டிகிரி இளைஞர்களின் டிகிரி காஃபி…!!!

நல்ல வேலை, கை நிறைய சம்பளம் உள்ள இளைஞர்கள் ரெஃப்ரஷ்மன்டுக்காக எப்போதாவது டிகிரி காஃபி குடிப்பார்கள். ஆனால், இந்த டிகிரி படித்த இளைஞர்கள் ‘டிகிரி காஃபி’ தயாரிப்பையே தங்கள் தொழிலாக்கி அதில் வெற்றி பெற்றுள்ளார்கள்.

ஜெயராமன் (27), குருநாதன்(27), வெற்றிச்செல்வன்(28) ஆகிய மூவரும் இன்ஜினீயரிங் முடித்துவிட்டுத் தங்கள் துறை சார்ந்த வேலையிலும் சேர்ந்தார்கள். ஆனால், ஒரு காலகட்டத்தில் வேலையை உதறிவிட்டு மூவரும் இணைந்து ‘கான்செப்டோ டெலிகசிஸ்’ என்று ஒரு நிறுவனத்தைத் தொடங்கினார்கள். இதன் இரண்டு அங்கங்கள் காப்பி குடில், எக்ஸ்குளூசிவ்.

சொந்தமாகத் தொழில் தொடங்க வேண்டும், அதுவும் உணவு சார்ந்த தொழில் தொடங்க வேண்டும் என எது உந்து சக்தியாக அமைந்தது. சொந்த தொழில் புரிவதில் உள்ள சவால்களும், சந்தோஷங்களும் என்ன? உங்களை இணைத்த மையப்புள்ளி எது? எதிர்கால திட்டம் பற்றிக் கூறவும் என அவர்களிடம் கேட்டபோது சுறுசுறுப்பாக சுடச்சுட தகவல்கள் பல அளித்தனர்.

‘‘நாங்கள் மூவருமே பள்ளிக்கூட சினேகிதர்கள். எப்போது வாய்ப்பு கிடைத்தாலும் ஒன்றாக சேர்ந்து விதவிதமான உணவுகளைச் சாப்பிடுவோம். எங்கள் மூவருக்கும் பிடித்த பொதுவான விஷயம் காபி. நல்ல காபியைத் தேடி பலமுறை அலைந்திருக்கிறோம்.

ஆனால், பின்னாளில் வேலைக்குச் சென்ற பிறகு, எங்கள் பணியிடத்திற்கு அருகில் உள்ள காபி பாரிலேயே தான் காபி குடிக்க வேண்டும் என்ற நிர்ப்பந்தம் ஏற்பட்டது.

அந்தக் கடையில் சுத்தம் பார்க்க முடியாது, சிகரெட் புகை இருக்கிறதே என சுகாதாரம் பேண முடியாது. இதுபற்றி நாங்கள் அடிக்கடி பேசுவோம். அப்போதுதான் நாம் மூவரும் இணைந்து ஏன் காஃபி ஷாப் ஆரம்பிக்கக் கூடாது என்ற எண்ணம் உதித்தது.

‘ரெஃப்ரஷ்மன்ட்’

இந்தத் தொழிலைத் தொடங்குவதற்கு முன்னர் நிறைய மெனக்கிடுதல் இருந்தது. ஒரு சர்வே செய்தோம், நீங்கள் ரெஃப்ரஷ்மன்ட்டுக்காக என்ன குடிக்க விரும்புவீர்கள் எனக் கேட்டபோது 95% பேர் நல்ல காபி எனப் பதிலளித்தனர்.

சரியான பாதையிலேயே செல்கிறோம் எனக் களத்தில் இறங்கினோம். முதல் அவுட்லெட்டைத் தஞ்சையில் சாஸ்திரா பல்கலைக்கழக வளாகத்தில் தொடங்கினோம். இப்போது சென்னை, ஈரோடு, கொல்கத்தா என மொத்தம் 7 கிளைகள் இருக்கின்றன.

உடல்நலன் முக்கியம்

நாங்கள் காபி ஷாப் ஆரம்பிக்கும் போதே அது மேற்கத்திய காபி ஷாப் போல இருக்கக் கூடாது என்பதில் தீர்க்கமாக இருந்தோம். அதற்கேற்பவே, சுக்கு காப்பி, பனங்கற்கண்டு பால், கிரீன் டீ என உடல்நலத்திற்குச் சிறந்த பானங்களைத் தேர்வு செய்தோம்.

எங்களது அவுட்லெட்டுகள் கல்லூரிகள், கார்ப்பரேட் நிறுவனங்கள், ஐ.டி. கம்பெனிகளில் இருக்கின்றன. இளைஞர்கள் இந்த ஹெல்த் டிரிங்கை மிகவும் ரசிக்கின்றனர். இன்னொரு முக்கிய விஷயம், மற்ற டீ ஸ்டால்களைப் போல் எங்கள் காபி குடிலில் நாங்கள் புகையிலைப் பொருட்களை அனுமதிப்பதில்லை என்றார் ‘கான்செப்டோ டெலிகசிஸ்’ இயக்குநர் ஜெயராமன்.

இதேபோல், குறைந்த விலையில் சத்தான உணவு என்ன வழங்கலாம் என்று யோசித்தபோது விளைந்ததே ‘எக்ஸ்குளூசிவ்’ கான்செப்ட். முட்டையை வைத்துக்கொண்டு 30-க்கும் மேலான வெரைட்டி தருகிறோம்.

ஒவ்வொரு சின்ன ரெஃப்ரஷ்மன்ட்டும் ரியல் ரெஃப்ரஷ்மன்ட்டாக இருக்க வேண்டும் என்பதே எங்கள் விருப்பம். வாழ்க்கையில் இப்படிப்பட்ட சின்ன சின்ன சுவாரஸ்யங்கள் வேண்டும். அதை நாங்கள் எங்களுக்குச் சாதகமான தொழிலாக மாற்றிக்கொண்டோம்.

காபி குடில் நல்ல வரவேற்பு பெற்று 100 கிளைகளாவது தொடங்க வேண்டும். நிறைய தொழில் முனைவோர் உருவாக வேண்டும். இதுவே எங்கள் இலக்கு’’, என்கிறார்கள். அவர்கள் பேச்சில் டிகிரி காபிக்கு இணையான திடமும், சுவையும் இருந்தன.

Message For the Day…” Who is a True Devotee … ” ?

A devotee without the faculty of observation and discrimination fails to ascertain what is real and unreal. They cause pain to others, though they have no intention of troubling others, as they lack the capability of understanding. Such people and many others preach about devotion beyond attributes. Anyone who does not have the quality of being helpful to others, and is devoid of compassion and pity is said to be possessing demonic devotion. Some other people lose the relationships with people who are near to them, thinking that the object that is dear to them is far away. Such devotees can be called as practicing devotion with hatred. Stay away from all of these practices. The true aspirant is the one, who has love, compassion and concern for all, including those who are less privileged than themselves. They work with them and help them in a way in accordance to the status. Love is primordial in devotion.

Sathya Sai Baba

Image of the Day… Great Venus and Jupiter Conjunction…

Venus and Jupiter are the brightest planets! Look east before dawn … closest planet-planet conjunction of 2014 August 18. Dazzling near moon August 22 and 23.

Venus and Jupiter as captured by EarthSky Facebook friend Stefano De Rosa on Isola d'Elba in Italy.

View larger. | Venus and Jupiter as captured by EarthSky Facebook friend Stefano De Rosa on Isola d’Elba in Italy.

The sky’s two brightest planets – Venus and Jupiter – staged 2014′s closest planet-planet conjunction before dawn on August 18. Central Europe had the best view of these two bright worlds less than a moon diameter apart, but they have beautiful from around the world for many days … and will stay beautiful for many days more. Don’t miss the planets onAugust 22 and August 23, when the waning crescent moon will be nearby.

Abhinav Singhai in Haryana, India caught the planets at their closest on August 18.  Thank you, Abhinav.

Abhinav Singhai in Haryana, India caught the planets at their closest on August 18.

Source::::Earth sky news

Natarajan

The Amazing Success Story of Kudumbashree, Kerala….!!!


Image: The Kudumbashree initiative has turned around the lives of lakhs of women in Kerala like Bindu, pictured above, who once could not afford even one meal a day.

Kudumbashree, the largest network of women in India, is a revolution worth copying wherever there are women in need of help.

Shobha Warrier/Rediff.com travelled to Thrissur, Kerala, to encounter the amazing success story of women who once lived in dire straits, but who now own homes, cars and make enough money to change their lives forever. All thanks to Kudumbashree.

Bindu’s story is as inspiring as it is astounding.

Bindu lives in Mullassery, a village near Thrissur.

There was a time in her life when she could not afford even a single meal a day. Today she can stock up rice for a year!

She didn’t own an inch of land. Today, she owns 22 acres of land!

She didn’t have a home of her own. Today, she has a two storey home!

She used to walk to the farm when she started, but today, she has bought herself a car and a scooter, and she uses the scooter to travel to her farm.

Because of poverty, she couldn’t study beyond Class 7, but today, her son is an engineering student studying computer science.

Bindu belonged to a large family of five brothers and three sisters. While her father toiled hard as a landless labourer, her mother sold tea. But the money they brought home was so little that the family didn’t even have one proper meal on most days.

“Though I was the 6th child, I knew how tough it was for my mother to give us at least one meal a day,” she recalls.

As her parents could not afford to send all eight of their children to school, she had to stop her schooling despite being a good student who had dreams of studying further. It was young Bindu’s duty to do the housework when her parents and elder brothers went outside to work.

Life went on thus until she was married off to Sathyan, who lived nearby, at the age of 18.

“From one poor house to another, that was my journey. With my husband making just Rs 800 a month polishing diamonds, two children, and his family on top of that to take care of, do I even need to tell you how difficult the days were? With both my children suffering from epilepsy, most of my days were spent visiting the hospital.”

In 1998, Kudumbashree started a group in her area, but Bindu could hardly find the ten rupees a week she needed in order to join the group.

“All of us were in such dire straits financially that it was not just me, but the other women too found it difficult to save ten rupees. If we didn’t pay the money for two weeks in a row, we faced eviction from the group. Somehow, I managed to continue with the group.”

Bindu and her friends used to listen to the block officers talk about starting farming but they never thought they would be able to do it.

“It was by accident that we became farmers. In 2000, we had gone to a studio to take a photo of ourselves together. The studio owner told us that he had some land that he wished to lease out for farming. He wanted us to tell some of our Kudumbashree members. We came home with the thought running through our minds. After a lot of deliberation, we decided to try our hand at collective farming.”

It was a major decision for Bindu and her friends — Sheeba, Sreeja and Mallika.

They decided to join hands and lease 8 acres of land that was overgrown with weeds.

The idea was to cultivate paddy.

Though they bought seeds at a discounted price from Krishi Bhavan, they had to take a loan of Rs 10,000 each from Kudumbashree’s informal bank, Rs 25,000 from its revolving fund, and some more from a normal bank.

There was no machinery to cut the weeds; so they used their sickles. When other workers went to their farms at 8 am, they started as early as 6 am.

Leaving their small children at home, these four women worked from morning till evening and yet couldn’t clear the land of weeds. So, they had to employ people. Again, the entire paddy cultivation was done by hand.

As they had no previous experience in farming, they had to take advice and help from others at every step. But they learnt well and fast.

Altogether, they spent Rs 200,000 on their first effort.

Once the harvest was ready, what they did first was not to sell the rice to make a profit. None of them had forgotten the days when they could not afford even a meal a day. All four of them decided to store some rice at home to last the entire year.

They sold the rice that remained, and used it to clear all the debts.

Bindu won the Best Farmer award from the Grama Panchayat that year!

After that, we didn’t feel like coming out of the paddy field,” says Bindu. “The result was beyond our wildest dreams. We started dreaming of owning our own land, and somehow we felt that was achievable.”

Full of confidence, they were ready for a bigger attempt next year; this time they leased 15 acres of land.

Again, they made a good profit from the produce.

Every year, they started making more than a lakh (Rs 100,000) of rupees in profit. Last year, they made Rs 20 lakh (Rs 2 million) from paddy cultivation, with a profit of Rs 150,000 for each of them.

In between, they also cultivated vegetables on another plot, with Krishi Bhavan helping them once again with seeds and fertilisers. Once the vegetables were harvested, they hired a vehicle, drove the veggies to the market, and sold them at a profit of Rs 4,000.

In 2002, Bindu bought her first piece of land — 1 acre for Rs 22,000. The next year, all three of them together bought another 3 acres of land. Now that they turn over profits in lakhs of rupees, they cultivate paddy on 30 acres of leased land.

With the agricultural department promoting mechanised cultivation, this year, they had a bumper crop.

With the profit she made last year, Bindu bought herself a scooter, and her family a car.

There has never been any problems between the friends; no clashes either on money or ego.

The reason, they say, is this” “We make it a point to write down each and every paisa spent and saved. We also minute every visit and discussion we have. After the sales, all the four of us sit down to calculate how much we spent and how much profit we made. Not a single paisa is unaccounted for. That is how we have worked together for 14 years.”

When Bindu was made chairperson of her local Kudumbashree unit, she decided to complete her schooling, and passed the Class 10 exam with flying colours.

“I am not sure whether I should do it at this advanced age, but I want to get through my Plus 2 exams too!” she says.

Bindu also learnt to drive the tiller machine and also climb coconut trees.

The biggest change in the lives of these four women is the freedom they enjoy.

“There was a time when we were shouted at if we were a bit late coming back home. With the kind of success we have achieved, nobody questions us any more. Our lives have changed beyond all recognition. We never ever thought that we would have three proper meals to eat, a two storey house, a car, a motorbike, a scooter, jewellery, and above all, our children studying to become engineers.”

“But there is no life without farming for us. This is our livelihood, our life. We can only thank Kudumbashree for this miraculous transformation,” they say.

As the chairperson of 164 NHGs of Kudumbashree at the Panchayat level, Bindu goes out on her scooter to meet other women and motivate them to come out of their homes and be independent!
“That is one motto of mine; inspire more women,” she says.

Bindu’s is just one success story; there are thousands of Bindus out there in Kerala now; all because of an idea called Kudumbashree.

Source:::: Shobha Warrier  in /Rediff.com  

Related News: Kudumbashree , Bindu , Krishi Bhavan , Kerala

Natarajan

 

Image of the Day…View From ISS…

Awesomeness from the International Space Station

What would it be like to view the Earth and the sky from the vantage point of the International Space Station? These three photos from ISS tell the tale.

First, the Plough or Big Dipper as seen from the International Space Station. A much clear view as from space, because there's no atmospheric blurring.

First, the Plough or Big Dipper as seen from the International Space Station. You’d get a much clearer view from space, because there’s no atmospheric blurring.

Second, the southern half of Orion the Hunter with the three belt blue supergiant stars Alnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka visible in the Earth's atmosphere. The blue supergiants Saiph and Rigel.  Below the constellation of Lepus the Hare. To the lower left, the constellation of Canis Major, the Great Dog, with the bight stars, Sirius (the brightest object and one of the closest outside of our solar system), powerful blue giant Mirzam, blue supergiant, Adhara (one of the most powerful stars visible from Earth), the huge immensely powerful yellow supergiant Wezen (another one of the most powerful stars visible from Earth) and the blue supergiant Aludra.

Second, you could see stars ascending above the wide curve of the whole Earth. In this case, refraction due to Earth’s thin shell of atmosphere would often be an added bonus. Here is the southern half of Orion the Hunter with the three belt blue supergiant stars Alnitak, Alnilam and Mintaka visible in the Earth’s atmosphere. The blue supergiants Saiph and Rigel. Below the constellation of Lepus the Hare. To the lower left, the constellation of Canis Major, the Great Dog, with the bight stars, Sirius (the brightest object and one of the closest outside of our solar system), powerful blue giant Mirzam, blue supergiant, Adhara (one of the most powerful stars visible from Earth), the huge immensely powerful yellow supergiant Wezen (another one of the most powerful stars visible from Earth) and the blue supergiant Aludra

Finally, for all of you drowned out by the moon at the 2014 Perseid meteoer shower, an August 13, 20111 view of a Persied meteor below the ISS. The ISS was approximately five times higher above sea level than the Perseid. The dying orange giant star Arcturus is visible through the atmosphere on the Earth's limb (edge), and the rest of the constellation of Bootes the Herdsman, along with Corona Borealis the Northern Crown and Serpens Caput the Serpent's Head, are also visible to the left.

Third, you could see meteors from above. For all of you drowned out by the moon at the 2014 Perseid meteor shower, here is an August 17, 2011 view of a Perseid below the ISS. The ISS was approximately five times higher above sea level than the meteor. The dying orange giant star Arcturus is visible through the atmosphere on the Earth’s limb (edge), and the rest of the constellation of Bootes the Herdsman, along with Corona Borealis the Northern Crown and Serpens Caput the Serpent’s Head, are also visible to the left.

Bottom line: What would it be like to view the Earth and the sky from the vantage point of the International Space Station? These three photos from ISS tell the tale.

Source::::Earth skynews

Natarajan

Made in India ?….

Home-grown excellence in education remains elusive
We don’t need no education.

— Pink Floyd

On reading recently that the 2014 Pritzker Prize, considered the equivalent of the Nobel Prize, in architecture, was awarded to Japanese architect Shigeru Ban, my first thought was: why doesn’t an Indian win such prizes? The Pritzker Prize honours a living architect for excellence in architecture, ‘irrespective of nationality, creed, race, or ideology’. The list of winners shows that 23 of the 35 winners have been from developed and advanced countries. However, in the last 35 years of the prize, there was not a single person from South Asia, let alone India, who was nominated.

Critics may argue that the Pritzker Prize, like others for excellence in different fields, is a Western-dominated award. However, there have been winners from Brazil, China and Mexico. What may be a valid claim is that there is a greater chance for creativity and individuality to shine through in the education system in, for example, the United States, rather than India. As a product of the Indian educational system, I can say that studying logarithms in middle school and calculus in high school has scarred my life. What, may I ask, is the point of poring over indecipherable figures in translucent sheets? Ruining the eyesight? Yes. Learning life-enhancing skills? Probably not.

Some exceptions, of course, prove the rule. Take the example of Subhash Khot, the Indian-American theoretical computer scientist who last week won the International Mathematical Union’s Rolf Nevanlinna Prize. He studied in a humble school in Ichalkaranji in Maharashtra, doing his middle school and high school years there, then topped the JEE to gain admission to IIT Powai before leaving for the United States. The winner of the IMU’s Fields Medal, Manjul Bhargava, also has Indian origins, but was not educated in India.

India-born scholars winning top prizes in mathematics is indeed great news. However, even this re-emphasises the point. Although their educational foundation might have been laid in India, they are, in essence, Western-backed scholars who were exceptional but whose talent was nurtured to the fullest in the West and not in their home country. They might be ‘India-born’, but are not or ‘India-nurtured’ success stories.

The Indian educational system, from kindergarten to university, focusses on rote learning. Although the Central Board of Secondary Education has come up with a number of measures to alleviate the anxiety of students, this is surely not the case with the different Board systems followed by the different States. For example, in Tamil Nadu, there are virtually no application-oriented questions in the State Board examination, a life-altering event for many students that determines which college they would get into. All questions, barring the multiple-choice questions for just 25 marks out of 200, in the Mathematics paper are from the prescribed text BOOK: with no numbers changed, no names altered. It is actually possible to gain grace marks if a math problem is asked outside of the textbook or if the numbers are changed in the problem: it is conveniently considered as ‘out of syllabus’!

This is an example of how memory power and handwriting skills are the only pre-requisites for gaining good scores and getting into a good college. However, once a student goes through the motions of getting a university degree, which again is only slightly different from the school examinations, in that you have to mug up and throw up twice a year as opposed to once a year, the student is then thrown into the ‘real’ world.

And this is where the Indian system decides to abandon him or her and perform the disappearing act. The new GRADUATE, with consistently high scores in school and university, is unable to find a job. Even if he or she does, the candidate will find it difficult to come up with solutions to real-world problems at work or home, or think out of the box. After all, how do you expect a person to think out of the box after the ‘education’ that he or she has received precisely was about stuffing him or her into a box every day? This explains why India churns out engineers as China churns out plastic souvenirs. Most Indian graduates in the job market are unemployable; whether they really wanted to be what they studied for is a different story. They do not have the requisite communication skills to express their ideas and they have not been trained to think (the upside is that they have an amazing memory).

So, back to the question: will an Indian these days ever receive the Pritzker Prize (or any prize that recognised creativity and innovation, for that matter)? And when I mean ‘Indian’, I mean an Indian who lives and bases his or her work in India, not the countless Indian-origin American, British and Australian citizens whose achievements we are quick to borrow without permission and brand them ‘Indian’ success stories. The Indian diaspora might have affinity toward their motherland, but we Indians have no right to brag about their achievements. It was probably because of a lack of a motivational and nurturing environment, and a society that places one’s caste before one’s capability, that the Indian diaspora became a diaspora, in the first place.

So well, here’s my answer: I really do not think the Indian educational system is going to change much. A possible solution is to abolish all State Boards and put in place an autonomous Indian educational board that provides uniform, inspired education cutting across different regions. Minor changes could be made to accommodate State-specific preferences, for example, in languages. But as long as we follow a system that stifles creative thinking and individuality, the Pritzker Prize, and all other prizes for that matter, will be a distant dream for the desi Indian.

There is a paradox in the way we treat talent in India: on the one hand, parents rarely allow their children to pursue research careers in pure sciences, and the educational system is structured to hone memory, not talent. On the other hand, we are quick to ‘claim’ Indian talent that has shined outside the country as our own achievement.

There have also been a handful of other celebrated global-level achievers over the decades, but except in the case of an innate genius such as Srinivasa Ramanujam, how many of them were shaped and moulded by the educational system prevalent in India?

div.srik@gmail.com  

Source:::: Divya Srikant in The Hindu

Natarajan

These Kids Teach us the Meaning of our National Anthem …

 

 

These Adorable Kids Will Teach You the Meaning of Our National Anthem

Courtesy: YouTube

All Indian students grow up singing the national anthem in school. Some sing it at the beginning of their classes, others during morning assemblies or on special occasions. Even those who don’t get a chance to go to school, hear it on national and local media.

Yet, a huge percentage of Indians don’t know the meaning of our national anthem. According to The Akanksha Foundation, 9 out of 10 people in our country fall in this category. India is, of course, a vast and diverse country of many regional languages and dialects so many citizens would likely not understand the words to Jana Gana Mana, written by Rabindranath in Sanskrit-Bengali, even as they sing.

No worries though, for a group of children have taken it upon themselves to give everyone a line-by-line explanation of the anthem. As long as you read English.

Watch and spread the knowledge:

Source:::: Ndtv.com and You Tube

Natarajan

வாட்ஸ் ஆப் வசீகரிப்பால் தூக்கம் தொலைக்கும் இளம் தலைமுறையினர்

செல்போனில் ‘வாட்ஸ் ஆப்’ செயலியைப் பயன்படுத்தி தகவல்களை பரிமாறிக்கொள்ளும் போக்கு அண்மைக்காலங்களில் பல மடங்கு அதிகரித்துள்ளது. குறிப்பாக இரவு நேரங்களில் இளம் வயதினர் வாட்ஸ்-ஆப்-ஐ பயன்படுத்துவது அதிகரித்துள்ளது. இதனால், நூல்களைப் படிக்கும் வழக்கம் அவர்களிடையே குறைந்து வருகிறது.

காலை நேரங்களில் படிப்பு, வேலை என்று இருக்கும் இளைஞர்கள் இரவு நேரங்களில்தான் தங்களது நண்பர்களுடன் தொடர்பு கொள் கின்றனர்.

இன்டர்நெட் வசதி கொண்ட ஸ்மார்ட் போன் இருந்தால், வாட்ஸ் ஆப், வைபர், ஹைக் போன்ற குறுஞ்செய்தி ஆப்-களை (செயலி) சுலபமாக பயன்படுத்த முடியும்.

இந்த ஆப்-களை கைபேசிகளில் பதிவிறக்கம் செய்து கொண்டால், அதன் மூலம் உலகின் எந்த மூலையில் இருப்பவரோடும் இலவசமாக தகவல்களைப் பரிமாறலாம், பேசவும் செய்யலாம். குறுஞ்செய்திகளைத் தவிர புகைப்படங்கள், ஆடியோ, வீடியோ அனுப்பிக் கொள்ளலாம்.

இதனால் செல்போன்களில் எஸ்எம்எஸ் அனுப்பும் வழக்கம் கூட தற்போது பெரிதும் குறைந்துவிட்டது.

பொறியியலில் முதுகலை படிக்கும் கண்ணன் வாட்ஸ் ஆப் குறித்து கூறும்போது, “நாங்கள் வகுப்புகளை முடித்து, நண்பர்களோடு பேசிக்கொள்ள இரவில்தான் நேரம் கிடைக்கிறது.

விடுதியில் பெரும்பாலானோர் வாட்ஸ் ஆப் பயன்படுத்து வதால், அதைப் பயன்படுத்த பெரிதும் எதிர்ப்பு இருப்பதில்லை” என்றார்.

தனியார் மென்பொருள் நிறுவனத்தில் வேலை செய்யும் ப்ரவீணா, “நான் திருச்சியில் படித்து தற்போது பெங்களூரில் வேலை செய்கிறேன். எனது பள்ளி கல்லூரி நண்பர்களுக்காக வாட்ஸ் ஆப் குரூப் வைத்துள்ளோம். அந்த குரூப் ஆரம்பித்த பிறகுதான் நான் அவர்களுடன் தொடர்பில் இருக்க முடிகிறது.

சில நண்பர்கள் வெளி நாடுகளில் இருக்கிறார்கள். எனவே, அனைவரும் ஒன்றாக சேட்டிங் செய்யக் கூடிய நேரம் இரவுதான். ஆனால், என்னால் வாட்ஸ் ஆப் இல்லாமலும் இருக்க முடியும்” என்றார்.

ஆங்கிலத்தில் இளங்கலை படிக்கும் மரியா கூறுகையில், “வாட்ஸ் ஆப் குரூப்-ல் நடந்த விவாதங்களைப் பற்றி, சுவாரஸ்யமான ஸ்டேடஸ் பற்றி தினமும் வகுப்பில் பேசிக் கொள்வோம். எனது கைபேசியை பார்க்கும்போது அதில் குறுஞ்செய்தி எதுவும் வரவில்லை என்றால் சற்று கவலையாக இருக்கும்” என்றார்.

இழப்புகள் அதிகம்: மருத்துவர் கருத்து

இது குறித்து மன நல மருத்துவர் ராமானுஜம் கூறியதாவது:

ஒருவர் தமது முக்கிய பணிகளுக்கும் உறவுகளுக்கும் நேரம் ஒதுக்காமல், ஒரு செயல் அல்லது பொருளுக்கு நேரம் ஒதுக்கினால் அவர் அதற்கு அடிமையாகியுள்ளார் என்று பொருள். அதற்கு செலவழிக்கும் நேரம் கொஞ்சம் கொஞ்சமாக அதிகரித்துக் கொண்டே வரும். அந்த பழக்கத்தால் தமக்கு, இழப்புகள் ஏற்படுகின்றன என்று தெரிந்தும் அது தொடரும். இந்திய இளைஞர்களுள் 5 முதல் 10 சதவீதம் பேர் இன்டர்நெட் பயன்பாட்டுக்கு அடிமையாகி உள்ளனர். தங்கள் பிள்ளைகள் பேஸ்புக்கிலும், இன்டர்நெட்டிலுமே அதிக கவனம் செலுத்துகின்றனர் என பல பெற்றோர் புகார் கூறுகின்றனர். வாட்ஸ் ஆப்-ஐ ஒரு தொடர்பு சாதனமாக மட்டுமே கருத வேண்டும். நண்பர்களோடு நேரில் பேசுவது, நல்ல புத்தகங்களை படிப்பது, உடற்பயிற்சி செய்வது ஆகியவற்றை இளைஞர்கள் வழக்கமாக கொள்ள வேண்டும் என்றார்.

Keywords: வாட்ஸ் ஆப், தூக்கம் தொலைக்கும், இளம் தலைமுறையினர், மருத்துவர் கருத்து
Topics: தமிழகம்|

Source::::வி.சாரதா in The Hindu…Tamil
Natarajan

Innocence of This Kid will make you Smile and Smile !!!

Viral: Little Boy Goes to Pick Up Pizza, Wins the Internet Instead

Courtesy: Imgur

Kids can do the simplest of things and win your heart. Here’s one such kid whose innocence will make you smile from ear to ear.

A Reddit user posted the image above. He explained how a 6-year-old went to buy pizza at a Domino’s outlet where his sister works. When it was time to pay for the food, the little boy tried to use his father’s credit card. As you can see, the kid in his innocence signed the word ‘dad’ on the receipt.

Jewel Cowart, the cashier at the pizza joint was completely overwhelmed with the boys act. She clicked a picture of the receipt and showed it to her brother who in turn posted it online. Not surprisingly, the picture and its adorableness went viral.

“He simply thought he was signing for his father,” Cowart told a website.

And if you’re wondering whether the kid’s parents knew about this, Cowart mentions that the child was in fact accompanied by his father.

This is a cuteness overload, we say

Source::::Ndtv.com

Natarajan

“Power of X”….To Multiply Great Ideas…

 

 

 

Published on Apr 15, 2012

Dancers + camera + kaleidoscope = this infinitely gorgeous short video. (Watch in 1080p fullscreen if you can.) It’s made for TEDxSummit, an unprecedented gathering of TEDx organizers from around the world– and the video celebrates “the power of x” to multiply great ideas.
Learn more about TEDxSummit: http://tedxsummit.ted.com

 

Source::::You Tube

Natarajan