” Inflight Fight over Reclining Seats …” Is there a Solution ?

Another week, another flight divertedbecause passengers were fighting over a reclining seat.

It’s the great airborne travel question of our age: To recline, or not to recline?

Of course, the core of the problem is the coach airline seat itself. While there’s been, it seems, near constant innovation for first- and business-class seats, the stalwart coach seat has suffered with the same design since the 1960s, according to AirGo Design, a Singapore-based startup that wants to reinvent the genre.

“AirGo is the only aircraft seat in the world which is designed based on actual 3D scanning data of human body and therefore, is ergonomically superior,” the company’s co-founder and Chief Technology Officer, Alireza Yaghoubi, recently told BizDaily in a Q&A. (The company was founded in 2013).

As you can see from this screenshot of AirGo’s Orion seating system, reclining isn’t an issue: The seat behind and the seat in front are designed to prevent one passenger’s actions from interfering with another passenger’s space.

AirGo-Recline-Screenshot

Screenshot via AirGo Design

Plus, the entertainment screen pulls down from above, so a repositioned front seat doesn’t affect your viewing experience in the same way it does with seatback screens.

AirGo-Screens-Screenshot

Screenshot via AirGo Design

Christopher Elliott of USA Today interviewed Yaghoubi earlier this year for a story about seating issues and the airlines. Elliott noted Yaghoubi’s view that“technology exists to offer everyone on the plane ample legroom and space to move in coach class. But it would require a significant INVESTMENT, and…airlines prefer to sink that money into first-class passengers, who are deemed more valuable.”

Consequently, the first-class seat becomes progressively more sophisticated, while the coach seat – at least of late – encourages passenger conflict, inspires controversial anti-reclining gadgets, and is probably starting to annoy pilots as they worry about diverted landings to hand over combative economy travelers to the authorities.

SOURCE:::::: BUSINESSINSIDER.IN

Natarajan

Image of the Day…World”s Largest Single-Aperture Telescope…

Milky Way over Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico

Arecibo Observatory’s 1,000-foot (305-meter) radio telescope is the world’s largest single-aperture telescope.

Milky Way over Arecibo, by Ferdinand Arroyo.

Be sure to click into the larger view of this photo. It’s the extensive cloud of stars at the center of our Milky Way galaxy, over Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico. We see this Milky Way star cloud because, in this direction, we’re looking toward the galaxy’s center. Ferdinand Arroyo, from Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe (Astronomical Society of the Caribbean) took this beautiful photo using a Nikon D90 with a Sigma 10mm lens. 30 secs exposure at ISO 1600, F/4.

Thank you, Ferdinand and Sociedad de Astronomía del Caribe!

By the way, in case you are wondering, here’s what the observatory looks like in daylight.

Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico, via Wikimedia Commons.

Joke of the Day…” Computer Problem Fixing Report ” !!!

Computer Problem Report Form

1. Describe your problem:

__________________________________________

2. Now, describe the problem accurately:

__________________________________________

3. Speculate wildly about the cause of the problem:

__________________________________________

__________________________________________

4. Problem Severity:

A. Minor__

B. Minor__

C. Minor__

D. Trivial__

5. Nature of the problem:

A. Locked Up__

B. Frozen__

C. Hung__

D. Shot__

6. Is your computer plugged in?

Yes__ No__

7. Is it turned on?

Yes__ No__

8. Have you tried to fix it yourself?

Yes__ No__

9. Have you made it worse?

Yes__

10. Have you read the manual?

Yes__ No__

11. Are you sure you’ve read the manual?

Yes__ No__

12. Are you absolutely certain you’ve read the manual?

No__

13. Do you think you understood it?

Yes__ No__

14. If `Yes’ then why can’t you fix the problem yourself? __________________________________________

15. How tall are you? Are you above this line?

__________________________________________

16. What were you doing with your computer at the time the problem occurred?

__________________________________________

17. If “nothing” explain why you were logged in.

__________________________________________

18. Are you sure you aren’t imagining the problem?

Yes__ No__

19. How does this problem make you feel?

__________________________________________

20. Tell me about your childhood.

__________________________________________

21. Do you have any independent witnesses of the problem?

Yes__ No__

22. Can’t you do something else, instead of bothering me?

Yes__

Thank you for taking the time to fill out our Computer Problems Form. Please allow 1-week response time so that the problem will resolve its self or you will reboot your computer, most likely resolving the issue.

Source::::Joke a Day.com

Natarajan

An App. Now for Deleting the Sent Message …!!!

If you have erroneously sent a message to your dad and wish that it should not be seen, here comes a unique app that will help you delete that instantly.

App That Can Delete Message Even After it is Sent

 

“Invisible Text” app works by allowing the user to delete a sent message as long as it has not already been opened, eWeek reported.

Users can send videos, texts, voice messages and picture messages and also set a timer for a message to self-destruct if it is not read after the stated amount of time.

The app, available on Android, iOS and BlackBerry devices, uses technology that combines message encryption with device pairing.

“To date, no other solution can ensure secure data transmission between two devices, including a smartphone, smart TV, computer, tablet, radio or webcam,” the company said in a statement.

The recipient of the text you want to delete must also have “Invisible Text” app on his phone.

Source::::Ndtv.com

Natarajan

Anand Shimpi Heading towards Apple ?….

A day after announcing his retirement from writing, it’s come to light that veteran journalist Anand Shimpi will soon be joining Apple. The move, which was first reported by Re/codeearlier today, was confirmed by the company.

Shimpi spent 17 years building the site AnandTech, focusing mostly on reviews of hardware and along the way providing detailed info on products from Apple and other consumer electronics manufacturers. But after so many years covering those products, he’ll now be going inside Apple to work for the company.

We’re not sure what Shimpi will be doing for Apple, but based on his deep knowledge of its products he’ll probably be working in some sort of strategy role. While he moves on, AnandTech will continue to publish, with the site being run by new editor-in-chief Ryan Smith.

Image of the Day….Pioneer 11 Swept Past Sun On This Date in 1979 !!!

September 1, 1979. On this date, NASA’s Pioneer 11 came within 13,000 miles (21,000 kilometers) of Saturn, making it the first spacecraft ever to sweep closely past that place. The spacecraft found a new ring for Saturn – now called the “F” ring – and also a new moon, Epimetheus. There were two Pioneer spacecraft. They were used to investigate Saturn’s rings and determine if a trajectory through the rings was safe for the upcoming Voyager visits. They paved the way for the even-more-sophisticated Voyager spacecraft, which were launched in 1977.

Image credit:  NASA/Ames

Scientists said that Pioneer 11 also enabled them to get a sense of Saturn’s internal composition. It had long been realized that Saturn is not very dense; if you could find an ocean large enough hold it, it would float on water. Pioneer 11 showed Saturn likely has a relatively small core for an outer gas giant world – only 10 times Earth’s mass – and that the planet is mostly liquid hydrogen.

Pioneer 11 is still sailing away from Earth, even though its transmissions died several years ago. As far as scientists know, it’s off towards the center of our Milky Way galaxy, that is, generally in the direction of our constellation Sagittarius.

Botton line: On September 1, 1979, Pioneer 11 came closest to Saturn.

Source::::: Earth sky news

Natarajan

Anand Shimpy … One of the Most Influential Tech. Industry Experts…

Anand Shimpi is one of the most influential tech industry figures you’ve never heard of.

ANAND SHIMPI

From his start as a teenager building PCs for students and faculty at a college in his hometown of Raleigh, North Carolina, he’s become one of the semiconductor industry’s most closely watched reviewers. His website, AnandTech.com, is all about product performance, plain and simple.

Shimpi measures exactly how fast the latest Intel processor really is, how quickly that graphics chip will render the latest video game, how long that laptop battery will last.

At age 30, Shimpi is courted by technology executives and followed by Wall Street analysts keen to hear his well-informed product views. He briefs Intel executives, dines with Asian PC executives and commands a loyal following of tech enthusiasts, with AnandTech.com drawing 12 million unique visitors per month.

His workbench at his home in Raleigh is cluttered with high-end storage drives, laptops and recently released tablets, one of them playing a Harry Potter movie in an endless loop. A storage room is filled with hundreds of other products shipped to him over the years, and he says UPS drops more gear off almost every day.

“All of this is used in one form or another,” Shimpi says, gesturing toward the stacks of equipment.

Poor marks in one of his so-called benchmark reviews, focusing strictly on performance data, can mean trouble for a new product.

And because Shimpi amasses performance data on a wide range of chips and other products, he sometimes has more insight in certain areas than companies’ own design engineers, said Alex Mei, chief marketing officer for enterprise storage vendor OCZ Technology.

“His criticism carries more weight,” said Mei. “He really has a bead on what his readers are looking for.”

Indeed, OCZ altered the design of a solid-state drive a couple years ago to take into account Shimpi’s suggestions about how customers would likely use the product.

AnandTech is not alone in the benchmark review business; sites including The Tech Report and Tom’s Hardware have a similar obsession with performance data, though smaller followings.

But many chip executives, Wall Street investors and technically minded consumers see Shimpi’s meticulously collected test results as the most authoritative and highly trustable.

Dozens of widely read blogs write more subjective – and often more easily digestible – reviews of laptops, phones and tablets based to a large degree on how much the reviewer likes the product. Increasingly, those reviewers conduct limited tests of their own, using “off the shelf” benchmark tools.

Still others make mention of Shimpi’s data, painstakingly collected using proprietary tests he has developed over the years.

“We have known Anand for a long time,” Jonney Shih, chairman of the big Taiwanese computer-maker Asus, told Reuters by email. “We definitely share a passion for technology and we respect his in-depth knowledge and the thorough testing that he does.”

HOBBYISTS GO PRO

Today, reviewers are turning to benchmark tests to evaluate the chips, touch screens and batteries in the latest tablets and smarpthones, a fast-growing market in which Apple, Samsung, Intel, Qualcomm and others are competing fiercely.

But the niche business made its mark during the personal computer boom of the 1990s, when chipmakers fought for bragging rights about everything from clock speeds to latency.

Developing scientific ways to verify manufacturers’ claims and compare the performance of motherboards, processors and other components became a hobby among a small group of tech enthusiasts.

Data was compiled in reviews and posted on websites where they were read by legions of other technophiles, who in turn have become an important target for tech industry marketers.

“They’re the decision makers, influencers, guys who work in IT jobs during the day and play games at night, that people go to for advice when they have questions about technology,” Chris Angelini, who started reviewing PC parts while at college and is now editor of Tom’s Hardware, said of his readers.

As they gained attention in the industry, the benchmark reviewers grew more sophisticated – and attracted yet more attention from industry watchers.

Stock analysts, for one, have come to rely on the data when projecting product sales.

“We don’t have tools to go out and measure these things ourselves, so we depend on independent third parties to take the devices and tell us things like what does the performance look like and how does it stack up relative to the competition,” said Shawn Webster, a chip analyst at Macquarie.

This year, stock analysts have cited AnandTech measurements in more than 70 reports about Intel, Nvidia and other chipmakers.

With AnandTech attracting a large, specialized audience of cutting edge techies, it has plenty of advertising. The website has more than a dozen reviewers and editors, and has done well enough to make Shimpi a wealthy man.

The rise of smartphones and tablets has presented some new challenges to performance testers, but those devices have also created demand for more reviews. Shimpi believes he can continue to prosper by sticking to a simple mantra.

“What are they not telling me?” he regularly asks, referring to the companies whose devices he tests.

HARRY POTTER

Shimpi recently demonstrated how he works, running scripted videogame sequences on a MacBook Air to test the performance of its graphics chip. That’s just one example of several tests he runs on each device he reviews. The Harry Potter movie playing over and over on a Google Nexus 7 tablet was part of a test to document its battery life.

Shimpi carries out measurements several times for each device, with the results feeding spreadsheets with thousands of data points. It’s a never-ending process as Shimpi adds new products to his database and runs new benchmarks on older ones.

Chip executives have embraced the most professional of the benchmark reviewers and ship them samples of their new products, often ahead of their release. In return, they get objective feedback.

“We literally go into every review site in the world we can find, and our teams read the reviews, and they decide internally whether it was a good review for us or a good review for the competition,” Jen-Hsun Huang, chief executive of chipmaker Nvidia, told investors at a conference in May.

To make sure his reviews are ready in time for product launches, Shimpi pulls all-nighters and lays out his testing gear in hotel rooms during his frequent travels.

“If you put in an honest seven days of work – I’m not saying eight hours a day or less, I’m saying if you don’t sleep for a couple of nights, and that’s all you live and breath and do – I think it’s possible to deliver a good review within that seven-day period,” Shimpi said.

“Anything less and you start making sacrifices.”

Evaluating PC processors is a matter of connecting them to one of the motherboards on Shimpi’s table and running standard tests established over a decade ago. Testing the components in a mobile device like an iPad is trickier because it cannot easily be opened up and tinkered with.

To adapt, reviewers are resorting to some decidedly low-tech tools like stopwatches and cameras to measure the quality of tablet displays, how quickly web pages load, and battery life.

EARLY START

Soon after his start in high school building PCs for students and faculty at Saint Augustine’s College in Raleigh, where his father taught computer science, Shimpi created a website and started writing about components. He quickly gained a following with a rapidly growing niche of PC enthusiasts.

“I would build the PC for free and then say I want to review this stuff before I give you your computer,” Shimpi said. “As I got popular, a couple of resellers wanted to put ads on my site. So I gave them ad spots in return for more hardware to review.”

As the website grew, Shimpi started getting invitations to visit with companies and attend trade shows. Self-conscious about his age, he wore suits to meetings.

AnandTech soon made the teenager financially independent. He went on to study computer engineering at North Carolina State University while continuing to build his business.

Today he stills wears a suit to meetings and trade shows – sometimes accompanied by sneakers. He deliberately maintains a distance between his personal life and the tech world, even if that means frequent, long flights to Silicon Valley to visit chip execs.

His sprawling house, which he had built, includes a storage room for the parts companies have sent him over the years. It also includes a professional-quality home theater, carefully designed with the help of a reader and controlled by a computer Shimpi cobbled together for the task.

Plastic guitars and drums – the virtual instruments of the Rock Band videogame – are strewn across a sofa but Shimpi complains that he and his girlfriend, a sculptor who lives with him, are too busy to play much.

He takes phone calls from investors who pay him for his advice and spends more and more time hunkered down with design engineers. But Shimpi says his main focus will remain AnandTech’s readers – the sort of tech fans who spend hours reading up on new products before deciding which to buy.

“I don’t care so much how this affects the companies,” Shimpi said. “They’re going to be okay. It’s the guy putting $200 down that he worked really hard for, and some guy he’s never met is telling him he should do that. They’re the reason I get to do this.”

Anand Lal Shimpy ….Young Achiever too…

Anand Lal Shimpi started AnandTech as a hobby when he was a 14 year old.It was hosted on a Geosites website.The website which was started in 1997 is now counted as the leading web resource on computer hardware.In 2005,AnandTech REGISTERED 50million page views per month.He was featured in Fortune magazine and USA Today.Besides,he has authored a book AnandTech Guide to PC Gaming Hardware.

 

Source:::: | By Noel Randewich …and alldigitalguide.blogspot.in

Natarajan

” Anand Tech Without its Titan Anand Lal Shimpi… ” What Next ?

Anand Lal Shimpi Announces Retirement, Departs AnandTech
Contribution by Marco Chiappetta  in Forbes .com

 

This post isn’t about a particular piece of technology, but in the technology publishing scene, this news is just as relevant as Intel releasing a new processor architecture or NVIDIA launching a brand new GPU. One of the titans of the technology press industry has announced his prompt retirement, at the ripe old age of 32. Anand Lal Shimpi, the founder and namesake of the popular site AnandTech, just published an article entitled “The Road Ahead”, in which he explains his decision to retire and his departure from the site. “After 17.5 years of digging, testing, analyzing and writing about the most interesting stuff in tech, it’s time for a change. This will be the last thing I write on AnandTech as I am officially retiring from the tech publishing world”, Anand said.

Anand didn’t give a particular reason for his retirement other than to say he wanted a change, but he did reassure his readers that it is not for health reasons or because of problems with the publication. “It’s important for me to stress two things: this isn’t a transition because of health or business issues. I am healthy and hope to be even more so now that I won’t be flying nearly 130,000 miles every year. The website and business are both extremely strong”, Anand goes on to say, “We’ve expanded our staff this year to include a number of new faces contributing to both mobile and more traditional PC categories. Traffic is solid, we are looking forward to a bunch of very exciting launches especially in the final quarters of 2014.” Indeed, there will be lots to talk about in the coming weeks and months as virtually every major player from Intel to Samsung and AMD and NVIDIA ready new products, most of which I can’t talk about yet. September is usually a very busy month for people in my line of work—whatever Anand’s reason is, his timing appears to be spot on.

AnandTech's Anand Lal Shimpi
AnandTech’s Anand Lal Shimpi. Image Source: AnandTech.Com

 

In all serious though, the tech press will not be the same with Anand gone. As a 15+ year veteran of the industry, I’ve spent many a briefing and tech summit sitting alongside Anand (we also share a birthday), and he was as personable and humorous in person as he was fierce and technical in his writings. The depth of Anand’s knowledge of technology and the seriousness of which he approached virtually every subject was a rare thing to see.

Anand’s contributions to the technology publishing industry are numerous and far reaching. Not only did his ability to start such a respected publication as a teenager inspire a myriad of others to try and do the same, but rivalries and competitiveness with other industry stalwarts advanced the depth and quality of tech coverage across the internet. Speaking from personal experience, I know I have been inspired to up the quality of my work in part because of Anand.

The article concludes with, “As for me, I won’t stay idle forever. There are a bunch of challenges out there” and “Thanks for the memories and the support. I really do owe you all a tremendous debt of gratitude. I hope that my work and the work that continues at AnandTech will serve as a token of my appreciation”. Your work was definitely appreciated, Anand. I hope we cross paths again soon.

Source:::: http://www.forbes.com/sites/marcochiappetta/2014/08/31/anand-lal-shimpi-announces-retirement-departs-anandtech/

Natarajan

Water ATM … Smile on the Face of Rajasthan Villagers …

 

 

 

An Indian energy major and modern technology have combined to bring about a revolution in two districts of Rajasthan that were infamous due to the scarcity of potable water. Thanks to water ATMs, many otherwise arid villages here have 24X7 access to the COMMODITY at the swipe of a card — at 20 litres for Rs.5.

Under Cairn India’s “Jeevan Amrit Project,” kiosks with reverse osmosis (RO) plants have been installed to provide safe drinking water in villages like Bhakharpur, Kawas, Guda, Jogasar, Aakdada and Baytu to benefit 22,000 people.

“The project is a good example of a PPP model, where Cairn India has partnered with the Rajasthan government’s Public Health Engineering Department (PHED), Tata Projects and the respective village panchayats to provide potable drinking water at the doorsteps of the local community,” Cairn India CSR head Nilesh Jain told IANS.

Rajasthan, with 10.4 percent of the country’s geographical area, 5.5 percent of the population and 18.70 percent of the livestock, has only 1.16 percent of surface water available in the country.

The State is one of the driest in the country. Rainfall is erratic and there is a large variation in its distribution pattern in the State. The average annual rainfall ranges from 100 mm in Jaisalmer to 800 mm in Jhalawar.

At present, 22 RO plants (17 with the swipe facility) catering to drinking water needs of 22,000 villagers on a daily basis are up and running. The project is expected to scale up in the coming years in terms of number of plants and locations. Through this technology, villagers can now get clean drinking water by swiping their smart cards in the machines installed at the plant,” Cairn India general manager (CSR) Ritu Jhingon told IANS.

The cards come with an initial value of Rs.150 and can be recharged for a similar amount. Plans are afoot to also provide Rs.20 recharges.

This makes the dispensers self-sustaining, with the revenue earned used by the village’s water committee to meet the running expenses of the RO plant, such as salary of the operator, electricity and maintenance. The surplus MONEY is used to undertake developmental work in the village.

And to maximise its reach, water from the RO plants is transported to the surrounding dhanis (hamlets) through vehicles at nominal charges (Rs.1 to Rs. 2 extra, as decided by the water committee).

The dispensers are getting increasingly popular among the locals with more and more people purchasing the smart cards.

“Once it was difficult to get water, forget about clean water to drink. Now things have changed. I can, at any time, get clean water for my family,” Ram Pyari, a resident of Kawas village, told IANS.

Such sentiments are echoed by other users, including Ratna Ram, sarpanch of Sawai Padam Singh village, who became a role model after he inspired more than 100 households in his village to utilise safe drinking water and four another village sarpanchs to initiate the “Jeevan Amrit” project in their gram panchyats.

“My father used to regularly take painkillers for a long time as he suffered from severe joint pain. We have been using RO water for six months now, and miraculously my father has stopped taking medicines for the last two months,” Ratna Ram told IANS.

The number of water-borne diseases, such as diarrhoea in children, has also come down. Cases of joint pain caused by high fluoride content in drinking water have also decreased.

Keywords: water ATMsJeevan Amrit Project

SOURCE::: The Hindu

Natarajan

படித்ததில் பிடித்தது…” ரொம்ப நல்லா வருவப்பா…”

திருமண வீட்டில் சமையலை முடித்துவிட்டு அலுத்துப்போய் வீட்டுக்குள் அடியெடுத்து வைத்தார் கனகசபை. அப்பாடா என்று சேரில் அமர்ந்தவர் மனைவியிடம் கூறினார், “கனகா! இந்த சமையல்காரப் பொழைப்பு என்னோட போகட்டும், நம்ம பையனை பெரிய இன்ஜினீயர் ஆக்கணும்.”

“ஆமாங்க நீங்க சொல்றது சரிதான். இப்படி அடுப்புல வெந்து சாகிற பொழைப்பு உங்க பரம்பரையில உங்களோட முடியட்டும்” என்றாள் கனகா.

நாட்கள் ஓடின. மகன் சிவராமன் பிளஸ்2-வில் நல்ல மதிப்பெண் எடுத்து தேர்வாகியிருந்தான்.

“ஏம்பா எந்த காலேஜ்ல இன்ஜினீயரிங் அப்ளிகேஷன் வாங்கியிருக்க?” என்று கேட்டார் கனகசபை.

“மன்னிச்சிருங்கப்பா. நான் இன்ஜினீயரிங் படிக்க விரும்பலை.”

மகன் கூறியதும் பதறிப் போனார் கனகசபை. தன் கனவை மகன் சிதைத்துவிடுவானோ என்று பதறியது அவர் மனம்.

“சிவராமா! நீ இன்ஜினீயரிங் படிக்கணும்கறது அப்பாவோட கனவுப்பா. அதை கலைச்சிடாதடா கண்ணா” மகனிடம் வாஞ்சையுடன் கூறினார்.

தாழ்ந்த குரலில் தந்தைக்கு பதில் கூறினான் சிவராமன்.. “அப்பா.. இன்ஜினீயர் படிப்பு ஒரு காலத்துல பெரிய படிப்புதான். இல்லைன்னு சொல்லல. ஆனா இப்ப தெருவுக்குத் தெரு இன்ஜினீயரிங் காலேஜ் மலிஞ்சு போச்சு. இன்ஜினீயர்களுக்கு வேலை கிடைக்கிறது குதிரைக் கொம்பா ஆயிடுச்சுப்பா.”

“சரி, வேற என்ன படிக்கலாம்னு இருக்க?”

“கேட்டரிங் டெக்னாலஜி.”

மகன் சொன்னதும் தூக்கி வாரிப் போட்டது கனகசபைக்கு.

“ஏம்பா இந்த சமையல் வேலை என்னோட போகட்டும்னு நானும் உங்க அம்மாவும் நெனைக்கிறோம், நீ என்னடான்னா வாழையடி வாழையா இந்தப் பொழைப்புக்கே வரணும்னு துடிக்கிறியே?”

“அப்பா சமையல்னா கேவலமாப்பா? ஊருல கேட்டுப் பாருங்க கனகசபை சமையலப் பத்தி. உங்க சமையல்னா ஊர் சனம் ஒன்பது பந்தி கழிஞ்சும் காத்திருந்து சாப்பிட்டுட்டு போகும். ருசியா சமைக்க உங்களைப்போல ஒண்ணு ரெண்டு பேர்தாம்பா ஊர்ல இருக்காங்க. உங்க சமையல் கலை உங்களோட அழிஞ்சுபோயிடக் கூடாது.அதுக்கு வாரிசா நான் வரணும். அதுக்காகத்தான் கேட்டரிங் டெக்னாலஜி படிக்கறேன். ஏட்டுப் படிப்போட உங்க அனுபவ பாடமும் சேர்ந்தா நாட்டிலேயே நான் பெரிய சமையல் கலைஞனா ஆயிடுவேன். ஆயிரம் இன்ஜினீ யர்கள் எளிதா உருவாகிடுவாங்க. ஆனா வாய்க்கு ருசியா சமைக்க ஒரு கனகசபை உருவாகிறது ரொம்ப கஷ்டம்பா. நான் ஒரு கனகசபையா உருவாக விரும்புறேன்” என்றவாறு கேட்டரிங் படிப்புக்கான விண்ணப்ப படிவத்தை தந்தையின் காலில் வைத்து வணங்கினான் சிவராமன்.

“ரொம்ப நல்லா வருவப்பா” என்று கண்ணீர் மல்க மகனை ஆசீர்வதித்தார் கனகசபை.

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