Image of the Day….Progress 59 Launch on 28 April 2015…

Progress 59 launch on April 28, 2015 via NASA on G+

An unpiloted ISS Progress 59 cargo craft launched at 3:09 a.m. EDT (7:09 UTC, 1:09 p.m. local time in Baikonur) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. At the time of launch, the International Space Station? was flying about 257 miles over northeast Kazakhstan near the Russian border, having flown over the launch site two and a half minutes before lift off.

Less than 10 minutes after launch, the resupply ship reached preliminary orbit and deployed its solar arrays and navigational antennas as planned.

Russian flight controllers notified the crew members that Progress will make a two-day, 34-orbit rendezvous to the station instead of the planned four-orbit, six-hour journey after telemetry could not confirm the Kurs automated rendezvous antennas deployed.

The Russian cargo craft now is scheduled to arrive at the space station Thursday morning at approximately 5:03 a.m. EDT/9:03 UTC.

Image and launch details via NASA on G+

 

Bottom line: An unpiloted ISS Progress 59 cargo craft launched at 3:09 a.m. EDT (7:09 UTC, 1:09 p.m. local time in Baikonur) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, carrying food and supplies for the International Space Station.

Source……www.earthsky.org

Natarajan

“Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari is New York’s first Indian-American woman judge”…

Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari has been sworn-in as a criminal court judge in New York by Mayor Bill de Blasio, becoming the first India-born woman to be appointed a judge in New York City.

Newly appointed city judge, Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari, rises to take her place for a Judicial Swearing-In Ceremony at New York City Hall in New York on Monday.

Newly appointed city judge, Chennai-born Raja Rajeswari, rises to take her place for a Judicial Swearing-In Ceremony at New York City Hall in New York on Monday.

Ms. Rajeswari, 43, who had migrated to the U.S. from Chennai as a teenager, previously worked with the Richmond County District Attorney’s Office for her entire career in several bureaus including Criminal Court, Narcotics, Supreme Court, and the Sex Crimes Special Victims Bureau, where she last served as Deputy Chief.

Ms. Rajeswari took the oath of office at a ceremony in New York City on Monday along with 27 other judges appointed earlier this month to the Family Court, Criminal Court, and Civil Court, which are part of the New York State Unified Court System.

The mayor appoints judges to 10-year terms in the New York City Criminal Court and the Family Court within the city.

“To ensure New Yorkers have access to a fair, equitable justice system, we need judges who are qualified, honest and reflective of the people of this city,” Mr. de Blasio said.

“With their wealth of legal experience, these appointees represent all five boroughs and all walks of life. From the first female South Asian-American judge in New York City to a former NYPD First Deputy Commissioner, these talented leaders truly reflect the diverse range of communities that make up our great city,” he said.

The mayor said Ms. Rajeswari has an “extraordinary, extraordinary empathy for others”.

He lauded her ability to speak in Indian, Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian languages, saying she put her history as an immigrant and ability to speak all these languages to work, “helping to reach immigrants” in the Staten Island communities where she served as an Assistant District Attorney.

“And she saw as her mission to give them confidence in the justice process,” Mr. de Blasio said.

Ms. Rajeswari came to the U.S. when she was 16.

“It’s like a dream. It’s way beyond what I imagined,” she had told silive.com, a Staten Island news website.

“For someone like me, an immigrant who comes from India, I’m beyond grateful,” she had said. “I told the mayor this is not only my American Dream, but it shows another girl from a far away country that this is possible.”

Ms. Rajeswari hoped to use her new position to improve the judicial system by encouraging interpreters to have more access to aid immigrants, the news site had said.

Ms. Rajeswari had told Desi Talk newspaper that she had observed gender inequality even before coming to the US when some of her “brilliant” girlfriends in India were married off at the age of 14 and 15. “That has always stayed with me.”

As a prosecuting attorney in New York, she has come across numerous cases of spousal and child abuse with in the South Asian community in New York, Ms Rajeswari had said. “Many of the domestic violence victims have been South Asians, Sri Lankans.”

Ms. Rajeswari has served in the district attorney’s office for the past 16 years and has been the deputy chief of the Special Victims Unit for more than four years.

She has worked on cases involving women and children and said they are the ones that touched her the most.

Ms. Rajeswari said that she hopes to use her new position to improve the judicial system by encouraging interpreters to have more access to aid immigrants.

“I’m honoured to sit on a city bench and make Staten Island proud,” she said.

Currently, there are two male judges of Indian descent in civil court settings — Jaya Madhavan on the New York City Housing Court in Bronx County, and Anil C. Singh of New York County Supreme Court, 1st District, according to ethnic New India Times.

Besides her legal acumen Ms Rajeswari is an accomplished Bharat Natyam and Kucchipudi dancer who continues to perform at Indian events and temples with her troupe from the Padmalaya Dance Academy, named after her mother, Padma Ramanathan.

Source…..www.thehindu.com and http://www.ndtv.com

Natarajan

Incredible Images of Macro Photography ….

A Tiny Wonderland in the Backyard

While studying for a degree in neuroscience, Nadav Bagim (A.K.A. Aimishboy) went through a period of introspection. He wasn’t sure whether he wanted to continue with his studies, leaving him in somewhat of an existential impasse. When his father gave him an SLR-like camera, Nadav’s life went in an entirely different direction.

Nadav taught himself how to use the camera and became fascinated with macro photography. He says that he only uses Photoshop to perform minor tweaks in his images and that his tiny models do the real work.

The Celestial Conductor 

Tiny Photoshoot

Moon River

Tiny Photoshoot

The Offering

Tiny Photoshoot

Life Inside a Snowglobe

Tiny Photoshoot

Swirling

Tiny Photoshoot

Winged Shadows

temp

Piggy-Back Ride

temp

Tickle Me

Tiny Photoshoot

Hey There!

Tiny Photoshoot

Waiting for the Princess

temp

Sunrise Friends

Tiny Photoshoot

Make Slime, Not War

Tiny Photoshoot

Source….www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

Nine Indians Who have Planets Named after Them….

Viswanathan Anand just had a planet named after him. The Chess Grandmaster, once nicknamed the “Lightning Kid”, famous for his rapid tactical calculations has been immortalized with planet Vishyanand, the main asteroid belt minor planet between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

But Indians are no strangers to having planetary bodies named after them – these whiz kids have had their own planets for a while now.

Hamsa Padmanabhan

hamsa planet

At 16, Hamsa Padmanabhan had a minor planet 21575 named ‘Hamsa’, after her. She was then a second-year B.Sc student of Fergusson College, when she made a presentation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s (MIT) Lincoln lab for the Intel International Science and Engineering Fir (ISEF) in 2006. Today at 21, she is doing her post graduation in Physics from Pune University, after which she plans to do her doctoral research in theoretical physics.

Sainudeen Pattazhy

sainuddin planet

NASA named a minor planet (5178 No CD4) after Kerala zoology professor Sainudeen Pattazhy for his environmental research and campaigns, including red rain, health hazard of mobile phone towers, biological control of mosquitoes and the eco-biology of trees of religious importance.

Vishnu Jayaprakash

vishnu fuel cell

In 2010, Vishnu Jayaprakash, then a Chennai Class XII student of Chettinad Vidyashram demonstrated a microbial fuel cell that runs on cow dung and inexpensive graphite electrodes. The minor planet named after him is called 25620 Jayaprakash. He aimed to reduce power costs for India’s 700,000 villages. Today, he has done extensive research on renewable energy technologies, and is now focussing on Microbial Fuel Cell (MFC) technology.

Anish Mukherjee

anish intel award planet

When Anish Mukherjee and Debarghya Sarkar were only 16 years old, they noticed the large scale bottle tampering rampant in India. They took the idea of autodisposable syringes—which, once used, cannot be used again—and implemented that for one-time use bottle cap. Their design enabled customers to know if the the bottle had been tampered with. For this, planet 2000 AH52 he was renamed 25629 Mukherjee.

Debarghya Sarkar

sarkar intel award planet

In 2010, Sarkar and his school classmate Anish Mukherjee worked on an innovative design that would make bottle-caps completely tamper proof. For his contribution to electrical and mechanical engineering, 25630 Sarkar (previously 2000 AT53) is named after him. Debarghya Sarkar is currently a Ph.D. student at the University of Southern California. He plans to take his interest in bottle cap design towards a larger goal – design, fabrication and integration of devices that modulate photons and electrons.

Hetal Vaishnav

hetal planet

When class X student Hetal Vaishnav saw that ragpickers were not picking up waste packets made up of multilayer plastic, she found that recycling companies avoided buying multilayer film plastic waste from them as it cannot be reused or recycled. Hetal then spent months to innovate upon a process to deliver an innovative material that is “sustainable to water, has good nail- and screw-holding capacity, and has features that are better than MDF (Medium-density fibreboard) and plywood.”. This let her use multilayered and metallised plastic used for packaging wafers and chewing tobacco. “I got a certificate from Lincoln Lab a few days ago,” Hetal said on telephone from Rajkot. Planet 25636 Vaishnav was named for her contribution to the environment.

Akshat Singhal

akshat planet

After Akshat found how annoying it was to index documents in a computer, he developed a system to automatically categorise documents, and also find relations between them, using artificial intelligence. The planet named after him, 12599 Singhal, is in the same region of planets that has 8749 Beatles, 2001 Einstein and 7000 Curie.

Madhav Pathak

madhav pathak

Madhav Pathak has changed the conventional Braille slate, making writing easier for the visually impaired. After Madhav Pathak found that his uncle could not easily write in Braille, the system of six raised dots, he decided to change it. Braille  has a steep learning curve: Blind children have to memorise more than 300 combinations of dots, since they need one set of combinations for reading, and another set for writing! Madhav has modified the Braille slate (used for writing the language), which lets students easily read and write the language. For this, he has 12509 Pathak named after him.

Viswanathan Anand

vishwanatan anand

Named Vishyanand, the main belt minor planet is between the orbits of planets Mars and Jupiter. The planet was discovered in 1988 by Kenzo Suzuki in Toyota, Japan and was nameless until now. A minor planet is usually named after the person who discovered it but if it remains nameless, then it’s in the hands of the committee members to name it. Hence Micahel Rudenko, a minor planet committee member and an ardent fan of Viswanathan Anand’s knack for chess decided to name the planet ‘Vishyanand’. He is only the third chess player in the world after Alexander Alekhine and Anatoly Karpov to be honored in this fashion.

With inputs from Mensxp.com

Source…..www.indiatimes.com

Natarajan

Are You Good in Grammar …? Take this Test and Find out…!!!

 

 

How good is your grammar?

Everyone always seems to talk about how stupid young people are these days, but can you really prove them wrong? Test your knowledge of grammar and also see how good your friends are!

There are 15 simple questions given with 3 choices to select from.

Try out your grammar strength. 

http://en.what-character-are-you.com/d/en/927/index/4875.html 

Source……..input from a friend of mine

Natarajan

” A Bad Prank by a Pax on Board …. It Went Wrong For the Crazy Pax anyway …”

A man has been arrested over an incident on an Air India flight.

A man has been arrested over an incident on an Air India flight. Source: Getty Images 

A PASSENGER attempts to chat up a flight attendant, but she resists his “charms” and walks away. What could possibly go wrong?

As it turns out, a lot!

Yousuf Sharif, 35, allegedly sparked hijacking fears on board an Air India flight from Dubai to Hyderabad, India on Tuesday. And it was all because of a very bad prank he decided to play on a flight attendant, the Times of India reports.

Sitting in business class, the Indian resident asked the crew member if she would take a selfie with him on his phone. He also asked if he could photograph the cockpit.

“He was requesting the crew member to pose for a selfie and tried to engage her in a conversation, to which she objected,” Police officer T Sudhakar, who works for Rajiv Gandhi International Airport, where the plane landed, told local news website the DeccanChronicle.

Police allege the man had been trying to flirt with the staff member and when she refused to talk to him, he decided to scare her with a hijacking prank.

“When the air hostess rejected his request and started walking away, Yousuf told her that he will hijack the flight,” Deputy Commissioner of Police Shamshabad AR Srinivas said. “She immediately alerted the pilot.”

The man was questioned once the flight touched down, no charges have yet been laid.

news.com.au has contacted Air India for comment.

He allegedly threatened to hijack the plane as a prank. Picture: Stefan Krasowski

He allegedly threatened to hijack the plane as a prank. Picture: Stefan Krasowski Source: Flickr 

Source….www.news.com.au

Natarajan

What is the Difference Between Green and Black Tea …?

What’s the difference between green and black tea? Isn’t it all just tea from the same plant?

Both black and green tea is harvested from an evergreen, tree-like shrub known as camellia sinensis. Most likely originating in China, the camellia sinensis is thought to have first been used to brew a medicinal elixir during the Shang Dynasty (1600 BC to 1046 BC). By the Qin Dynasty in the third century BC, it had become a relatively popular drink using only the leaves from this plant, rather than mixed with other things as seems to have been common when used medicinally.

As for the plant itself, camellia sinensis can grow as tall as 30 ft if left untended, but is generally kept significantly shorter, usually only 3-6 ft tall, to make it easier to harvest the buds and leaves. It is those that are then processed to become green or black tea, among other types.

The difference between these teas is achieved via different processing methods. Manufacturers create green tea by picking the leaves off the plant and then heating them immediately afterwards. This is commonly done by pan firing the leaves or steaming them. Sufficient heat stops the leaves from oxidizing, allowing them to maintain their green color.

Leaves that are going to be used for black tea are allowed to ferment, or oxidize, completely. The general process here is to roll, tear, or crush the leaves to help along the oxidation process (similar to why the inside of an apple turns brown when you expose it to air). The leaves are then dried out, sometimes in the Sun or otherwise using machines. As the leaves oxidize, they gradually turn from green to black.

Other common types of tea include white and oolong.  Oolong is initially generally processed in the same way as black tea, but isn’t allowed to oxidize for as long.  Once the desired oxidation level has been reached, which varies quite a bit by type and manufacturer (some oolong tea is closer to green tea, while others is closer to black in oxidation levels), the leaves are fired similar to green tea to stop the oxidation process at that point.

White tea is made by picking the leaves and buds early in the year while the bud is still closed.  From here, the leaves may be placed out to dry in the Sun or may be dried out in some other fashion, in either case attempting to minimize oxidation during this process.

Bonus Facts

  • Contrary to what you might think, the highest tea consumption per capita is not found in the United Kingdom, but rather Turkey at 7.682 kg per person per year.  The U.K. rings in at number 5, and has actually been on the decline of late, with a 6% drop in tea sales in the last year alone in the U.K., which has only continued the recent trend. On the flipside, coffee sales are rising in the U.K. at about the same rate as the tea sales are falling annually.
  • Americans overwhelming preferred black tea to green, with 84% of the tea consumed being of the black variety and 14% green.
  • It is thought that tea arrived in Europe as a result of Portugal’s trading privileges with China. A Jesuit priest by the name of Jasper de Cruz is often credited with being the first to bring tea back to Portugal with him after visiting China in 1590.
  • Tea drinking didn’t become common in Britain until around the 18th century, when tea smuggling became big business in that country.  Previous to this, the taxes on tea tended to make it unaffordable to lower class citizens as something regularly consumed.

Source…..www.todayifoundout.com

Natarajan

 

 

Few Misconceptions and Myths Busted….!!!

Think coffee comes from a bean? Think again.

Think coffee comes from a bean? Think again. Source: Getty Images

YOU may need to sit down before you continue reading. It appears much of what you thought you knew about the world is simply not true.

Ripley’s Believe It Or Not in London has released the top 50 misconceptions we have about planet Earth and you could be in for a shock.

Modern day facts — termed “faux facts” by Ripley’s — have been put under the microscope and proven by experts to be factually incorrect. Think Everest is the highest mountain and that coffee is made from beans? Think again.

Instead our beliefs are thought to be a mash up of old wives tales, rumours and a case of good old Chinese whispers.

The stuff you’ve been getting wrong for years

Not the tallest. Source: Getty Images 

A spokesperson for Ripley’s Believe It Or Not said it was understandable most of us have fallen for these myths.

“If you’re told something enough times, you’re sure to start believing it.

“The misconceptions in this list are all pretty plausible, so it’s understandable that many … will have read it and been certain it’s true, with many of us being told these from an early age.

“Unbelievably, all of these commonly believed facts are in fact common misconceptions that we have myths and misconceptions.

“As our founder Robert Ripley used to say, it is often the strangest things that are true.”

Here are some of the more common myths busted::

1. Mount Everest is the tallest mountain in the world

Not true. While Mount Everest is officially known as the tallest mountain in the world, experts claim that in technical terms this is not true.

The summit of Mount Everest is higher above sea level than the summit of any other mountain however Mauna Kea in Hawaii is the tallest when measured from base to summit.

2. The Great Wall of China can be seen from space

It is commonly believed that one of the greatest feats of mankind is so huge it can be seen from the moon. However Apollo astronauts have confirmed that you can’t see the Great Wall of China from above and that all you can see from the moon is the white and blue marble of Earth.

3. Coffee is made from beans

Coffee fanatics obsess over their coffee beans. But while many assume that coffee comes from coffee beans, experts say they are actually made from seeds called a bean.

4. Sushi means “raw fish”

Although one of the common ingredients may be raw fish, sushi actually means “sour tasting”.

5. Toilets flush in different directions because of different hemispheres

Remember when you first went overseas and were told to expect toilet water to spin in a different direction because you were in a different hemisphere?

Well it’s not actually due to the hemisphere: the real reason is just that the water jets point in the opposite direction.

6. Dropping a penny from the Empire State Building will kill someone

Yes, it towers 381 metres high but a penny only weighs a gram and it tumbles as it falls. Its light weight combined with the tumbling effect produces so much air resistance that the penny never really gathers speed before it hits its terminal velocity and therefore definitely not enough to kill you.

7. Peanuts are a type of nut

Yes they have the word nut in their name, but peanuts, along with beans and peas, actually belong to the single plant family — Leguminosae.

8. Fortune cookies are a Chinese tradition

Love going to your local Chinese restaurant for the fortune cookie that comes with the bill at the end? This tradition was actually invented by the Americans.

9. Vikings wore horned helmets

They might be depicted in movies and books this way but experts say there is no actual evidence to suggest that Vikings ever wore horned helmets.

10. Chameleons change colour to match their surroundings

A chameleon is thought to change colour to fit in with its surroundings and people are often accused of being like a chameleon when they change their beliefs or behaviour to please others. But the real reason chameleons actually change colour as a response to mood, temperature and exposure to light. Not because of their surrounding objects.

11. One human year is equivalent to seven dog years

While it may be true for some dogs, it’s not a blanket rule. It all depends on the size and breed of the dog.

12. You lose body heat fastest through your head

You know when your mum tells you to put something on your head if you want to keep warm? Well apparently that’s just an old wives tale. Experts say you sould be just as cold if you went without a hat as if you went without trousers.

13. The forbidden fruit mentioned in the Book of Genesis is an apple

Absolutely not true. The bible never mentioned the forbidden fruit was an apple.

14. Vitamin C is an effective treatment for colds

You start to get sick and people tell you to eat an orange or buy some vitamin C tablets but apparently there is little or no evidence that vitamin C helps a cold. It is thought instead to help build up the immune system to ward off potential flu viruses.

15. Penguins mate for life

We all refer to penguins as upholders of the moral order as they remain entirely monogamous. But some species, such as the Emperor Penguin, are serial monogamists. They will mate with one penguins for a season then move onto another penguin the following year.

16. Caffeine dehydrates you

If you have a cup of coffee, make sure you follow it up with a large glass of water we’re told. However, while caffeinated drinks do have a mild diuretic effect — experts say they don’t appear to increase the risk of dehydration.

17. We use just 10 per cent of our brain

Neurologists say this is entirely untrue. Humans use nearly every part of their brain and most of the brain is active all the time.

18. Bulls charge at the colour red

It is a proven fact that bulls only see blues and yellow. The only reason they seem to be angered at red capes in bullfighting is because of its movement.

19. The capital of Australia is Sydney

We’re hoping every Australian already knows this but apparently this is one of the top misconceptions in the world. The capital, as we know, is Canberra.

Source…..www.news.com.au

Natarajan

நெட்டெழுத்து: இணையத்தில் வழிகாட்டும் தமிழக ஆசிரியர்!….

 

கதை, கவிதை, கட்டுரை எனக் கற்பனைக் கடிவாளங்களை அவிழ்த்துவிட்டு வலைப்பதிவுகளில் அதைத் தொடுப்பவர்கள் பலர். அவர்களுக்கு மத்தியில் முழுக்க முழுக்கத் தமிழக ஆசிரியர்களுக்காகவே இயங்கி வருகிறார் சுரேஷ்.

அவரின் http://www.tamilagaasiriyar.com/ வலைதளம், அரசு வெளியிடும் அரசாணைகள், கல்வித்துறை இயக்குனர்களின் செயல்முறைகள், பாடங்கள் சார்ந்த கையேடுகள், பாடப் புத்தகங்கள், பவர் பாயிண்ட் விளக்கக் காட்சிகள், பொது அறிவு சார்ந்த புத்தகத் தொகுப்புகள், ஆய்வுக் குறிப்புகள் என அறிவுக் களஞ்சியமாக இருக்கிறது.

வேலை பார்ப்பவர்களுக்கு உதவும் விதமாக சம்பளப் பட்டியலுக்கான பே-ரோல் மென்பொருளின் இணைப்பு, வருமான வரி குறித்த சந்தேகங்களுக்கான விளக்கப் பட்டியல் ஆகியவையும் இத்தளத்தில் உண்டு.

தமிழ் மற்றும் ஆங்கில வழிக் கல்விக்கான ஒன்றாம் வகுப்பு முதல் பன்னிரெண்டாம் வகுப்பு வரை பாடத்திட்டங்கள் தொகுத்து, பதிவேற்றப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன.

பள்ளிக்கல்விக்கு அதிக முக்கியத்துவம் அளிக்கும் இத்தளத்தில் ஆசிரியர்கள் தங்கள் மாணவர்களுக்கு வழிகாட்டும் விதமாய் ‘சர்வ சிக்‌ஷ அபியான்’ திட்டக் கொள்கைகள், பத்தாம் வகுப்பு, பன்னிரெண்டாம் வகுப்பு மாணவர்களுக்கான கையேடுகள், பொதுத்தேர்வு பற்றிய வழிகாட்டிகள் போன்றவை உள்ளன.

தொடக்க மற்றும் உயர்நிலை வகுப்புகளுக்காக CCE எனப்படும் ‘தொடர் மற்றும் முழுமையான மதிப்பீடு’ முறையின் மென்பொருளும் இங்கே உள்ளது. இதன் மூலம் ஆசிரியர்கள் தங்கள் மாணவர்களின் மதிப்பெண்ணை உள்ளீடு செய்தாலே, அது கிரேடாக மாற்றப்பட்டு, முழுமையான தர அறிக்கையைப் பெற முடிகிறது.

ஆசிரியர் தகுதித் தேர்வுக்கான வினா விடைகள் அடங்கிய தொகுப்பு, பள்ளிக் கல்வித் துறையின் முக்கிய அறிவிப்புகள், சுற்றறிக்கைகளின் நகல்கள், காலியாக உள்ள பணியிடங்கள் பற்றிய அறிவிப்பு, பள்ளிக் கல்வி இயக்குநரின் சுற்றறிக்கைகள் போன்றவையும் லிங்க்குகளாய் இங்கே காணக் கிடைக்கின்றன.

இவை போக சுவாரசியமான கணிதப்புதிர்களும், பொது அறிவுத் தகவல்களும் கொட்டிக் கிடக்கின்றன. தகவல் அறியும் உரிமைச் சட்டம் பற்றிய வழிகாட்டி கையேட்டின் இணைப்புகளும் இத்தளத்தில் அடக்கம். யாருக்கெல்லாம் பச்சை மையில் கையெழுத்திட அதிகாரம் உள்ளது போன்ற அவசியம் தெரிந்துகொள்ள வேண்டிய பல விவரங்கள் இங்கே பதிவேற்றப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன.

தொடக்கப்பள்ளி மற்றும் இடைநிலை ஆசிரியர்கள் மேலே என்ன படிக்கலாம், எவ்வகையான உயர்கல்வி தங்களின் முன்னேறத்துக்கு உதவும் என்பது போன்ற தகவல்கள் தரப்பட்டுள்ளன.

இவை மட்டுமல்லாது, செல்பேசி, டேட்டா கார்டு மற்றும் டிடிஹச்களை ரீசார்ஜ் செய்வதற்கான தளங்களின் இணைப்புகளும் கொடுக்கப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன. செல்பேசி மற்றும் மின் வாரியக் கட்டணங்களை செலுத்துவதற்கான இணைப்புகளும் இதில் அடக்கம்.

தமிழில் தட்டச்சு செய்வதற்கான மென்பொருட்களின் இணைப்புகள், காணொளிகளைக் காண மீடியா, வி.எல்.சி., ரியல் ப்ளேயர்களின் இணைப்புகள், அனைத்துப் பல்கலைக்கழகங்களின் யூ.ஆர்.எல். இணைப்புகள் ஆகியவையும் கொடுக்கப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன.

எந்தெந்த தினத்தில் கிரிக்கெட் நடக்கிறதோ, அன்று விளையாடும் அணி குறித்த தகவல்களும், உடனுக்குடனான கிரிக்கெட் ஸ்கோர் பட்டியலும் வெளியிடப்படுகிறது.

முக்கியமாய் வலைதள வாசிப்பாளர்களும் தங்களிடம் உள்ள புத்தகங்களையும், விடைத் தாள்களையும், கையேடுகளையும் இங்கே பதிவேற்றலாம். இதன் மூலம் எல்லோரும் அதைப் பகிர்ந்துகொள்ள வாய்ப்பளிக்கும் ஊடகமாக இத்தளம் செயல்படுகிறது. அரசு வெளியிடும் அறிவிப்புகள், கல்வி சார்ந்த நீதிமன்ற ஆணைகள் அனைத்தும் உடனுக்குடன் பதிவேற்றப்படுவது இத்தளத்தின் முக்கிய அம்சமாகும்.

மொத்தத்தில் கணிப்பொறியையும், இணையத்தையும் ஆரம்ப நிலையில் கையாளத் தெரிந்தவர்களுக்கும், ஆசிரியர் பயிற்சி மற்றும் தமிழ்நாடு அரசுப் பணியாளர் தேர்வாணையத் தேர்வுகளை எழுதுபவர்களுக்கும் ஆகச் சிறந்த வழிகாட்டியாக இந்த வலைதளம் இருக்கும் என்பதில் எந்த சந்தேகமும் இல்லை.

Source……..க.சே. ரமணி பிரபா தேவி in http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

” With This Handy Color Chart , No More Arguments over the Shades of Color…” !!!

A Very Helpful Color Chart

This great and handy color chart was diligently made by Ingrid Sundberg, a write and children’s books illustrator. Sundberg says that she loves nothing more than collecting exotic words that give her stories variety. We all have different associations with the words that describe colors, says Sundberg. I know that I have certain associations with ‘sepia’, for instance, imaginging mostly as a light brown, although some see it as a darker hue.
You can see more of her projects on her website, her studio’s website or on herfacebook page.
With this handy color chart, there will be no more arguing about color! Now you can always show the person (or salesman) the exact color you are talking about
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
color chart
Source……www.ba-bamail.com
Natarajan