Rebuild A jeep in 4 Minutes !!!!!

This is fabulous!!!!

Willys Jeep…..Unbelievable
6 soldiers pull up on a main street in Halifax, Nova Scotia
as part of a parade. They’re in a standard issue WWII type Willys Jeep. In the span of about 4 to 5 minutes they completely disassemble the vehicle and reassemble it and drive off in it fully operable! The idea being to show the
genius that went into the making of the jeep and its basic simplicity.

pl click the link below ….

source ::::input from a friend of mine ….. you tube .com

natarajan

An Aircraft To Fly Anywhere in the World In Just 4 hours !!!!

British aerospace firm Reaction Engines is working on an aircraft it believes would be able to take passengers anywhere in the world in just four hours.
The vehicle would also be able to fly in outer space.

skylon reaction engines

A rendering of Reaction Engines’ Skylon aircraft taking off.

 

Reaction Engines says there’s only one truly new technology in the aircraft that makes those things possible: the precooler.

In a new video, chief engineer Alan Bond explains that air entering the new “Sabre” engine system could be cooled by more than 1,000 degrees Celsius in .01 seconds. That ability would allow a jet engine to run at higher power than what is possible today.

More power = more speed. Enough to fly at Mach 5, five times the speed of sound, “pretty easily,” Bond says.

The Telegraph explained the technology in an article in late 2012:

The breakthrough technology is a cooling system which uses an array of thin pipes, arranged in a “swirl” pattern and filled with condensed helium, to extract heat from air and cool it to minus 150C before it enters the engine.

In normal circumstances, this would cause moisture in the air to freeze, coating the engine with frost, but the company has also developed a method which prevents this from happening.

The company eventually hopes to use its cooling technology to build a plane that transports 300 passengers and flies like a rocket. It will “transform high-speed aviation,” Bond says, adding, “we have no competitors. We are unique.”

The aircraft itself will measure 276 feet long, and be called the Skylon. It would take off and land horizontally (like a plane), which would make it easier to reuse than a standard rocket. But in addition to the $1.1 billion price tag for each one, there’s another big downside: The Skylon has no windows, a major bummer for those excited to fly in space.

The company is currently in the process of testing the system. Test flights of the Skylon are planned for 2019.

source:::::businessinsider.com

natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/reaction-engines-tests-new-cooling-system-2013-7#ixzz2ZHU061xq

Birth of Ctrl +Alt + Del !!!

By Virginia Hughes

In the spring of 1981, David Bradley was part of a select team working from a nondescript office building in Boca Raton, Fla. His task: to help build IBM’s new personal computer. Because Apple and RadioShack were already selling small stand-alone computers, the project (code name: Acorn) was a rush job. Instead of the typical three- to five-year turnaround, Acorn had to be completed in a single year.

One of the programmers’ pet peeves was that whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch, they had to manually restart the entire system. Turning the machine back on automatically initiated a series of memory tests, which stole valuable time. “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem,” Bradley says. The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.

So Bradley created a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without the memory tests. He never dreamed that the simple fix would make him a programming hero, someone who’d someday be hounded to autograph keyboards at conferences. And he didn’t foresee the command becoming such an integral part of the user experience.

Bradley joined IBM as a programmer in 1975. By 1978, he was working on the Datamaster, the company’s early, flawed attempt at a PC. It was an exciting time—computers were starting to become more accessible, and Bradley had a chance to help popularize them.

In September 1980, he became the 12th of 12 engineers picked to work on Acorn. The close-knit team was whisked away from IBM’s New York headquarters. “We had very little interference,” Bradley says. “We got to do the design essentially starting with a blank sheet of paper.”

Bradley worked on everything from writing input/output programs to troubleshooting wire-wrap boards. Five months into the project, he created ctrl+alt+del. The task was just another item to tick off his to-do list. “It was five minutes, 10 minutes of activity, and then I moved on to the next of the 100 things that needed to get done,” he says. Bradley chose the keys by location—with the del key across the keyboard from the other two, it seemed unlikely that all three would be accidentally pressed at the same time. Bradley never intended to make the shortcut available to customers, nor did he expect it to enter the pop lexicon. It was meant for him and his fellow coders, for whom every second counted.

The team managed to finish Acorn on schedule. In the fall of 1981, the IBM PC hit shelves—a homely gray box beneath a monitor that spit out green lines of type. Marketing experts predicted that the company would sell a modest 241,683 units in the first five years; company execs thought that estimate was too optimistic. They were all wrong. IBM PC sales would reach into the millions, with people of all ages using the machines to play games, edit documents, and crunch numbers. Computing would never be the same.

 

And yet, few of these consumers were aware of Bradley’s shortcut quietly lingering in their machines. It wasn’t until the early 1990s, when Microsoft’s Windows took off, that the shortcut came to prominence. As PCs all over the country crashed and the infamous “blue screen of death” plagued Windows users, a quick fix spread from friend to friend: ctrl+alt+del. Suddenly, Bradley’s little code was a big deal. Journalists hailed “the three-finger salute” as a saving grace for PC owners—a population that kept growing.

In 2001, hundreds of people packed into the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC. In two decades, the company had moved more than 500 million PCs worldwide. After dinner, industry luminaries, including Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, sat down for a panel discussion. But the first question didn’t go to Gates; it went to David Bradley. The programmer, who has always been surprised by how popular those five minutes spent creating ctrl+alt+del made him, was quick to deflect the glory.

“I have to share the credit,” Bradley joked. “I may have invented it, but I think Bill made it famou

source:::::mentalfloss.com

natarajan

Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/51674/history-ctrl-alt-delete#ixzz2ZGXMJXdw
–brought to you by mental_floss!

In India …Outside India …Perceptions Vary !!!

Relatives- and their perceptions

Relation

In India

Outside India

Mother-in-law

A woman capable of making your life miserable.

A woman you never fight with, because where else you will find such a dedicated baby sitter for free ?

Husband

A boring human species, who listens more to his mother than you, and orders you around to serve him, his parents and siblings.

Still boring, but now a useful human species that comes in handy when the house needs to be vacuumed.

Friend

A person whose house you can drop into any time of the day or night and you’ll always be welcome.

A person whom you have to call first to check and make sure he is not busy.

Wife

A woman who gives you your underwear and towel when you go to take a shower.

A woman who yells at you not to leave tub dirty when you go to take bath.

Son

A teenager, who without asking will carry your grocery bags from the market.

A teenager, who suddenly remembers he has lot of homework when you start mowing the lawn.

Daughter

A lovely doll, who brings tears to your eyes during her marriage.

A lovely doll, who brings you to tears long before her marriage.

Father

A person you are afraid of, and who is never to be disobeyed .

A person to whom you pretend to obey, after all he is the one paying your college tuition.

Indian Engineer

A person with a respectable job and earning lots.

A person without a secure job, who always dreams one day he will be rich.

Doctor

A respectable person with OK income.

A money making machine, who has a money spending machine at home called ‘doctor’s wife’.

Bhangra

A vigorous Punjabi festival dance.

A dance you do, when you don’t know how to dance.

Software Engineer

A high-tech guy, always speaks in American accent, always anxious to queue in the consulate visa line.

The same hi-tech guy, who does Ganapati Puja everyday, and says ‘This is my last year in the US (or whenever)’every year.

A Green Card holder bachelor

the guy can’t speak Hindi, parents of good looking girls are dying to hook him, wears jacket in summer, says he has a BMW back there.

the guy can’t speak proper English, wears jacket all the time, works in a Candy store at Manhattan, dreams of owning a BMW

 

source:::::unknown….input from a friend of mine

natarajan

R I P….Dear Telegram ….

The 163-year old telegram service in the country — the harbinger of good and bad news for generations of Indians — is dead.

Once the fastest means of communication for millions of people, the humble telegram was on Sunday buried without any requiem but for the promise of preserving the last telegram as a museum piece.

Nudged out by technology — SMS, emails, mobile phones — the iconic service gradually faded into oblivion with less and less people taking recourse to it.

Started in 1850 on an experimental basis between Kolkata and DiamondHarbour, it was opened for use by the British East India Company the following year.

In 1854, the service was made available to the public.

It was such an important mode of communication in those days that revolutionaries fighting for the country’s independence used to cut the telegram lines to stop the British from communicating.

Old timers recall that receiving a telegram would be an event itself and the messages were normally opened with a sense of trepidation as people feared for the welfare of their near and dear ones.

For jawans and armed forces seeking leave or waiting for transfer or joining reports, it was a quick and handy mode of communication.

Lawyers vouched for the telegrams as they were registered under the Indian Evidence Act and known for their credibility when presented in court.


Bollywood was not to be left behind and immortalised the service with many sudden turns in films being announced by the advent of the taar.

Pockets of rural India still use the service but with the advent of technology and newer means of communication , the Telegram found itself edged out.

“The service will start at 8 am and close by 9 pm on Sunday  JULY 14 night,” BSNL CMD R K Upadhyay told PTI.

“The service will not be available from Monday.”   JULY 15

State-run telecom firm BSNL had decided to discontinue telegrams following a huge shortfall in revenue.

The service generated about Rs 75 lakh annually, compared with the cost of over Rs 100 crore to run and manage it.

Telecom and IT Minister Kapil Sibal had said last month that

“We will bid it a very warm farewell and may be the last telegram sent should be a museum piece. That’s the way in which we can bid it a warm farewell.”

There are about 75 telegram centres in the country, with less than 1,000 employees to manage them.

BSNL will absorb these employees and deploy them to manage mobile services, landline telephony and broadband services.

source:::::rediff.com

natarajan

 


 

 

 

 

“LIC பில்டிங்கில் எத்தனை மாடிகள் ? “

1956 – நவம்பர் நுங்கம்பாக்கத்தில் பெரியவா முகாமிட்டிருந்தா. ஒரு நாள் ராத்திரி 10 மணிக்கு மவுண்ட் ரோடில் நடந்து சென்று கொண்டிருந்தார். 15 பேர் கூட சென்று 
கொண்டிருந்தோம். இந்து பத்திரிகை ஆபீஸ் விஜயம்.

LIC கட்டிடம் அருகே வந்த போது கண்ணன பெரியவாளிடம் இது தான் புதுசா வந்திருக்கிற LIC அடுக்குமாடி கட்டிடம் என்று பெரியவாளிடம் கூறினார். சற்று நின்ற பெரியாவா என்னிடம் இதுலே மொத்தம் எததனை மாடிகள் என்றார்.

நான் தவறாக சொல்லி விட கூடாதென்று “சரியாக தெரியாது ..” என்றேன். “எண்ணி பார்த்துவிட்டு வா ..” என்று கூறி விறு விறு என்று நடக்க ஆரம்பித்தார். 

நான் இரண்டு மூன்று முறை எண்ணி’பார்த்தேன். பாதி எண்ணும் போதே கணக்கு விட்டு போய் மீண்டும் எண்ணும் படி ஆயிற்று . ஒருமுறை 12ம் மறுமுறை 13ம் வந்தது. அதற்குள் பெரியவா வெலிங்டன் டாக்கிஸ வரை சென்று விட்டிரு நதார். நான் ஓடி சென்று மூச்சிறைக்க நின்றேன். “எண்ணிட்டையா ? எத்தனை ? ” என்று பெரியவா கேட்டா. கீழிருந்து 13. டேரசை சேர்த்தா 14. ஆனா மாடிகள் 12 தான் வரது என்றேன். பெரியவா சிரித்து கொண்டார்.

“12 மாடிகளா ? இந்த வாரம் ஆனந்த விகடன் மேல் அட்டைலே வந்திருக்கிற பில்டிங் லே 18 மாடிகள் போட்டிருக்கே. நீ பார்த்தாயோ …? :” என்று கேட்டார். எனக்கு தூக்கி வாரி போட்டது. “நான் எண்ணி பார்க்கலே..” என்றேன். :”அப்புறம் போய் பாரு …” என்று நடந்தபடி கூறினார். கண்ணன் என்னை பார்த்து சிரித்தார் .

நான் சற்று பின் தங்கினேன். அந்த அதிர்ச்சியில் இருந்து மீளுவது அத்தனை எளிதாக இருக்கவில்லை. ஒரு பத்திரிக்கையைப் புரட்டுவதிலும் அதில் வரும் செய்திகளைப் படிப்பதிலும், படங்களை பார்ப்பதிலும் சாதாரண வாசகருக்கும் பெரியவளுக்கும் எத்தனை வேற்றுமை இருக்கிறது என்று எண்ணி வியந்தேன். 

மேலட்டையில் பிரசுரமாயிருந்த அந்த நகைச்சுவையைப் படித்தவர்கள் சிரிப்பு வந்திருந்தால் சிரித்து விட்டுப்பத்திரிகையை புரட்டியிருப்பார்கள். சிரிப்பு வராதவர்கள் சிரிக்காமலேயே புரட்டியிருப்பார்கள். 

எத்தனை பேர் ” அந்த கட்டிடத்தில் எத்தனை மாடிகள் வரைய பட்டிருக்கின்றன” என்று பொறுமையாக எண்ணி பார்த்திருக்க போகிறார்கள்.. ? பிறரை சொல்வானேன்? நானே பார்க்கவில்லை. (அந்த ஜோக் என்னுடையது. படம் கோபுலு வரைநதது ).

எதையும் ஆராயந்து நோக்கும் பெரியவாளின் அபூர்வ சக்தி அதிசயிக்கக்தக்கது என்றால் அவரது நகைச்சுவை யுணர்வு மிகவும் ரசிக்கதக்கதாக இருக்கும்.

(From the experiences of Sri Baraneedharan, acclaimed tamil author)
source::::www.periva.proboards.com

natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/4707/lic/#ixzz2Yf3g3AUm

Amazing Images Captured From ISS !!!

An incredible photo shows a mass of storm clouds churning over the Atlantic Ocean near Brazil and the Equator.

It was taken by one of the Expedition 36 crew members aboard the International Space Station.

A Russian spacecraft, docked to the orbiting outpost, partially covers a small patch of sunlight on the ocean waters in a break in the clouds.

The photo was taken using a 50mm lens.

Independence Day in orbit: As the International Space Station circles the earth, astronauts are able to capture stunning pictures such as this one as the orbiter crossed the Brazilian coast

As the International Space Station circles the earth, astronauts are able to capture stunning pictures such as this one as the orbiter crossed the Brazilian coast


Sunrise: This stunning image shows the Sun greeting the International Space Station as seen from the Russian section of the orbital outpost. It was taken by one of the crew

Sunrise: This stunning image shows the Sun greeting the International Space Station as seen from the Russian section of the orbital outpos

The sun is about to come up over the South Pacific Ocean in this colorful scene photographed by one of the Expedition 35 crew members aboard the Earth-orbiting International Space Station

The most recent picture from NASA is the latest in a stunning series of pictures captured by astronauts that have been orbiting the planet this year.

 

The previous crew of Expedition 35, had Canadian Chris Hadfield on board who gained a cult following on Twitter for his images of the Earth from space.


One of Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield's latest pictures from the International Space Station shows a darkened south-eastern United States just before dawn, with the moon rising above

A picture from from the International Space Station shows a darkened south-eastern United States just before dawn, with the moon rising above


Emerald Isle: The silhouettes of Ireland and Wales were captured in this beautiful picture taken from the ISS by Commander Hadfield

Emerald Isle: The silhouettes of Ireland and Wales were captured in this beautiful picture taken from the ISS


Contrast: Commander Hadfield posted this shot of a vivid blue river snaking through Brazilian farmland on his Twitter page

This shot shows a vivid blue river snaking through Brazilian farmland


source::::mailonline.com

natarajan

 

FloodGates Open….A Teriffic Operation !!!

Visitors watch water gushing from the section of the Xiaolangdi Reservoir on the Yellow River, during a sand-washing operation

Visitors watch water gushing from the section of the Xiaolangdi Reservoir on the Yellow River, during a sand-washing operation


These photographs may look like scenes from an apocalyptic film.

But in fact they are of an annual operation to move 30 million tonnes of silt downstream a year in the Henan province.

Bystanders holding umbrellas are dwarfed as they watch the tremendous rush of water gushing through gaps in a dam.

It is part of a carefully-chorepgraphed operation to remove silt from the Yellow River in Luoyang.

More than 390 million tonnes shifted this way over the last 13 years.

The silt-carrying water gushes out of three specialised holes in the dam.

The Yellow River authority says the operation lowers the river bed in the lower reach of the river by an average of 2.03 meters each year.

The dam stands at 154m (505ft) tall and is 1,317m (4,321ft) wide.

When it was built opened in 2000, following a six-year construction, it had cost US$3.5billion to construct.
Residents turn out to watch the annual event - and try to avoid a drenching by protecting themselves with umbrellas
Residents turn out to watch the annual event – and try to avoid a drenching by protecting themselves with umbrellas

A cloud of water: The floodwater churns through Yellow River as bystanders stand and stare

A cloud of water: The floodwater churns through Yellow River as bystanders stand and stare

 

source:::::mailonline.com

natarajan


” ஓ அதைத்தானே Stratosphere என்று சொல்வது ” !!!

மொழி ஆராய்ச்சியில் எடுத்தாலும் அப்படித்தான் பெரியவா பேசும் ஆங்கிலம் மிகவும் கடினமாக உயர்ந்ததாக இருக்கும்.

அகராதியைப் புரட்டாமல் அர்த்தம் தெரியாது.நூறு வருடத்துக்கு முன்பே அவர் கான்வென்டில் படித்தவர்.ஆகவே அற்புதமாக ஆங்கிலத்தில் உரையாடுவார்.

ஒரு முறை விமான நிலையத்தைக் காண, பெரியவா மீனம்பாக்கம் சென்றார். எல்லா இடங்களையும் பார்வையிட்டபின் இன்ஜினீயரிங் செக்ஷன் வந்தது. அங்குள்ளவற்றை ஒருவர் விவரிக்கப் பிரயத்தனப்பட்டார். அவருக்கு தமிழில் சரளமாகப் பேச வரவில்லை

ஆனால் பெரியவாளுக்குத் தமிழில் சொல்லாவிட்டால் புரியாதே என்று நினைத்தார். தெரிந்தவரை சொல்லிக் கொண்டிருந்தவரைப் பெரியவா, “பிளேன் மேலே பறக்கும்போது காதைத் துளைக்கும்படியா ஒரு சத்தம் வரதே அது கேட்டுண்டேதான் இருக்குமா? என்று கேட்க “ஒரு குறிப்பிட்ட லெவல் வரைதான் கேட்கும். அதற்கு மேலே போயிட்டா
விமானச் சத்தம் கேட்காது!” என்றார். அந்தப் பொறியாளர்.

“ஓ! அதைத்தானே Stratosphere-னு சொல்லுவா!” என்று பெரியவர் சொல்ல…பொறியாளருக்குத் தூக்கிவாரிப்போட்டது.

‘இத்தனை நேரம் தமிழ் வார்த்தைகளையே தேடிக் கொண்டிருந்தேனே.. இவருக்கு போயா ஆங்கிலம் தெரியாது என்று நினைத்தேன்!’ என்று வெட்கினார்.

இப்படித்தான் அடிக்கடி உத்தியோகம் மாறுகிற ஒருவர் வந்தார்.

“இப்போ எதில் இருக்கே?” என்று கேட்கிறார் பெரியவர்.

அவருக்குப் புரியணுமேன்னு நினைச்சு மிகவும் கஷ்டப்பட்டு, “அந்தக் கணக்கு போடற யந்திரத்துக்கு பேப்பர் தரும் வேலை!” என்றார்.

“Computer Stationery-தானே நீ சொன்னது?” என்று பெரியவர் அவர் சங்கடத்தைத் தவிர்க்கிறார்.எந்த மொழியை எடுத்துக்கொண்டாலும் அதில் ஆழங்கால் கண்டவராயிற்றே.
source::::: http://www.periva.proboards.com

natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/4660/#ixzz2YNKcmReR

Amazing BodyPainting….Artist Turns Humans into Animals and Fruits !!!!

The world’s best bodypainter plays tricks with the mind with incredible body art in which his subjects disappear into their backgrounds.

Visual wiz Johannes Stoetter has replaced canvas with the human body, transforming his living models into objects inspired by the natural world.

Johannes, 35, spends up to five months painstakingly planning and perfecting each of his amazing creations

Visual wiz Johannes Stoetter has replaced canvas with the human body, transforming his living models into objects inspired by the natural world.
Re-leaf painting: Visual wiz Johannes Stoetter has replaced canvas with the human body, transforming his living models into objects inspired by the natural world.

Frog-otten art: The latest and most impressive creations is a lifelike tropical tree frog using five people to recreate the animal's body, legs arms and head

Frog-otten art: The latest and most impressive creation is a lifelike tropical tree frog using five people to recreate the animal’s body, legs arms and head

Each work of art then takes up to eight hours to complete using special breathable paint.

The stunning creations, which include fruit made from painted heads, have earned Johannes the world bodypainting title.

 

Owl does he do it? Each work of art then takes up to eight hours to complete using special breathable paint

Owl does he do it? Each work of art then takes up to eight hours to complete using special breathable paint


Owl does he do it? Each work of art then takes up to eight hours to complete using special breathable paint Get you head around this: The stunning creations, which include fruit made from painted heads, have earned Johannes the world bodypainting title

Wood you believe it? Johannes, 35, spends up to five months painstakingly planning and perfecting each of his amazing creations

Wood you believe it? Johannes, 35, spends up to five months painstakingly planning and perfecting each of his amazing creations

Johannes, from South Tyrol in Italy, said: ‘I did my first bodypainting experiment in 2000.

‘Five years earlier I had the idea to paint a human body but it took me until I was 23 to try it.

‘The experience was so special that I wanted to do it again immediately – I wanted to try it with different colours, a different model and a different motive.

‘I couldn’t imagine that there would be a way to earn money with bodypainting, but nevertheless I was totally convinced that I wanted to do it – I felt that it was my way.
Tip the scales: He says bodypainting is 'special' because the artwork is alive and can move Tip the scales: He says bodypainting is 'special' because the artwork is alive and can ove

Expert: Johannes, from South Tyrol in Italy did his first bodypainting experiment in 2000

‘I found out about the bodypainting world championship and took part for the first time in 2009.

‘To my amazement I finished fifth, and that was the beginning of a new bodypainting era for me.

‘From that moment I was fixed on winning the world title.

‘I started bodypainting full time, and in 2012 my hard work finally paid off – I won.

‘It was one of the best feelings in my life.

‘Bodypainting is special because the artwork is alive and can move.
Use yer melon: Johannes says he observes 'the world, nature, colours and shapes with very clear eyes and an open heart'

‘While a canvas painting lasts forever, a bodypainting exists only for a few hours.

‘The skin is very different to canvas – it is alive, it is soft and warm, it is a very comfortable base to paint on.

‘There are some designs I can do in just a few hours while others take up to eight hours.

‘In bodypainting you create unity between an image and a person.

‘A lot of my inspiration comes from nature.

‘I think I observe the world, nature, colours and shapes with very clear eyes and an open heart.

‘And painting is my big passion. I think the secret of good work is to always have a love for it.’

The stunning creations have earned him the world bodypainting title

source:::::::mailonline.com

natarajan

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2356721/Johannes-Stoetter-turns-humans-animals-fruit-landscapes-amazing-paintings.html#ixzz2YBWJ9UlN