How 2 Sikh Men Used Their Turbans to Save a Group of Ganesha Devotees from Drowning ….

A group of young men lost balance in a canal while immersing Ganesha idols. Two Sikh men instantly opened their turbans and threw them towards the drowning people to save their lives. This is how they did it.

Inderpal Singh and Kamalpreet Singh, two Sikh men from Sangrur in Punjab, set aside their religious code, and saved the life of a group of drowning people with the help of their turbans.

sikh men

Picture for representation only. Photo Credit: Chris Goldberg/Flickr

On Friday, a group of young men, aged between 18-25 years, had gone for the immersion of Ganesha idols in a canal in Sular Gharat village, located in Sunam Tehsil of Sangrur District. They were at the ghaat when a sudden gush of water made them lose their balance and they slipped into the canal.

34-year-old Inderpal Singh was there along with 25-year-old Kamalpreet Singh, amidst the crowd that had gathered at the bank to take part in the immersion ceremony. When Inderpal noticed that some devotees were drowning, he took a life-saving decision in a matter for few second. Taking off his nine meter long turban, he hurled it towards them so they could take support and come back to the bank.

“First, five youths slipped into the canal while immersing the idols. They had fallen very near to the canal bridge and shouted for help. I immediately spotted a wire lying near the bridge and rescued two of them with the help of the wire. However, three others were still caught in a current,” said Inderpal, according to a PTI report.

After this, three other people jumped in to rescue those who were still struggling in the water. But all of them got stuck in the intense whirlpool. It was then that Inderpal threw in his turban, and pulled the three men out. Kamalpreet also followed him, and directed his turban towards remaining three people, pulling them out.

After this, three other people jumped in to rescue those who were still struggling in the water. But all of them got stuck in the intense whirlpool. It was then that Inderpal threw in his turban, and pulled the three men out. Kamalpreet also followed him, and directed his turban towards remaining three people, pulling them out. Thanks to these quick thinking and selfless men, an impending disaster could be avoided. –

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

Natarajan

3 Coimbatore Boys Have a Plan to Tackle Hunger. It’s so Good They Bagged a $1000 Grant for It….

Three young boys from Coimbatore have just won an international grant for their project, No Food Waste, which focuses on collecting excess food from events and parties and then distributing among the needy. Here’s more.

In India, over 214 million citizens struggle with hunger, in spite of huge quantities of food being thrown away at various events like weddings and parties.

While many of us still wonder about what can be the solution for this problem, three young boys in Coimbatore have come up with an interesting idea to address the issue.

Meet Padmanaban Gopalan and his two friends, Sudhakar and Dinesh, who started an initiative called No Food Waste. They collect excess food from events like weddings and parties and then distribute it among the hungry in Coimbatore.

nfw

“One day a gaunt elderly lady, emaciated to the bones in a torn saree, approached me for alms, just as I left a wedding reception hall where food was carelessly discarded on used plates simply because the guests could not finish. I couldn’t stand by and watch anymore. I had to do something about it,” says Padmanabhan.

Photo: Pollination Project

Padmanabhan and his friends runs a volunteer-staffed hotline for wedding, banquet, and school organizers, who wish to donate their excess food to the needy.

This effort by the trio has now also received support from a US Based NGO, Pollination Project, who have selected No Food Waste as the best initiative among many others nominated from across the world. The team got a $1000 grant from the NGO to work further on the project. Check out their Facebook page for more details.

The winning organization was finalised based on public voting, out of the 150 applicants that the NGO received.

Padmanaban, the boy behind the initiative.

Photo: Twitter

The voting closed on July 17 and No Food Waste won by a margin of 4,000 votes. Generally, winners are chosen after scrutinising the project, but because it was the 1,000th grant, the NGO authorities planned to launch a public voting system.

Prior to this, the team used to spend money out of their own pockets to package the food and deliver it. They tried to contact many sponsors, but no one took them seriously.

To date, the team has donated about 5,100 excess meals to families and individuals. Padmanabhan now wants to expand this initiative to five nearby cities, with an aim of feeding over 5,000 people every month.

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Photo: Facebook

Padmanabhan is also planning to launch a mobile application that will enable people to locate areas where extra food can be donated. To spread the word about the initiative, he also visits schools to conduct No Food Waste audits and spread awareness about the cause. He has already helped over 60 local schools in reducing their food waste.

Kudos to the trio for addressing a big issue in such an amazing way, and congratulations for a much deserved victory.

Source….www.thebetterindia.com

Natarajan

 

The 79-Year Old Who Knocks on the Doors of the Rich to Collect Medicines for the Poor ….

At his age, he walks 5-7 kms a day collecting leftover medicines from the rich in Delhi. Meet Medicine Baba, the selfless man who dreams of setting up a medicine bank for those who cannot afford treatment.

Omkarnath Sharma, better known as Medicine Baba, is a retired blood bank technician on a very difficult mission. He wants to start a free medicine bank for the poor and needy.

And for this, he walks around the streets of Delhi, knocking on one door after another, collecting medicines from the upper- and middle-class houses in the city.

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Omkarnath Sharma collecting medicines

Bachi dawai daan me, na ki kudedaan me. Medicine baba ka ek hi sapna, gareebo ka medicine bank ho apna.” (Leftover medicines should be donated, not discarded. Medicine Baba has only one dream, that the poor should have a medicine bank of their own).

This is Medicine Baba’s daily call at the doors of the well-heeled people of Delhi, those who don’t even often know that they have an abundance of unused medicines lying around in their homes.

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Medicine Baba documenting the details of his collection

At an age when many people choose to rest and spend time with their families, Medicine Baba has no plans of hanging up his shoes. He has been working like this since 2008, when an under-construction Delhi Metro bridge in Laxmi Nagar collapsed and Omkarnath witnessed many injured people suffering because of the lack of adequate medical care.

He saw how the nearest hospital turned away patients saying it did not have the required medicines. For no fault of their own, the injured people had to rush here and there to find a place that could provide proper treatment. Omkarnath was shocked.

He found this situation painfully ironic—on the one hand there were no medicines in the hospitals for people who were dying and on the other there were large quantities of usable medicines being discarded by households every day.

He wanted to do something that had never been done before—to collect these medicines and create a bank of medicines for the poor. And so began his journey.

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People come in to take medicines from Omkarnath for free

Omkarnath goes out every morning, takes a bus, and visits a different neighbourhood of Delhi each day. Here he walks around for about 5-7 kms, collecting unused prescription and non-prescription medicines from houses. Over the years, he has been successful in gaining some regular contributors, who sometimes call him to say that he can come and collect the medicines.

Ask him if he has any difficulty walking around so much at this age, and he says, “It is difficult, but if you are worried about difficulties and challenges, how will you work?”

He scans the collected medicines carefully, and maintains a record of all of them. Some of these medicines are stored in a small room he has rented next to his house in Manglapuri, New Delhi. Those who cannot afford medicines can visit him here between 4 and 6 pm.

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Medicines in his collection that can be useful to hospitals (like those required for the treatment of cancer), are donated to hospitals like AIIMS, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia Hospital, Deen Dayal Upadhayaya Hospital, Lady Irwin Medical College, and a few ashrams and dispensaries in Delhi. He says that he donates medicines worth Rs. 4-6 lakhs every month.

Medicine Baba says his main mission is not just to collect medicines. The priority is to create awareness among people so they think twice before discarding useful prescription medicines.

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Out on his mission

For himself personally, the satisfaction that he experiences on seeing people get healed with the help of medicines he donates, is enough. He is proud of his work and this is what gives him the inspiration to keep moving forward despite his age. “I feel so happy when I see them going to work all healed and healthy,” he says

As a retired person, Omkarnath faces difficult times trying to make ends meet sometimes. His family includes his wife, a son, a daughter, and a granddaughter. He manages his work with the help of donations he receives from people from time to time. Other than that, he is also sometimes seen in buses and metros, letting people know about patients who need financial help.

If he manages to collect some money this way, he uses it to donate medical equipment like oxygen tanks, hospital beds, etc.

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Medicine Baba is a blessing for many people. At present, he is trying to help some people suffering from cancer and kidney ailments. He is trying his best to arrange money for their treatment. Moving around in Delhi, wearing an orange shirt that highlights his phone number and his mission in bold, Medicine Baba is a source of hope for many. We can only wish that his dream of setting up a medicine bank gets fulfilled.

To know more about Omkarnath and donate to his mission, you can visit his website here or write to him at helpingbaba@gmail.com or you can call him on +91 9250243298.

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

Natarajan

” I Earned a Lot @ 13, It is a lot More @24…” Meet Ankit Fadia…

At 30 Ankit Fadia has been appointed as one of the brand ambassadors for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Digital India programme.

Fadia, who became famous as an ethical hacker, wrote his first book at 14. By the time he was 24, he was working on his 15th book on how to hack into Windows Vista and Windows 7.

Later he also helped India’s investigation agencies with the 26/11 terror attacks in Mumbai.

We bring you an interview with Ankit Fadia that was first published on December 4, 2009.

Initially it was the forbidden fruit that attracted me,” says 24-year-old Ankit Fadia who wrote his first book on ethical hacking when he was 14, studying in Class IX at Delhi’s DPS R K Puram. Till date he has authored 14 books on ethical hacking and the 15th one on how to hack into Windows Vista and Windows 7 is in the works.

For the record Ankit’s first book The Unofficial Guide to Ethical Hacking has sold more than 7.5 million copies worldwide and is still counting.

In simple terms hacking is all about gaining unauthorised entry into someone’s computer and either stealing confidential data or misusing the data for criminal activities,” explains Ankit from inside MTV’s Mumbai studio as he, in his new avatar, is co-hosting a 10-minute show What The Hack on the channel.

Ankit Fadia

Ethical hacking,” says he, “is all about hacking for a good purpose”. “It is about helping governments, intelligence agencies and corporates tackle espionage, crack on terrorist activities and prevent cyber criminals from misusing confidential data.”

And in his 11-year career as a consultant Ethical Hacker he has helped intelligence agencies and police across the world — including India’s after 26/11 terror attacks and serial bomb blasts in Ahmedabad in July 2008 — nail cyber crimes.

“I’ve traveled to almost 50 countries across the world because of the nature of my job,” says Ankit. His ambition, though, is to travel to all the 195 countries in the world and he is sure he will do it one day.

Today Ankit travels in India and abroad for more than 20 days in a month. His data card, laptop and blackberry act as his office.

In an interview with Prasanna D Zore, Ankit talked about what attracted him to hacking, how he helps various government agencies crack cyber terrorism and what kind of career opportunities are available to ethical hackers.

What attracted you to ethical hacking and when did you start?

Initially it was the forbidden fruit that attracted me. I was always attracted to the power of being able to do things that most people could not or the power to access things that most people cannot. So I started hacking into a friend’s computer or snooped on their emails for fun.

That’s how my love for hacking began. People always say that the forbidden fruit is always sweet. The more somebody discourages you from doing a thing the more you feel like doing it. That’s how it all began for me. Because of the success of my first book I realised that what was my hobby I could absolutely convert that into a profession as well.

How did you manage to write your first book at 13?

I got a computer at home when I was 10 and I got interested in computer hacking when I was 12. While I was learning the tricks of the trade I realised that in India there are no books or resources that can help one learn hacking. This kind of inspired me to write my first book on hacking when I was 14. The book sold 7.5 million copies and has got translated into 11 different languages. That was A one big milestone that kind of inspired me to turn my hobby into my profession.

Was it very difficult for you to write at such a young age?

It wasn’t very difficult actually. I had started my own Web site where I wrote I was writing tutorials on different computer hacking techniques and the feedback was very positive. My readers asked me to write a book on the subject. Then I decided to convert my tutorials into a book by adding more information.

When I set to write a book I had not told any of my family or friends about it. When I finished it I called my mom and told her I have written a book on computer hacking. She thought I was playing a prank on her. Obviously, she believed me only when I showed her the manuscript.

What was McMillan’s (the publisher for his first book) first reaction when your mother told them that you wanted to publish a book?

My mom told them that my son has written a book on computer hacking and we want to get it published. The person on the line asked her if I was a professor in a college. My mom told them that I was in school. The editor then asked if I was a teacher in the school. And my mom was like he’s studying in Class IX.

The editors Sumesh Sharma and Joseph Mathai then asked my mom to bring the manuscript and author to their office to talk about the matter. Later Sumesh told me that when he received a call from my mother he thought somebody was playing a prank and he did not believe us. He thought that nobody would show up.

I became the youngest author of a technical book in the history of McMillan’s authors worldwide.

How did it feel after your first book was published?

I felt good but I was only a small kid then. So I didn’t realise the consequences of failure or success.

Till now I’ve written 14 books dealing with different topics on ethical hacking. My next book will be on how to hack into Microsoft Windows Vista and Windows 7. The fact that these two operating systems (OSs) were touted as the most secure is not true at all. You can hack into Windows Vista and Windows 7 pretty easily.

What kind of threats are we looking at from social networking sites, SNSs?

The youth in India spend a lot of their time on SNSs like Orkut, Facebook, Twitter etc. What people don’t realise is these SNSs come with their own set of breaches that can be real threats to your identity on the web.

Today the latest viruses are coming through SNSs. What happens is you get a message from your best friend and you trust it without thinking twice. And that message will be something like ‘hey, are you there in this video?’ You get curious about what is this video in which you have been caught. When you click on this link it takes you to You Tube where it plays on the screen and stops midway. It then asks you to download a flash plug in, which being a common occurrence, you click on it. But what gets installed on your computer is a virus.

What’s the protection against such threats?

Only awareness. Until now the anti-virus companies have not upgraded their systems to give protection to users who are on SNSs.

Is What The Hack all about creating this awareness?

What The Hack is not about hacking, not about security. It’s about cool stuff that you can do with your computers and Internet technologies. It’s humorous and light-hearted but we also teach interesting things. It’s neither too technical nor too basic.

You have also assisted a lot of intelligence agencies crack cyber crime cases. Tell us something about it.

At different points in my life I’ve worked with different police departments, the CBI and other intelligence agencies. At 15 I worked with the CBI on the India-Pakistan cyber terrorism war. Pakistani hackers were defacing Indian Web sites so I helped find out who these hackers were, what tools were they using and who were funding these guys by hacking into their e-mail accounts.

Immediately after that 9/11 happened in the US, and the US government got in touch with me via the CBI on steganography, a technology which allows text messages to be hidden in photographs.

More recently, after the 26/11 attacks in Mumbai the Navi Mumbai police, working with the Anti Terrorism Squad, contacted me as I live there. I was also involved in finding out who was trespassing on Ken Haywood’s wi-fi account after the blasts in Ahmedabad in July 2008.

In 26/11, voice over Internet protocol (VOIP) was used for the first time against India for terror attacks. The problem was the data packets that run on this protocol are encoded which makes it difficult for investigating agencies to break it down, then reverse engineer it and recreate the communication. I worked on these two weeks after the attacks because I was called in only then.

What was this experience like?

Two things startled me: First I was shocked with the preparedness/training level of some of the police officials who were in the team. The second thing was that it was just shocking to be on the receiving end of a terror attack wherein the terrorists were very tech savvy. Terrorists today are ordinary people who live amongst us and live like you and I do.

What was your advice to Mumbai police? Did you convince them about the new face of terrorism and the tools required to handle tech savvy terrorists?

The problem is that there are a lot of egos involved. There is a power centre that you got to respect and you got to be very careful what you say to them. But I told them that I am always available for training or any investigation that happens. I run a one-month course called Ankit Fadia Certified Ethical Hacking Course, AFCEHC. This course is based on the guidelines enumerated by the Ministry of Information Technology. We train more than 15,000 people a year and many of them have been police officials in different parts of India.

What are the career opportunities that one can look at as an ethical hacker?

Every company, irrespective of what they do, need to have ethical hackers. The maximum demand for ethical hackers comes from financial institutions and banks. They are also high in demand from the IT companies, BPOs, KPOs and LPOs. Telecommunication companies also hire them. Hotels, aviation companies, retailers all of them need ethical hackers to prevent misuse of data as well as online credit card transactions.

Interestingly, most of these industries have been hiring ethical hackers in good numbers to protect their information systems and infrastructure.

As far as remuneration is concerned those who work full time are paid monthly salaries and those who work as consultants are paid on a per-day, per-hour basis. However, consultants make more money than employees as ethical hackers but then it also depends on your skills and value add.

The starting salaries range for ethical hackers in India is between Rs 25,000 to Rs 35,000 per month and outside of India US $ 50,000 to 90,000 per year.

Also, most companies don’t advertise for ethical hackers because the word hacker still carries some stigma. Companies post advertisements for network engineers, system administrators or network specialists.

Lots and lots of my students write to me saying that they have been hired by big companies as such but what they actually do is work as ethical hackers.

What are the courses that you offer that can help people get jobs as cyber security professionals?

We have a one-month certified course called AFCEHC available at all Reliance World outlets that will cost you around Rs 6,999. We also have a one-year postgraduate diploma course on cyber security that is India’s first government accredited/approved certified course with IMT Ghaziabad as my partner. The fee for this distance-learning course is Rs 37,000 per year.

Then there is the two-year master’s degree course in cyber law and cyber security.

You have authored 14 books at 24, with the first one selling more than 7.5 million copies and you also act as a consultant. Can you tell us your net worth? How much do you earn in a year?

It was a lot when I was 13, it’s a lot more at 24.

Image: Ankit Fadia, one of the brand ambassadors for Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Digital India programme

Prasanna D Zore / Rediff.com

Source..www.rediff.com

Natarajan

5 Things you Need to know about India’s First Space Observatory…

This mission will study astronomical phenomena, puts India in select group of nations

Astrosat is compared to NASA’s Hubble telescope. Photograph: ISRO

The Indian Space Research Organisation on Monday successfully launched the Astrosat satellite. Through this launch, India has joined a select group of countries that have their own space observatory satellite.

Here are five things you need to know about Astrosat.

1.
This is India’s first attempt at setting up an observatory in space, a place from where it can study cosmological phenomena.
2.
The mission is aimed at obtaining data that will help in a better understanding of the universe. The mission is to study astronomical phenomena. Astrosat is carrying five payloads, including an ultraviolet imaging telescope.
3.
Astrosat is generally described as India’s version of the Hubble telescope that NASA had put in space in 1990.

But experts say it is not right to call Astrosat India’s Hubble, as the NASA version is 10 times heavier than Astrosat and is said to cost $2.5 billion, while India’s satellite costs around Rs 180 crore.

4.
Astrosat will put ISRO in a very exclusive club of nations that have space-based observatories. Only the United States, European Space Agency, Japan and Russia have such observatories in space..
5.
For the third time an Indian rocket will be launching seven satellites in a single mission. In 2008, ISRO had launched 10 satellites in one go, including India’s Cartosate-2A satellite.

 

Source….www.rediff.com

Natarajan

ISRO Creates History. Launches India’s First Space Observatory – ASTROSAT ….

ISRO has successfully launched India’s first dedicated multi wavelength space observatory – ASTROSAT, which is meant to observe distant celestial objects and to gain a more detailed understanding of our universe.

Right after celebrating the completion of Mangalyaan’s first year in the Martian orbit, the Indian Space Research Organization has set yet another milestone today. ISRO got its name etched in the scientific history of the India with the launch of the country’s first dedicated multi wavelength space observatory – ASTROSAT.

A 50-hour countdown for the launch of the scientific satellite began at 8 am on Saturday.

And the final launch took place at 10 am today from the Satish Dhawan Space Centre in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh. –

Source: Twitter

ASTROSAT is an astronomy observatory, a place from where India can study different cosmological phenomena. It is meant to observe distant celestial objects and to gain a more detailed understanding of our universe.

The speciality of ASTROSAT is that with just a single satellite, it enables simultaneous multi-wavelength observations of many astronomical elements.

The 1,513-kg satellite, estimated to have cost around Rs. 180 crore, was launched by PSLV-C30 into a 650 km orbit inclined at an angle of 6 degree to the equator. This is the 31st flight of India’s Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), and six small satellites of three foreign countries have also been launched along with ASTROSAT. It is for the first time that the PSLV launcher, which has lifted 45 small and mid-sized foreign satellites till date, is carrying four US Nano satellites. The other satellites are from Canada and Indonesia.

The spacecraft control centre at Mission Operations Complex (MOX) of ISRO Telemetry, Tracking and Command Network (ISTRAC) at Bangalore will manage the satellite during its mission life.

While most of ISRO’s spacecraft are for specific applications such as communication, Earth observation and navigation, this is one among the few scientific satellites launched by the country. According to the official release by ISRO, missions of ASTROSAT include the following:

  • To understand high energy processes in binary star systems containing neutron stars and black holes
  • Estimate magnetic fields of neutron stars
  • Study star birth regions and high energy processes in star systems lying beyond our galaxy
  • Detect new briefly bright X-ray sources in the sky
  • Perform a limited deep field survey of the Universe in the Ultraviolet region

ASTROSAT has five payloads which rely on the visible, Ultraviolet and X-rays coming from distant celestial sources.

ASTROSAT in clean room before its integration with PSLV-C30 –

They will gather data for the better understanding of various astrophysical processes occurring in our universe, and will send it to the ground station at MOX. This data will then be processed and distributed by the Indian Space Science Data Centre (ISSDC). While most scientific satellites can observe a narrow range of wavelength band, ASTROSAT will observe universe in the optical, ultraviolet, low and high energy X-ray regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. All major astronomy institutions and some universities in India will also participate in these observations.

The types and functions of the payloads as described by ISRO are as follows:

The Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (UVIT, capable of observing the sky in the Visible, Near Ultraviolet and Far Ultraviolet regions of the electromagnetic spectrum

Large Area X-ray Proportional Counter (LAXPC, is designed for study the variations in the emission of X-rays from sources like X-ray binaries, Active Galactic Nuclei and other cosmic sources.

Soft X-ray Telescope (SXT) is designed for studying how the X-ray spectrum of 0.3-8 keV range coming from distant celestial bodies varies with time.

Cadmium Zinc Telluride Imager (CZTI), functioning in the X-ray region, extends the capability of the satellite to sense X-rays of high energy in 10-100 keV range.

Scanning Sky Monitor(SSM),is intended to scan the sky for long term monitoring of bright X-ray sources in binary stars, and for the detection and location of sources that become bright in X-rays for a short duration of time.

CONGRATULATIONS @isro! PSLV-C30 successfully launches #ASTROSAT into the orbit. pic.twitter.com/3PlK5BLZWR

— Doordarshan National (@DDNational) September 28, 2015

Source……..Tanaya Singh…www.the better india .com

Natarajan

‘டிஜிட்டல்’ தொழில்நுட்பத்தைப் பற்றி ‘ஒரு வரி’ யில் பேசி அசத்திய நரேந்திர மோடி…

கூகுள் சி.இ.ஓ. சுந்தர் பிச்சையுடன் கைகுலுக்கும் பிரதமர் மோடி. | படம்: பிடிஐ.

கூகுள் சி.இ.ஓ. சுந்தர் பிச்சையுடன் கைகுலுக்கும் பிரதமர் மோடி. | படம்: பிடிஐ.

சிலிகான் வேலியில் பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி பேசுகையில், ஒரு வரியில் எல்லோரும் கவரும் வகையில் டிஜிட்டல் தொழில்நுட்பம் பற்றி பல கருத்துகளை தெரிவித்தார். அதைக் கேட்டு பிரபல நிறுவன தலைமை செயல் அதிகாரிகள் (சிஇஓ) ஆச்சரியம் அடைந்தனர்.

* நீங்கள் விழித்திருக்கிறீர்களா, தூங்குகிறீர்களா என்பது இப்போது முக்கியமில்லை.

* நீங்கள் ஆன்லைனில் இருக்கிறீர்களா ஆப் லைனில் இருக்கிறீர்களா என்பது முக்கியம்.

அமெரிக்காவில் சுற்றுப்பயணம் மேற்கொண்டுள்ள பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி சிலிக்கான் வேலியில் நேற்று நடந்த டிஜிட்டல் இந்தியா கூட்டத்தில் பேசினார். கூகுள், மைக்ரோசாப்ட், சிஸ்கோ உட்பட பல முன்னணி நிறுவனங்களைச் சேர்ந்த தலைமை செயல் அதிகாரிகள் உட்பட நூற்றுக்கணக்கானோர் கலந்து கொண்டனர்.

அவர்கள் மத்தியில் மோடி பேசுகையில், டிஜிட்டல் தொழில்நுட்ப புரட்சி பற்றியும் அதன் பயன்கள் குறித்தும் பல கருத்துகளை ஒரு ஒரு வரியாக எல்லோரையும் கவரும் வகையில் குறிப்பிட்டார். அதன் விவரம் வருமாறு:

* உலகில் ஒவ்வொருவரின் வாழ்க்கை முறையையும் மாற்றியுள்ளது சிலிகான் வேலி.

* உங்களில் பலரை டெல்லி, நியூயார்க், முகநூல், ட்விட்டர், இன்ஸ்டாகிராம் ஆகியவற்றில் சந்தித்துள்ளேன்.

* முகநூல் உட்பட இவைதான் நமது உலகின் அண்டை வீட்டாராக உள்ளன.

* முகநூல் மட்டும் ஒரு நாடாக இருந்திருந்தால், அதுதான் மக்கள் தொகை அதிகம் கொண்ட 3-வது நாடாக இருந்திருக்கும்.

* கூகுள் ஆசிரியர்களை குறைத்துவிட்டது. மிகவும் விரும்பப்படுவதாக உள்ளது.

* ட்விட்டர் எல்லோரையும் நிருபர்களாக்கி உள்ளது.

* போக்குவரத்து விளக்குகள் வேலை செய்ய சிஸ்கோவின் ரவுட்டர்கள்தான் சிறந்தவை.

* நீங்கள் விழித்திருக்கிறீர்களா, தூங்குகிறீர்களா என்பது இப்போது முக்கியமில்லை.

* நீங்கள் ஆன்லைனில் இருக்கிறீர்களா ஆப் லைனில் இருக்கிறீர்களா என்பது முக்கியம்.

* நமது இளைஞர்களின் விவாதம் எல்லாம் ஆண்ட்ராய்டு, ஐஓஎஸ் அல்லது விண்டோஸ் பற்றியதாகவே உள்ளது.

* இவை எல்லாம் சிலிகான் வேலியில் உள்ள உங்களால்தான் சாத்தியமாகி இருக்கின்றன.

இவ்வாறு மோடி பேசினார்.

அவர் ஒவ்வொரு வரிகளாக சொல்லச் சொல்ல, பிரபல நிறுவனங்களின் அதிகாரிகள் ஆரவாரம் செய்து மகிழ்ச்சியை வெளிப்படுத்தினர்.

தன்னுடைய சொந்த வாழ்க்கையை உதாரணமாகக் கூறி, இந்தியாவில் உள்ள கிராம பெண்கள்கூட இப்போது தொழில்நுட்பத்தைப் பற்றி தெரிந்து வைத்துள்ளனர் என்று மோடி மகிழ்ச்சி தெரிவித்தார்.

மோடி மேலும் பேசுகையில் கூறியதாவது:

நீண்ட பயணம் செய்யாமல், சாகசம் செய்யாமல், சிறிய தீவில் உள்ளவர்களைக் கூட தொடர்பு கொள்ள டிஜிட்டல் தொழில்நுட்பம் உதவி உள்ளது. ஆப்பிரிக்காவில் இருந்து கொண்டு செல்போன் மூலம் பணத்தை வேறு ஒருவர் கணக்குக்கு மாற்ற முடிகிறது.

இந்தியாவில் குக்கிராமத்தில் உள்ள ஒரு தாய், தனக்கு பிறந்த குழந்தையை எளிதில் காப்பாற்ற முடிகிறது. குக்கிராமத்தில் உள்ள குழந்தை நல்ல கல்வியை பெற முடிகிறது. இவை எல்லாமே டிஜிட்டல் புரட்சியால்தான்.

சான் பிரான்சிஸ்கோவில் உள்ள ஒருவர், இந்தியாவில் உடல்நலம் இல்லாமல் உள்ள தனது பாட்டியுடன் தினமும் ஸ்கைப் மூலம் பேசி ஆறுதல் சொல்கிறார். விவசாயிகள் தங்கள் நிலத்தின் மதிப்பை அறிந்துகொள்ள முடிகிறது, மீனவர்கள் அதிக மீன்களைப் பிடிக்க முடிகிறது. ‘செல்பி வித் டாட்டர்’ என்ற தலைப்பில் தனது மகளுடன் புகைப்படம் எடுத்து ஹரியாணாவைச் சேர்ந்த தந்தை வெளியிடுகிறார். அதன் மூலம் அனைவரின் கவனத்தையும் கவர்ந்து விழிப்புணர்வு ஏற்படுத்த முடிகிறது.

இவை எல்லாமே சிலிகான் வேலியில் இருந்து கொண்டு நீங்கள் செய்யும் டிஜிட்டல் புரட்சியால்தான்.

இவ்வாறு மோடி பேசினார்.மோடியின் பேச்சைக் கேட்ட பிரபல நிறுவன அதிகாரிகள் ஆச்சரியமும் மகிழ்ச்சியும் அடைந்தனர்.

Source….www.tamil.thehindu.com

Natarajan

How Modi won the internet during Silicon Valley visit……..

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday answered questions from the audience at a Townhall at the Facebook headquarters and took a tour of the Google headquarters with CEO Sundar Pichai. The Prime Minister spoke about the role of social media in governance, and the effect it has had on his personal life.

Here are the top 10 quotes:

1 Social media was like a guide and an easy textbook to know about things for me. It helped mould my thought process. It helped me build world consciousness.


2 I used Chinese social media to wish the PM there. It went viral. I wished the Israel PM in Hebrew and he replied in Hindi!


3 We need both highways and i-ways (information ways) in India.


4 People today live in places where infrastructure is present unlike the past when water was the reason. Soon we might live in places where there is good digital infrastructure.


5 For our government to achieve economic progress, we have to utilise the potential of the 50 percent population — the women in India.


6 My mother is illiterate. My father is no more. My mom understands things through media. My mother took lot of pains to help me grow.


7 I come from a poor family and my family played an important role in my life. No one could have imagined that the world’s largest democracy could have accepted an ordinary tea seller.
8 I thought technology helps us save time, but in fact it is the opposite: people are spending maximum time using technology.


9 I want to encourage hack-a-thons in Indian cities too.


10 India’s unique strengths: 3D. Demographic dividend, democracy and demand. I have added another D: deregulation.

 

Source….www.thehindu.com

Natarajan

பேஸ்புக் சுவற்றில் வந்தே மாதரம் எழுதிய மோடி……

 

சான் ஜோஸ் : பேஸ்புக் தலைமையகம் சென்ற பிரதமர் மோடி, தனது நிகழ்ச்சியை முடித்து திரும்பும் போது பேஸ்புக் தலைமையக சுவற்றில், அகிம்சையே சிறந்த தர்மம். சத்யமேவ ஜெயதே. வந்தே மாதரம் என்று தனது கை பட எழுதினார்.

source….www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

நரேந்திர மோடி ஏன் உலகை கவர்கிறார்…..

உலகளவில் அமெரிக்க அதிபர் ஒபமாவுக்கு பிறகு சமூக வலைதளங்களில் அதிகம் பேர் பின்தொடரும் நபராக இந்திய பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி இருக்கிறார். தகவல் தொடர்பு நிறுவனங்களின் உலகத் தலைநகராக கருதப்படும் சிலிக்கான் வேலியே அவரது வருகையால் சிலிர்த்துக் கொண்டது என்றுதான் சொல்ல வேண்டும். உலக நாடுகளில் மோடிக்கு ஏன் இவ்வளவு வரவேற்பு இருக்கிறது என்றால் அதில் சில ரகசியங்களும் அடங்கியிருக்கிறது.

பிரதமர் நரேந்திர மோடி பொலிட்டிக்கல் சயின்சில் முதுகலை பட்டம் பெற்றவர். அதோடு அமெரிக்காவில் ‘இமேஜ் மேனேஜ்மென்ட் மற்றும் பப்ளிக் ரிலேஷன்ஷிப்பில் சிறப்பு பட்டம் பெற்றவர் என்பது நிறைய பேருக்கு தெரிந்திருக்க வாய்ப்பில்லை. அவருக்கு ஒரு விஷயத்தை பற்றி மக்களிடம் எப்படி செய்தி சேர வேண்டும் என்பதில் தெளிந்த அறிவு உண்டு. இளம் வயது முதலே ஊர் ஊராக பயணம் மேற்கொள்வதில் மோடிக்கு மிகுந்த ஆர்வம். எங்கே போகிறோம் என்று தெரியாமலேயே மோடியின் பயணம் அமைந்திருக்குமாம். அப்படி ராஜ்கோட் முதல் இமயமலை வரை மோடியின் இளம் வயது பயணம் அமைந்திருக்கிறது. சில காலம் இமயமலையில் சந்நியாசி வாழ்க்கை கூட மோடி வாழ்ந்திருக்கிறார். மோடி வெளிநாடுகளுக்கு ஏன் அடிக்கடி பறக்கிறார் என்பதற்கு இப்போது விடை கிடைத்திருக்கிறதா?

பிரதமர் மோடி ஒரு மிகச்சிறந்த புகைப்பட கலைஞர். அவர் எடுத்த புகைப்படங்களை கொண்டு கண்காட்சியும் நடத்தியிருக்கிறார். அவரது தாய்மொழியான குஜராத்தியில் கவிதையும் புனைந்துள்ளார். சில புத்தகங்களையும் எழுதியுள்ளார். அமெரிக்க அதிபர் ஒபாமாவுக்கு பிறகு ட்விட்டரில் அதிக ஃபாலோயர்கள் உள்ள தலைவர் மோடிதான். இவரை ட்விட்டரில் ஒரு கோடியே 20 லட்சம் பேர் தொடர்கின்றனர். உலகளவில் மோடிக்கு இதில் 2வது இடம். 1965ஆம் ஆண்டு பாகிஸ்தானுக்கு எதிரான போரின் போது மோடியும் நாட்டுக்காக தன்னால் முடிந்த பங்களிப்பை செய்திருக்கிறார். அதாவது ரயிலில் செல்லும் ராணுவ வீரர்களுக்கு உதவி செய்யும் சிறுவனாக பயணித்திருக்கிறார்.

குஜராத் முதலமைச்சராக மோடி 13 ஆண்டுகள் இருந்திருக்கிறார். இதில் ஒருநாள் கூட அவர் விடுமுறை என்று எடுத்ததில்லையாம். இரவு லேட்டாக உறங்க சென்றாலும் மோடியின் விடியல் காலை 5.30 மணிக்கு தொடங்கி விடும். பள்ளி, கல்லூரி காலத்தில் நாடகங்களில் நடிப்பதில் ஆர்வம் உண்டு. பல வேடங்களில் கலக்கியிருக்கிறார். மோடியின் சொந்த ஊரான வத்நகரில் உள்ள ஏரி, முதலைகளுக்கும் வசிப்பிடமாக இருக்கிறது. இளவயது மோடி அந்த ஏரிக்கரையில் விளையாடுவது வழக்கம். கரையில் கிடந்த முதலையிடம் வம்பிழுத்திருக்கிறார். முதலை வாலால் தாக்கி விட சிறிய காயத்துடன் தப்பிய வரலாறும் மோடிக்கு உண்டு.

மோடி குஜராத் முதல்வராக இருந்த போது கடந்த 2010ஆம் ஆண்டு உலகின் மிக வேகமாக வளர்ந்து வரும் 3வது நகரமாக அகமதாபாத்தை ஃபேர்ப்ஸ் இதழ் தேர்வு செய்தது. முதல் இரு இடங்களை சீனாவின் ஜோக்ஜிங், செங்குடு நகரங்கள் பெற்றன. ஒரு மாநாட்டில் மோடி பங்கேற்கிறார் என்றால் அங்கு பேச வேண்டிய விஷயங்களை ஹோம் வொர்க் செய்து பார்த்து விட்டுதான் மோடி மேடையே ஏறுவார்.

Source…..www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan