat without an extended seat belt and fit through the emergency exit window. The acceptable height is approximately 160-185 centimetres.

What happens when the pilot goes to the toilet?
Ever wondered why the seatbelt sign randomly lights up during a flight? Well forget turbulence, it may be that the pilot has made a sneaky trip to the toilet. A cabin crew member will guard the flight deck door while the pilot makes the trip to the lavatory.

Can lightning cause a plane crash?
Passenger planes are inevitable targets for lightning, which strikes a commercial plane on average once a year. However, lightning hasn’t downed a passenger plane since 1967. Planes have to pass numerous lightning certification tests. The outer skin of most planes is mainly aluminium – a good conductor of electricity. The current flows through the skin from the point of impact to another extremity point, commonly the tail.

Why do airlines leave out row 13?
Some airlines remove row 13 from their planes so not to spook superstitious flyers, including Air France, Emirates, Continental Airlines, Lufthansa and Ryanair. Lufthansa also flies minus a 17th row as it’s regarded as unlucky in Italy and Brazil.

Do lavatories have to be fitted with an ashtray, despite ban on smoking?
Smoking on planes has been banned for nearly 15 years, but all planes worldwide must have ashtrays to ensure flight safety. Why? A discarded cigarette sparked a plane crash in 1973, so the rule was adopted in case a passenger gave in to their cravings on a flight.

Can you get high from the emergency masks?
Contrary to what Brad Pitt’s character in Fight Club may think, the oxygen from the emergency masks won’t get you high. It’s actually a loss of oxygen that makes you feel this way, so that’s why airlines provide the masks in case the cabin pressure suddenly drops.

Can your mobile phone cause a plane crash?
The jury’s still out on this issue, but airlines are erring on the side of caution. Current regulations give crew the power to ban the use of any device that could threaten the safety of an aircraft. Experts say that electromagnetic waves emitted by mobiles can interfere with a plane’s electronics and cause a crash, concerns that were outlined in an investigation by the New York Times last year.

Which seats are the safest?
It’s true – the safest seat should you be involved in a mid-air disaster is the emergency exit, according to researchers from the University of Greenwich commissioned by the US Civil Aviation Authority, who looked at the accounts of 2000 survivors in 105 air accidents around the world. A seat up to five rows from an exit offers a greater chance of escaping if there’s a fire. There’s only a “marginal” difference as to whether the seat is on the aisle or not. It also found passengers at the front of the plane had a 65 per cent chance of escape, while those at the rear had only a 53 per cent chance.

Why does food taste different on a plane?
It’s not just your imagination – food really does taste different in the skies. Firstly, the atmosphere inside the cabin dries out the nose and then the change in air pressure numbs approximately a third of the taste buds. This explains why airlines tend to add a lot of salt and spice to food.

source:::news.com.au

natarajan

Fly Thro ‘ A Crater on Mars!!!…A Stunning View Of Mars!!!

Mountains

Wow. Wired’s Adam Mann directed us toward this stunning overhead view of a crater rim on Mars, posted by NASA. The image is actually a screen shot from a simulated movie about the Mojave Crater called “Soaring over Mars,” which you can watch below.

The terrain models in the movie were generated from images taken by a camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, a satellite that has been orbiting Mars since 2006.

Mojave Crater is 37 miles in diameter and 1.6 miles deep. It’s estimated to be around 10 million years old, which is quite young for a crater of this size, NASA scientists say. It was created when a meteor or something else from space crashed into the planet.

 

 

source:::::businessinsider australia

natarajan

World”s Worst Airport Terminal !!!

Manila’s crowded Terminal 1 was ranked the world’s worst by travellers based on comfort, convenience, cleanliness and customer service. (File Pic)

 

The Philippines’ main Manila airport terminal has been named the world’s worst for the second year in a row in a survey by an online travel website.

Officials on Friday brushed off the survey results, insisting conditions were being improved.

“The Guide to Sleeping in Airports” website said Manila’s crowded Terminal 1 was ranked the world’s worst by travellers based on comfort, convenience, cleanliness and customer service.

Reviews posted on the site mentioned “dilapidated facilities”, dishonest airport workers — particularly taxi drivers — long waiting times and rude officials.

“These are old issues,” Terminal 1 manager Dante Basanta told AFP, adding that the problems were already being addressed by the government.

He conceded that the Manila airport, with a capacity of about 6.5 million passengers annually, was overstretched, handling 8.1 million travellers last year.

Terminal 1, the oldest of its four passenger terminals, was built 32 years ago.

The government has launched a 2.5-billion-peso ($58 million) renovation programme for the terminal.

It is also attempting to decongest it by moving at least three million passengers a year to a newer terminal.

source ::::ndtv site

natarajan

Kangaroo @ Qantas Terminal Of Melbourne airport !!!

Whopper hopper ... The kangaroo examines the pharmacy's offeringsWhopper hopper … The kangaroo examines the pharmacy’s offerings Photo: Courtesy 3AW

The kangaroo made its way to level two of the airport, although airport spokeswoman Anna Gillett said it was not clear how it got to level two

The kangaroo was photographed by long-haul flight steward Marita Young, of Brighton.

 

An injured kangaroo somehow managed to make its way into Melbourne Airport in Australia on Wednesday, ending up in a pharmacy to the shock of travelers.

The kangaroo made the right choice: emergency responders came to the scene and the animal, nicknamed Cyrus, was placed under the care of a veterinarian.

The airport is ringed partly by bushland that is apparently frequented by kangaroos. This one chose to end up at the Qantas terminal, an apt destination since the airline’s symbol is the kangaroo and it is known among Australians as the “Flying Kangaroo.”

Officials said the animal had likely been injured by a car and was bleeding when it got inside. After going into the pharmacy, the kangaroo was surrounded by Qantas workers and tranquilized before being turned over to the veterinarian, according to Wildlife Victoria, an animal emergency response service.

“Cyrus, as he has been aptly named after one of the helpers on the scene, will be assessed by a vet following his stressful ordeal,” the group said.

Naturally, the animal’s escapades were fodder for social media. An Australian comedian, Julia Morris, happened to be at the airport when the kangaroo came by, and she was practically at a loss for jokes to top the reality of the situation. “Ok, so I’m at Melbourne airport & a KANGAROO has just jumped into the chemist,” she tweeted, using the hashtags #notajoke #soundslikeajoke #mustneedaprescriptionfilled.

The kangaroo apparently did not breach airport security at any point. It was later filmedresting comfortably at a wildlife shelter after its ordeal.

source:::::Sydney Morning Heald &NewyorkTimes

natarajan

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/travel/travel-news/kangaroo-cornered-in-melbourne-airport-chemist-20131016-2vllc.html#ixzz2hsOLJxkV