Musical Roads That Play Melodies When Cars Drive Over….!!!

A Japanese engineer by the name of Shizuo Shinoda was digging with a bulldozer when he accidentally scraped some markings into a road with its claw. Later when he drove over the markings he realized that the vibration produced in his car can be heard as a tune. In 2007, a team of engineers from the Hokkaido Industrial Research Institute refined Shinoda’s designs and built a number of “melody roads” in Japan. These roads have groves cut at very specific intervals along the road surface. Depending on how far apart the grooves are and how deep they are, a car moving over them will produce a series of high or low notes, enabling designers to create a distinct tune. The closer the grooves are, the higher the pitch of the sound. The critical ingredient in the mix is the speed of the car.

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The Civic Musical Road in Lancaster, California. Photo credit: roadtrippers.com

There are four melody roads in Japan, one each in Hokkaido, Wakayama, Shizuoka and Gunma. They all play different tunes. They stretch between 175 to 250 meters, and are carved with thousands of groves. Aside from street signs, the roads are marked by colored musical notes painted on the surface of the road which alert motorists of the incoming musical interlude. The grooves are laid down on the side of the road near the curb and not in the middle, so drivers have the option to either go over them or avoid them. In order to hear the tunes, they need to keep the car windows closed and drive at 28mph keeping one wheel over the grooves . Drive too fast and it will sound like a tape on fast forward. Drive too slow and it will have the opposite effect.

The first musical road, however, was not Japanese. It was created in Gylling, Denmark, by two Danish artists Steen Krarup Jensen and Jakob Freud-Magnus, in October 1995. Called the Asphaltophone, the street is made from a series of raised pavement markers, spaced out at intermittent intervals so that as a vehicle drives over the markers, the vibrations caused by the wheels can be heard inside the car.

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Grooves on a melody road in Japan. Photo credit: Yusuke Japan Blog

The idea of musical roads has caught engineers in several other countries. There is one “Singing Road” in South Korea close to Anyang in Gyeonggi. It plays the nursery rhyme “Mary Had a Little Lamb”. Unlike other melody roads, it was designed not to draw tourists but to help motorists stay alert and awake. The Singing Road is located on a particularly treacherous section of a highway where lots of accidents occur due to dozing and speeding. 68% of traffic accidents in South Korea are due to inattentive, sleeping or speeding drivers.

America got its first melody road in 2008. It was originally built on Avenue K in Lancaster, California, for a Honda commercial. The Civic Musical Road, named after Honda Civic, stretches for a quarter-mile and plays back a part of the Finale of the ‘William Tell Overture’. But the intervals are so far off that the melody bears only a slight resemblance to the original tune. Later, when residents complained that the grooves produced too much noise from nocturnal drivers, they relocated the strip to Avenue G.

Another musical road is located in the village of Tijeras, in New Mexico. Driving over the grooves at 45mph causes the car to play the famous song “America the Beautiful”. The project was funded by the National Geographic Society, and overseen by the New Mexico Department of Transportation who said that the real motive behind the musical road is to get drivers to slow down.

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A sign ahead of the Civic Musical Road in Lancaster, California. Photo credit: roadtrippers.com

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The Civic Musical Road in Lancaster, California. Photo credit: roadtrippers.com

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Photo credit: Yusuke Japan Blog

The musical road in New Mexico.

Amazing Singing Road of Anyang

Melody Roads….Japan

Source….www.amusingplanet.com

Natarajan

” When I started Loving Myself….”

A poem by Charlie Chaplin written on his 70th birthday on April 16, 1959.
When I started loving myself
I understood that I’m always and at any given opportunity
in the right place at the right time.
And I understood that all that happens is right –
from then on I could be calm.
Today I know: It’s called TRUST.

When I started to love myself I understood how much it can offend somebody
When I tried to force my desires on this person,
even though I knew the time is not right and the person was not ready for it,
and even though this person was me.
Today I know: It’s called LETTING GO

When I started loving myself
I could recognize that emotional pain and grief
are just warnings for me to not live against my own truth.
Today I know: It’s called AUTHENTICALLY BEING.

When I started loving myself
I stopped longing for another life
and could see that everything around me was a request to grow.
Today I know: It’s called MATURITY.

When I started loving myself
I stopped depriving myself of my free time
and stopped sketching further magnificent projects for the future.
Today I only do what’s fun and joy for me,
what I love and what makes my heart laugh,
in my own way and in my tempo.
Today I know: it’s called HONESTY.

When I started loving myself
I escaped from all what wasn’t healthy for me,
from dishes, people, things, situations
and from everything pulling me down and away from myself.
In the beginning I called it“healthy egoism”,
but today I know: it’s called SELF-LOVE.

When I started loving myself
I stopped wanting to be always right
thus I’ve been less wrong.
Today I’ve recognized: it’s called HUMBLENESS.

When I started loving myself
I refused to live further in the past
and worry about my future.
Now I live only at this moment where EVERYTHING takes place,
like this I live every day and I call it CONSCIOUSNESS.


When I started loving myself
I recognized, that my thinking
can make me miserable and sick.
When I requested for my heart forces,
my mind got an important partner.
Today I call this connection HEART WISDOM.

We do not need to fear further discussions,
conflicts and problems with ourselves and others
since even stars sometimes bang on each other
and create new worlds.
Today I know: THIS IS LIFE!

Source…www.ba-bamail.com

Natarajan

A Boy Who Saved 850 Train Passengers. A Girl Who Saved Her Brother from Electrocution….

33 children from Karnataka were awarded for their acts of bravery by the Governor, Vajubhai Rudabhai Vala, on the occasion of Children’s Day this year. The award ceremony was held at the Jawahar Bal Bhavan in Cubbon Park, Bengaluru. These children showed exemplary courage and did not think twice before putting their lives in danger to save other people.

Two of the 33 award recipients are Siddesh Manjunath and Siya Vamanasa Khode. This is how they displayed immense courage and presence of mind in dangerous situations:

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Siddesh Manjunath

This 10-year-old boy was conferred the Hoysala bravery award for stopping a passenger train that was about to cross a nearly two-inch wide crack on the rail track. His action saved about 850 passengers.

Siddesh is a student of class 5 at Avaregere government school in Davanagere city of Karnataka. He has a habit of watching trains pass by his father’s tea stall in their village. On March 14, 2015, he was at the tea stall and felt that something sounded wrong when two trains passed by. While his father told him that it was just the sound of stones on the track, Siddesh wanted to confirm. He went near the tracks to find a very risky gap there. On hearing about it, his father Manjunath rushed to the tracks and tried alerting other people. By that time, the Harihara-Chitradurga train was approaching and Siddesh knew that they had to do something to stop it. It was then that an idea struck the child. He took off his red t-shirt, and started waving it while running towards the train. His father and some villagers also ran behind him, thereby alerting the loco pilot from a distance. The train stopped and many lives were thus saved. Siddesh explained that he got t-shirt the idea from a movie that he had seen earlier.

Siya Vamanasa Khode

This 11-year-old girl from Hubballi saved her younger brother from electrocution. She was felicitated with the Keladi Chennamma award for bravery. She was playing with her 7-year-old brother, Yellappa, when he accidentally came in contact with a live wire.

“While we were playing, I saw my younger brother holding the iron railing, but standing still with his eyes wide open. When I tried to pull him away, I received an electric shock. That’s when I realised Yellappa was electrocuted. I tried to hold his hand, but received yet another electric shock. So I pulled him away from the railing by holding on to his shirt,” she told The Hindu.

Source….Tanaya Singh….www.the betterindia.com

Natarajan

 

The Boy Who Defeated His Disability to Become an Award Winning Artist …….

Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.”
– Winston Churchill

Anjan Satheesh, a differently abled artist has proved that nothing can stop an ignited and strong mind.

Anjan is hearing-impaired and has cerebral palsy. But neither of these conditions stopped him from following his dreams.

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Photo: Kerala Cartoon Academy Facebook

Anjan is now making headlines for all the right reasons. He recently won a national award for Outstanding Creative Adult with Disabilities, instituted by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment this year.

His various paintings and caricatures drawn over the last several years won him the prestigious award. He will receive a purse of Rs. 50,000 and citation, which will be presented to him at a function in Vigyan Bhavan, New Delhi, on December 3.

A former student of Adarsh Special School, Tripunithura, Anjan has learnt 3D animation at Toons and now works as a computer teacher there. His other achievements include awards like Amrita Keerthy Puraskaaram (Amritanandamayi Math) at the age of 8, Rotary International Special Talent Award (2001), Medal in Art at the National Abylimpics, Chennai (2005).

He was also praised by ace cricketer Sachin Tendulkar for his creativity. Anjan had drawn a caricature of Sachin when the master blaster had come down to watch an ISL match of Kerala Blasters in Kochi.

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Photo: Twitter

Anjan’s most memorable moment is his meeting with the former president Late APJ Abdul Kalam, who appreciated his work in 2005 during his visit to Adarsh. In fact, a photo featuring Dr. Kalam and Anjan became part of the book titled ‘Turning Points: A Journey Through Challenges’. He also organized an exhibition of his work at Kerala High Court in 2009, becoming the first artist to hold an exhibition inside the High Court and to get a Full Court Honour.

“Disability cannot defeat me ..straining to reach there for which I am made for..aiming to become a legend with what I have in me,” he wrote on his blog.

Check out his website to know more about his work.

Source….Shreya Pareek in http://www.the betterindia.com

natarajan

 

” மடை”யர்களை போற்றுவோம்…..!!!

80 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்பு ராஜசிம்ம மங்கலம் ஏரி.

80 ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்பு ராஜசிம்ம மங்கலம் ஏரி.

இன்றைய நிலையில் ராஜசிம்ம மங்கலம் ஏரி. படம்: எஸ்.முஹம்மது ராஃபி

இன்றைய நிலையில் ராஜசிம்ம மங்கலம் ஏரி. படம்: எஸ்.முஹம்மது ராஃபி

ஓடும் நீரின் வேரை அறுத்த வேதனை வரலாறு

நம் முன்னோர்களின் ஏரி தொழில்நுட்பங்களை அறிந்துக்கொள்வதற்கு முன்பாக ஏரிகளைப் பற்றிய அடிப்படைத் தகவல்களை அறிந்துகொள்வோம். மனிதன் வெட்டியது அல்லாமல் இயற்கையாகவே உருவாகும் ஏரிகளும் உண்டு. அவை 6 வகைப்படுகின்றன. பூமித் தட்டுகளின் அசைவால் உருவாவது டெக்டோனிக் (Tectonic) ஏரி (உ.ம்: டிசோ மொரீரி ஏரி-லடாக்). எரிமலை வெடிப்புகளால் உருவாவது வேல்கனிக் (Volcanic) ஏரி (உ.ம்: டவோடா ஏரி-ஜப்பான்). தொடர் காற்று வீச்சால் உருவாவது எயோலியன் (Aeolian) ஏரி (உ.ம்: சாம்பார் ஏரி-ஜெய்ப்பூர்). தொடர் நீர் பாய்தலால் உருவாவது புளுவியல்(Fluvial) ஏரி (உ.ம்: கபர்டால் ஏரி-பிஹார்). பனிப் பாறைகளின் சரிவுகளால் உருவாவது கிளாசியல் (Glacial) ஏரி (உ.ம்: சந்திராடால் ஏரி-இமாச்சலம்). கடலோர இயக்கங்களால் உருவாவது கோஸ்டல் (Coastal) ஏரி (உ.ம்: பழவேற்காடு ஏரி-சென்னை).

ஆனால், மனிதனால் உருவாக்கப்பட்ட ஏரிகளே அதிகம். இந்தியாவில் 2,52,848 ஏரிகள், குளங்கள் உள்ளன. தமிழகம், ஆந்திரம், கர்நாடகம் ஆகிய மாநிலங்களில் மட்டும் 1,66,283 ஏரிகள் உள்ளன. சரி, மனிதன் ஏரிகளை உருவாக்க வேண்டிய அவசியம் என்ன? மனிதன் முதலில் மழையை மட்டுமே நம்பி விவசாயம் செய்தான். மழை இல்லாதபோது மழை நீரை சேமிக்க ஆறுகளின் அருகே சிறு நீர் நிலைகளை ஏற்படுத்தினான். இதுவே ஏரியின் தொடக்கக் காலம். அடுத்ததாக ஆற்றில் இருந்து நீர் நிலைகளுக்குத் தண்ணீர் கொண்டுவர ஆற்றின் குறுக்கும் நெடுக்குமாக சவுக்கு, மூங்கில் கம்புகளை அடித்தார்கள். அவற்றின் இடையே கோரை மற்றும் நாணல் புற்களைக் கொண்டு அடைத்து, களிமண் பூசி சுவர்போல தடுப்பு ஏற்படுத்தினார்கள். இதன் பெயர் கொரம்பு. கொரம்பில் நீர் நிரம்பியபோது கால்வாய்கள் அமைத்து உயரமான இடங்களில் இருந்த குளங்களுக்கு நீரைப் பாய்ச்சினார்கள். இதுவே பிற்காலத்தில் அணைகள் அமைய அடிப்படையாக அமைந்தது.

பழந்தமிழர் நீர் நிலைகளை இலஞ்சி, வாவி, நளினி, கயம், கண்மாய், ஏரி, கோட்டகம், கேணி, குளம், மலங்கன், கிடங்கு, குட்டம், வட்டம், தடாகம், மடு, ஓடை, பொய்கை, சலந்தரம் என்று அழைத்தனர். அப்போது நீர் நிலைகளை உருவாக்குவது ஒரு மன்னனின் தலையாயக் கடமையாக கருதப்பட்டது. இதைத்தான் பாண்டியன் நெடுஞ்செழியனிடம் குடபுலவியனார்,

‘நிலன்நெளி மருங்கின் நீர்நிலை பெருகத்
தட்டோரம்ம இவண்தட் டோரே
தள்ளாதோர் இவண்தள்ளா தோரே’

(புறநானூறு 18) என்று பாடினார். அதாவது, ‘எங்கெல்லாம் நிலம் பள்ளமாக இருக்கிறதோ அங்கெல்லாம் கரை அமைத்து நீர் நிலைகள் உருவாக்கிய மன்னர்களே இந்த உலகில் தங்களது பெயரை நிலை நிறுத்திக்கொள்வார்கள்’ என்கிறார் குடபுலவியனார். அதேபோல 10 வயது முதல் 80 வயது வரை குடிமராமத்துப் பணி செய்வது கடமையாக கருதப்பட்டது. இப்படியாக நீர் நிலைகளை உருவாக்குவதும் பராமரிப்பதும் பழந்தமிழர் வாழ்வோடு ஒன்றியதாக இருந்தது.

நம் முன்னோர் ஏனோதானோவென்று ஏரிகளை வெட்டிவிடவில்லை. இன்றைய பொறியியல் தொழில்நுட்பங்களுக்கு எல்லாம் சவால் விடுபவை அவை. பாண்டியன் மூன்றாம் ராஜசிம்மன் கட்டிய ராஜசிம்ம மங்கலம் ஏரி உட்பட, தமிழகத்தின் பாரம்பரிய ஏரிகளைக் கழுகுக் கண் கொண்டு பார்த்தால் அவை பிறை நிலவின் வடிவில் இருப்பதைக் காணலாம். குறிப்பாக, பழந்தமிழர் ஏரிகளை 8-ம் நாள் பிறை வடிவில் அமைத்தார்கள். ஏரிகள் இந்த வடிவத்தில் அமைவதால் கரையின் நீளம் குறைவாகவும், அதேசமயம் அதிக நீர்க் கொள்ளளவு கொண்டதாகவும் இருந்தன. இது சிக்கனமான வடிவமைப்பு முறை. இதைத்தான் சங்கப் புலவர் கபிலர்,

‘அறையும் பொறையும் மணந்த தனைய
எண்நாள் திங்கள் அணைய கொடுங்கரைத்
தென்நீர்ச் சிறுகுளம் கீழ்வது மாதோ
தேர்வன் பாரிதன் பறம்பு நாடே’

என்று பாடினார்.

ஏரியை வடிவமைத்தப் பிறகு அதிலிருந்து தண்ணீர் வெளியேற்ற கண்டுபிடித்த தொழில்நுட்பம்தான் ‘மடை’. அந்த மடைகளை அமைக்க முதலில் பனை மரங்கள் பயன்படுத்தப்பட்டன. முதிர்ந்த பனை மரத்தை ‘வாய்ச்சு’ என்கிற கருவியால் வெட்டுவார்கள். மரம் வெட்டுப்படாமல் நெருப்புத் தெறிக்க வேண்டும். அதுதான் மடைக்கு உகந்த மரம். வைரம் பாய்ந்த கட்டை. அப்படியான மரங்களைத் தேர்வு செய்து, அதன் உள்தண்டை நீக்கிவிடுவார்கள். உறுதியான நீண்ட குழாய் தயார். இதனை ஏரிக் கரையின் அடியாழத்தில் பதித்து, அதன் உள் ஓட்டையில் கோரை, நாணல், களிமண் கலந்து அடைத்துவிடுவார்கள். இதுதான் ஆரம்பகால மடை. பின்பு பாறை மற்றும் மரச் சட்டங்களில் மடைகள் உருவாக்கப்பட்டன.

வெள்ளக் காலங்களில் மடைகளைத் திறப்பதற்கு என்றே ஆட்கள் இருந்தார்கள். மடைகளைத் திறப்பது சாதாரண விஷயமல்ல; உயிரைப் பணயம் வைக்கும் சாகசப் பணி இது. வெள்ளக் காலங்களில் ஏரியில் தண்ணீர் நிரம்பி வழியும். கரை வெடிக்கக் காத்திருக்கும். நேரம் கடந்தால் ஊரே அழிந்துவிடும். வெள்ளத்துக்குப் பயந்து மக்கள் ஊருக்கு வெளியே ஒதுங்கிவிடுவார்கள். அப்போது ஒரே ஒருவர் மட்டும் ஏரிக் கரைக்குச் செல்வார். கடல்போல கொந்தளிக்கும் ஏரிக்குள் குதிப்பார். நீரில் மூழ்கி, மூச்சடக்கி, கரையின் அடியாழத்தில் இருக்கும் மடையின் அடைப்பை திறந்துவிடுவார். மடை திறந்ததும் புயல் வேகத்தில் வெளியேறும் வெள்ளம். அதேவேகத்தில் வெள்ளம் அதை திறப்பவரையும் இழுத்துச் செல்ல முற்படும். அதன் வேகத்தில் இருந்து தப்புவது மிகவும் சிரமம்.

மடையைத் திறக்க ஒருவர் உள்ளே மூழ்கும்போதே உயிர் பிழைத்தால் உண்டு என்று கடவுளை வேண்டிக்கொண்டுதான் அனுப்புவார்கள். மூழ்குபவர் மனைவி, குழந்தைகளிடம் எல்லாம் ஆற்றாமையுடன் விடைப் பெற்றுக்கொண்டுதான் ஏரிக்குள் இறங்குவார். இப்படி மடை திறக்கச் சென்று மீண்டு வந்தவர் பலர். மாண்டுபோனவர் பலர். தியாகிகளான இவர்களைப் பற்றி எந்தக் குறிப்புகளோ, கல்வெட்டுகளோ வரலாற்றில் எதுவுமில்லாமல் போனதுதான் சோகம். இவர்கள் ‘மடையர்கள்’என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டார்கள்.

மனதை தொட்டுச் சொல்லுங்கள், இனியும் யாரையாவது ‘மடையா’ என்று திட்டுவீர்கள் நீங்கள்?

Source…..டி.எல்.சஞ்சீவிகுமார் in http://www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

Message for the Day….” Strive to light Your own Lamp from the Universal Light of Love First…”

You can light more than thousand candles from a single lamp. Remember only a burning lamp or candle can be used to light other candles. An unlit candle cannot light the other unlit candles. So too only the one who earned wisdom can enlighten others who are in ignorance. One who is not illumined cannot illumine others who are dwelling in the darkness of maya:So you must strive to light your own lamp from the Universal Light of Love and from there transmit illumination to all who seek and strive. All lamps shine alike, since they are all sparks of that Param-jyothi, the Universal Luminosity, which is God. Lamps are many but light is one. Every patch of water on earth has the reflection of the sun in it but the original sun is one. Just as the one sun is seen in a million pots, lakes or wells the one same Divine (Paramjyothi) shines as wisdom in a million hearts.

Sathya Sai Baba

Simple Cleaning Tricks for Household ….

Cleaning your home usually involves harsh, smelly chemicals that assault your sense of smell, dry out your skin, and leave you feeling like you live in a science lab.

The natural methods below not only work just as well without those abrasive side effects, some actually work even better. Say goodbye to working up a sweat scrubbing away and let these simple hacks take care of the hard work for you. Everything from the bathroom to your laundry will benefit from these awesome tricks.

 Revive your musty shower curtain.

Revive your musty shower curtain.

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Toss it in the washing machine with a few old towels to help scrub off all the mildew and other ickiness. Just do a normal wash in warm water and hang to dry.

 Clear out drain buildup without harsh chemicals.

Clear out drain buildup without harsh chemicals.

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Pour one cup of baking soda followed by one cup of white vinegar and allow to fizz for five to ten minutes. Rinse with boiling hot water.

 De-grime your shower head.

De-grime your shower head.

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Use a Ziplock bag large enough to fit over the entire shower head and fill it with white vinegar. Tie it over the shower head, making sure it’s fully submerged, and allow to sit overnight. Rinse with water.

Toilet brushes need to be cleaned, too.

Toilet brushes need to be cleaned, too.

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Pour one cup of washing soda, a half-cup hydrogen peroxide, and half a cup of white vinegar into your toilet bowl and leave your brush to sit in it for a few hours. Flush to rinse.

Get your mirrors and windows drunk.

Get your mirrors and windows drunk.

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Okay, not really, but using a mixture of one part vodka, one part white vinegar, and two parts distilled water will give you a streak-free clean.

Stop scrubbing your microwave.

Stop scrubbing your microwave.

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Fill a bowl with water and lemon juice (or vinegar) and heat it for about five minutes. Once it’s cooled down, you’ll be able to wipe away all the stains without a struggle.

Keep your wood cutting boards naturally sanitized

Keep your wood cutting boards naturally sanitized.

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Just rub a sliced lemon over the whole thing, then let it dry before wiping off any residue.

Toothpaste doesn’t just make your teeth shiny.

Toothpaste doesn't just make your teeth shiny.

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It can also get rid of the pesky tarnish on silver without having to resort to smelly chemical solutions.

Clean hard-to-reach glassware nooks with rice.

Clean hard-to-reach glassware nooks with rice.

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Decorative wine bottles, flower vases, and other items with small openings can be cleaned using one-quarter cup of uncooked rice, a splash of water, and a few drops of dish soap. Simply give ’em a good shake!

Give your appliances a smooth shine with baby oil.

Give your appliances a smooth shine with baby oil.

It cuts through all the dust and grease and leaves metal appliances shining for up to a week.

Soak up carpet spills with salt

Soak up carpet spills with salt.

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It’s best to get to the stain as quickly as possible and pour lots (LOTS) of salt on it. Let it stay for a few days, adding more if necessary, then vacuum up.

Or iron the stain away.

Or iron the stain away.

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Put a damp cloth over the stain and iron on a high setting to give it a good steam clean.

Make your mildewy towels as fresh as new.

Make your mildewy towels as fresh as new.

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Wash them with vinegar on hot to kill the stale smell and make them fluffy as well as fresh-scented.

Speaking of washing machines, clean those, too.

Speaking of washing machines, clean those, too.

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Run an empty load with as much water and on the highest heat setting as possible. Once it’s filled, add a quart of white vinegar and one cup of washing or baking soda (or whatever you can fit into the front-loading detergent drawer), then run again with just water.

Gather the dust from your fans in a pillowcase instead of your face.

Gather the dust from your fans in a pillowcase instead of your face.

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Wrap the pillow case around the blade and wipe away the dust on the bottom and top of the blade at the same time.

When your guests forget to use coasters, clean the wood rings with olive oil and salt.

When your guests forget to use coasters, clean the wood rings with olive oil and salt.

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Apply a mixture of olive oil and salt to each stain and allow to sit for an hour or so before wiping away. It might not look like it worked at first, but just wait and reapply if necessary.

Get rid of your kids’ graffiti from wood furniture.

Get rid of your kids' graffiti from wood furniture.

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A washcloth soaked in rubbing alcohol will easily wipe away their artwork on most wood surfaces.

 

(via Nourishing Joy, Bustle)

Source…. http://www.justdiy.com/cleaning-tricks

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Let the Field of our Heart be Pure and Sacred thro Good and Holy actions to Yield the Fruit of Divine Wisdom…”

It is not easy for the human mind, immersed in worldly concerns to turn to God. It is only when the mind is transformed and brought under the control of the Soul (Atma) that the body experiences Divine Bliss (Ananda). The means by which the mind is transformed is devotion (Bhakthi – intense love for God). Progressively, turn your mind towards God until it merges in God. Meditation, repetition of the names of the Lord, group singing of devotional songs (bhajans), reading of scriptures and other such activities are designed only to purify the mind so that it can concentrate on God. As a field has to be properly ploughed and prepared for sowing so as to reap a good harvest, the field of our heart has to be rendered pure and sacred through good and holy actions and spiritual discipline(sadhana) if it is to yield the fruit of Divine Wisdom.

Sathya Sai Baba

This IT Analyst Started a Tea Stall on Bangalore’s Footpaths. For a Very Special Reason….

It’s 5:00 pm on a Saturday evening and work is just getting started for a group of 12 to 15 young people in the BTM area of Bangalore. Standing on a pavement, dressed in white t-shirts, they look more like friends hanging out and unwinding on a weekend. There is laughter, there are interesting discussions, and there is music. But walk closer and you will see the main reason this sidewalk is bustling with energy – it’s tea!

Welcome to the ‘I Support Foundation’ tea stall, one of the most pleasantly offbeat chai shops in Bangalore.

All set and ready to roll!

All set and ready to roll!

There is a small table set up neatly with two thermos flasks, some peanuts, a few earthen pots, and a banner saying ‘I Support Foundation.’ The stall owners welcome you with smiling faces and gratefully take your order – masala or plain tea, earthen cups or paper cups, some peanut masala to go – the choice is yours.

And while you sip, cheerful music from a guitar overcomes the loud honking of cars on the road as one of the team members, Utkarsh, strums along.

Tea plus music

Tea plus music

But this small arrangement is a lot more than just a fun tea stall and a bunch of youngsters whiling away time. Every weekend, volunteers of the ISF organization gather on the sidewalk. Their aim? To spread awareness about autism among as many people as they can with the help of this tea stall.

In a congenial environment created with tea and music, they talk to their customers about autism, its meaning, its presence in India, and more if the curious want to know.

A perfect environment for conversation

A perfect environment for conversation and awareness

Ask ISF’s co-founder Juhi Ramani about her motivation behind starting something like this, and she says, “My brother, 19-year-old Shivam Ramani, lives with autism. I was eight when we found out about his condition. I come from the small city of Raebareli in UP, and at that time, there wasn’t much awareness about autism. It took us five years just to be informed that he is autistic. Then, finding a good school for him was a very big challenge. There were schools, but autistic children need special care, so we had to be very careful in finding the best place where he could study. Growing up, my elder sister and I witnessed these struggles. Hence we decided to do something for such children.”

Thus began ‘I Support Foundation’, a joint venture between 25-year-old Juhi and her sister Bobby Ramani, with the purpose of working for the education and overall development of children living with autism, as well as for underprivileged children.

In January 2014, they started a school in Lucknow where children with autism and underprivileged children could get a chance to study together. Today, the school has 45 children, and a group of special educators and caretakers. Students receive assistance in the form of free education, computer training, career counselling, and sports training, along with basic necessities like clothes and hygiene kits. The caretakers include Juhi’s mother and sister as well. All expenses of the school are taken care of by Bobby, from her own pocket.

While her sister continues to work in UP, Juhi, an IT professional, started a chapter of the Foundation in Bangalore in November 2014.

With a team of about 40 volunteers who came on board with the help of her friends, colleagues and social media, Juhi has successfully set up an organised base in the city. –

Juhi Ramani with her students

Juhi Ramani with her students These are the different activities the Foundation conducts: –

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Sessions about child sexual abuse for underprivileged children and parents of children with autism. Juhi and her team of volunteers go from school to school, talking to as many children, parents and teachers as they can, to make them aware about CSA and how to fight it.

“For underprivileged kids, we take sessions with interactive videos and explanations, and then provide them with a feedback form where they can write about any issues they might be facing and are hesitant to talk about to anyone. After this, we also have one on one sessions with those children and their guardians,” explains Juhi.

Career counselling sessions. These are also conducted in the form of sessions at different schools where children get to learn about the various career options they will have after school or college and how they can prepare for them.

“We are doing this because many children remain uninformed about the kind of options they have, and hence miss out on opportunities. For such sessions, we visit orphanages too.”

Football training for children with autism, and computer classes for all children at different low income schools, organised by the volunteers with their own laptops.

However, in order to fund these sessions and activities, the Foundation requires money.

The volunteers come for the stall every weekend

The volunteers come for the stall every weekend

Juhi and the volunteers initially pitched in from their own pockets, but in March this year, Juhi came up with a unique idea for raising funds. ISF started the sidewalk tea stalls with two purposes in mind – raising funds and creating a platform to make people aware about autism.

“Every weekend, about 10-12 of us gather at any one person’s place and prepare tea together. After that, we reach the venue, set up the stall, and get started. Plain tea is sold for Rs. 10 and masala tea for Rs. 15. And sometimes, people who come to the stall as customers, end up getting associated with us as volunteers,” says a proud Juhi.

They often set up the stall on different sidewalks in BTM itself, but sometimes shift to regions like Koramangala too to increase their reach.

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“I came across Juhi through a common friend, and before being associated with ISF, I did not know much about autism. Working here is a very different experience. It is not like a task but more of a passion. I get to do what I love and, as a by-product, my work also makes a difference in society,” says Karthik, a volunteer who comes from a sales background and looks at the financial and business aspects of the Foundation.

“Whenever I have a commitment on Saturdays and Sundays, it is mostly a commitment for ISF,” says Ajitesh, another volunteer.

“Here I have realised that it’s not just monetary help that needs to be given to society, you can also give time and that makes a lot of difference.”

A lot more than money

A lot more than money

According to Juhi, ISF earns profits between Rs. 1,100 and 1,600 daily from the tea stall. The team conducts activities and sessions during the mornings, and sets up the stalls in the evenings. To date, ISF has visited 15 schools and interacted with about 5,000 children. “The best part is that the volunteers enjoy this a lot and are excited about being here every weekend,” says Juhi.

“It is very important to spread awareness about autism. People don’t know much about it, and it is very difficult for parents and siblings like me when people look at our loved ones differently. We have to bridge the gap,” concludes Juhi.

Source………Tanaya Singh….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

The curious case of the Google self-driving car and the police officer…!!!

Never mind the mystery behind The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, things just got a whole lot weirder today when Google shared with the world a picture of a police officer, seemingly in California, pulling over one of its self-driving cars— for going too slow.

google-car-police

Now, I’m surprised that at just about this point in the picture the officer’s head didn’t implode. (OK, OK, there was probably a human in there somewhere.)

“Driving too slowly? Bet humans don’t get pulled over for that too often,” Google wrote it a posting on its self-driving car Google+ page. “We’ve capped the speed of our prototype vehicles at 25mph for safety reasons. We want them to feel friendly and approachable, rather than zooming scarily through neighborhood streets.”

“Like this officer, people sometimes flag us down when they want to know more about our project. After 1.2 million miles of autonomous driving (that’s the human equivalent of 90 years of driving experience), we’re proud to say we’ve never been ticketed!”

It’s also another fascinating example of how technology is racing ahead of regulations. Yes, Google’s cars are road-legal (at least along the roads they drive), but in general the laws around self-driving cars have a long way to go.

As Re/code points out, the California Department of Motor Vehicles still doesn’t have a law in place for what happens when a self-driving car is pulled over and all the seats are empty inside. Presumably, there was someone sitting in the front seat of Google’s car, though the picture doesn’t reveal that person.

One thing that came to my mind when I saw the picture was how the cars know to pull over when a police car hails them — assuming there’s no driver. Clearly that will have to be programmed in, if laws are eventually passed to allow vehicles on the road without a human inside.

It would be interesting to know if Google’s self-driving cars can already respond to police sirens, lights, or other requests that it pull over. “I’m pretty sure the car can understand that cops and fire engines behave differently than regular cars, I’m just not sure if they’re capable of pulling over for them just yet,” Christopher Espejo commented on the Google+ posting.

But in a tongue-in-cheek comment that highlights just how absurd (and cool) this tech-driven world of ours is becoming, Ken Hiroshi Clark wrote, “The cop is actually a robot, created by Google. Photo taken by a drone, Google’s, as well.”

Before long, that seems all too likely to come true.

Source….…. http://www.venturebeat.com

Natarajan