Rice Bucket Challenger gets UN Award !!!

My earlier blogpost on this story is linked up below for your ready ref.

https://natarajank.com/2014/08/24/here-is-indias-answer-to-ice-bucket-challenge-it-is-rice-bucket-challenge/

Manjulatha Kalanidhi, a 38-year-old Hyderabad resident who created a buzz online by creating the ‘rice bucket challenge (based on the ALS ice bucket challenge), has been honoured with the Karmaveer Chakra Award and the Rex Karmaveer Global Fellowship by iCONGO, an international confederation of NGOs, and the United Nations.

The awards are given for doing something small, yet significant, to make a difference in the world.

“The award shall be given to Ms. Manju on March, 23, 2015 at an august gathering in New Delhi, where she shall be felicitated and recognised as a Karmaveer Hero with some other heroes from around the world,” Jeroninio Almeida, founder of iCONGO told The Hindu in an email.

Ms. Manjulatha’s initiative will be promoted by agencies in a global scale. Apart from this, she will be featured in the second edition of iCONGO’s book Karma Kurry. The organisation is slated to sign a DEAL to sell 12 crore copies.

Speaking about the award, an excited Ms. Manjulatha said: “I’m extremely happy to learn that rice bucket challenge was chosen for Karmaveer Chakra Award and fellowship. I’m planning to associate with some NGOs such as Goonj and GiveIndia to channelize the charity potential and take the idea forward. This award would expand my horizon and give the necessary push to the initiative.”

There has been a tremendous response to the idea across the country and media within a week after The Hindu broke the story on Ms. Manjulatha’s innovative way of feeding the poor. The web page has been viewed by over 5 lakh people and according to Ms. Manjulatha over 10,000 kg of rice has been donated to beneficiaries.

While Tollywood actor-cum-producer Pradeep has already distributed rice in a big way, Bollywood diva Priyanka Chopra too endorsed the challenge in one of her recent interviews. The Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Goa, too has decided to do its bit for the initiative from September 2 to 7.

Keywords: Manjulatha KalanidhiRice Bucket ChallengeUnited Nations award,

Source::::The Hindu.com

Natarajan

 

Anand Shimpi Heading towards Apple ?….

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

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

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

Message For the Day…” God is, as Butter in Milk, …”

There are people who go about declaring that there is no God because they are unable to see Him. They say that they have searched in space, on the way to the moon, and even on the moon there was no sign of the Almighty. But they themselves are the mansions in which He resides, all the time! Like the blind bamboozling the blind into a fall, others too repeat like parrots this ‘fashionable slogan’. No one sees the roots, but the roots are indeed there, deep in the soil, away from all eyes. Can you assert that there are no roots for trees, that nothing feeds them or upholds them from below? God feeds, sustains, holds firm – though unseen, He can be seen by those who make the effort, along the lines laid down for the purpose by those who have succeeded in experiencing Him. God is, as butter in milk, visible when concretized by spiritual striving (Sadhana).

Sathya Sai Baba

உலகெங்கும் மணக்கிறது நம்மூர் தோசை… !!!

தமிழக கிராமத்திலிருந்து மும்பைக்கு கிளம்பி சர்வர் வேலை பார்த்தவர் இன்று உலகெங்கும் தனது ஹோட்டல் சாம்ராஜ்ஜியத்தை நிறுவியிருக்கிறார்!

சமீபத்தில் சென்னையில் தனது கிளையை நிறுவ வந்திருந்தவரைச் சந்தித்தோம்.

“பேரு கணபதிங்க. சொந்த ஊர் தூத்துகுடி பக்கம் நாகலாபுரம். அப்பாவுக்கு அடுப்புக் கரி வியாபாரம். ஏழு குழந்தைகள். குடும்பத்துல வறுமை. சின்னப் பையனா இருக்கிறப்பயே சென்னைக்கு ரயில் ஏறிட்டேன். காபிக் கடையில வேலை. டம்ளர் கழுவணும். மாசம் 200 ரூபாய் சம்பளம். கடைக்கு வர்ற ஒருத்தர், ‘மும்பையில வேலை வாங்கித்தர்றேன், ரெண்டாயிரம் ரூபாய் சம்பளம். ஆனால், எனக்கும் சேர்த்து டிக்கெட் எடுக்கணும்’னு சொன்னார். சரின்னு கிளம்பிட்டேன். மும்பை ரயில்வே ஸ்டேஷன் இறங்கிப் பார்த்தா அவரைக் காணோம். கையில் சில்லறைக் காசுதான் இருந்துச்சு. ஒரு தமிழ் டாக்ஸிக்காரர் இரக்கப்பட்டு தாராவி மாரியம்மன் கோயில் வீதியில் இறக்கிவிட்டார்.

ரோட்டோரக்கடை

அங்க இருந்த ரோட்டோர சாப்பாட்டுக் கடை அம்மாகிட்ட வேலை கேட்டேன். தட்டுக் கழுவச் சொன்னாங்க. சம்பளம் கிடையாது. வயித்துக்கு சாப்பிட்டுக்கலாம். ராத்திரி மாரியம்மன் கோயில் திண்ணையில படுத்துக்குவேன். அப்புறம் ஒரு டீக்கடையில் வேலைக்குச் சேர்ந்தேன். சமோசாவுக்குப் பதிலா வெங்காய பஜ்ஜி, உளுந்து வடை, கீரை போண்டாவை அறிமுகப்படுத்தினேன். வியாபாரம் நல்லா போனது. கஸ்டமர் ஒருத்தர் பார்ட்னர்ஷிப்பில் கடை போடலாம்னு கூப்பிட்டார். அப்ப அந்த ஏரியா எல்லாம் சப்பாத்தி, புரோட்டா மட்டும்தான். நாங்க இட்லி, தோசை, பணியாரம் போட்டோம். வியாபாரம் பிச்சுக்கிட்டுப் போச்சு. ஒரு மாசம் கழிச்சு கணக்கு பார்க்கலாம்னு கேட்டேன். மனுஷன், ‘சம்பளம் ஆயிரம் ரூபாய்; இஷ்டம் இருந்தா இரு’னுட்டாரு.

வண்டிக்கடை

கோபத்துல கிளம்பி வாஷி ரயில்வே ஸ்டேஷன் பக்கம் வண்டிக் கடையைப் போட்டேன். ஊர்ல இருந்த ரெண்டு அண்ணன்களை அழைச்சுக்கிட்டேன். இட்லி, தோசை மட்டும்தான். ஆனால், தொட்டுக்க கொத்தமல்லி சட்னி, புதினா சட்னி, தக்காளி சட்னி, கேரட் சட்னி, காய்கறி சட்னி, சாம்பார், பொடின்னு நிறைய வெரைட்டி கொடுத்தோம். ரோட்டோரக் கடைன்னாலும் நாங்க பேண்ட், சர்ட் போட்டுக்கிட்டு கைக்கு உறை எல்லாம் மாட்டிக்கிட்டு சப்ளை செஞ்சோம். நாலைஞ்சு மாசம் வியாபாரம் நல்லா போச்சு.

அப்பதான் எதிர்ல மெக் டோனால்டு கடையை ஆரம்பிச்சாங்க. அது வந்ததும் என் கடையில் வியாபாரம் படுத்துக்கிச்சு. அப்படி என்னதான் அங்கிருக்கும்னு போய் சாப்பிட்டுப் பார்த்தோம். நூடுல்ஸ், கோபி மஞ்சூரியன்னு வெளிநாட்டு அயிட்டங்க… நம்மூர் தோசையிலேயே இதை எல்லாம் கொண்டு வந்தால் என்னன்னு யோசிச்சோம். பேப்பர் ரோஸ்ட்டுல நூடுல்ஸ் பரப்பி இஞ்சி, பூண்டு, வெங்காயம் அரைச்சு வதக்குன பேஸ்ட், தக்காளித் தொக்குத் தடவி மொறுமொறுன்னு சுட்டு, சுருட்டி அழகா கட் பண்ணிக் கொடுத்தோம். சாப்பிட்டவங்க ஏதோ பெரிய ரகசியம் மாதிரி ‘அப்படி என்ன உள்ளே வெச்சிருக்கீங்க?ன்னு கேட்டாங்க. ஏரியா எல்லாம் பரபரப்பா எங்க தோசையைப் பத்தி பேச்சு. உடனே அதே ஸ்டைல்ல பன்னீர் தோசை, கோபி மஞ்சூரியன் தோசைன்னு அடிச்சு விட்டோம். பக்கத்து ஸ்டேஷன்ல இருந்து எல்லாம் ரயில் ஏறி வந்து சாப்பிட்டுப் போனாங்க.

ஓடிய மெக் டோனால்டு

மெக் டோனால்டு கடைக்குக் கூட்டம் குறைஞ்சு, கொஞ்ச நாள்ல அவங்க கடையைக் காலி பண்ணிட்டாங்க. பக்கத்துலயே நாங்க ஒரு கடையை பிடிச்சோம். தோசை மட்டும்தான். ஆனா, வெளிநாட்டுக்காரன் எதை எல்லாம் வெச்சு நம்மளை மயக்கினானோ அதே அயிட்டங்களை நம்ம தோசையில புகுத்தினேன்.

அமெரிக்கன் சாப்ஸி தோசை, சில்லி, சோயா நூடுல்ஸ் தோசை, சிஸ்வான் தோசை, ஜிஞ்சர் தோசை, பன்னீர் தோசை, ஸ்பிரிங் ரோல் தோசை, சாலெட் ரோஸ்ட் தோசை, ஹாராபாரா தோசை (பாலக் கீரை தோசை), மகாராஜா தோசைன்னு மொத்தம் 104 வகை தோசைகளை அறிமுகப்படுத்தினோம்.

கிளைகள்

நாலைஞ்சு வருஷத்துல மும்பையில ஐந்து கிளைகள் திறந்தோம். டெல்லி, ஜெய்ப்பூர், சூரத், பூனா, நாக்பூர் ஆகிய ஊர்களிலும் கிளைகள் திறந்தோம். அப்படியே நியூசிலாந்து, அரபு எமிரேட்ஸ், ஓமன், ஆஸ்திரேலியா, அமெரிக்கா, கட்டார், பக்ரைன், தான்சானியா ஆகிய ஊர்களிலும் இப்ப எங்கள் கிளைகள் இருக்கு. சொந்த ஊரை மறக்கக் கூடாதேன்னு இப்போ சென்னையில் கிளை திறக்கும் முயற்சியில் இருக்கோம்.” என்றார்.

கணபதி

Source::::டி.எல்.சஞ்சீவி குமார்  in  The Hindu.com…Tanil
Natarajan

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

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

Image credit:  NASA/Ames

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

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

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

Source::::: Earth sky news

Natarajan

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

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

ANAND SHIMPI

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

HOBBYISTS GO PRO

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

HARRY POTTER

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

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

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

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

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

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

“Anything less and you start making sacrifices.”

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

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

EARLY START

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Anand Lal Shimpy ….Young Achiever too…

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

 

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

Natarajan

How to Get Rid off Headache without Medication …

 

Getting a headache or worse, a migraine, can be a nuisance at best, and debilitating at worst. You don’t always have a headache pill available, or you might prefer to avoid taking pills in general – either way, this guide will show you how to relieve that headache in simple, natural ways.

Drink Coffee – Researchers found that Caffeine reduces swelling in blood vessels, and therefor can reduce the frequency and intensity of headaches.
Headache
Drink Ginger Tea – Ginger is amazingly effective in relieving migraines. Grate 2 tablespoons of Ginger and add them to 3 cups of water. Let it sit for about 5 minutes and pour into a cup using a sift and drink away. You can use ginger-tea bags, but they’re nowhere near as effective as fresh ginger.
Headache
Hot / Cold Towel – Suffering from a tension-related headache? Your head and neck feel like they’re contracting all the time? You might be suffering from anxiety, lack of sleep or stress. Prepare a bowl with hot water, dip a towel in it and wring it out, then place it on the back of your neck or your forehead. It will help relieve and relax tight muscles.If you’re suffering from a migraine or cluster headaches, do the same as instructed about, only use cold water instead. It will cause blood vessels to constrict and reduce blood flow to the head, and easy the pain.
Headache
Soak Your Feet – If you have a throbbing headache, soak your feet in a tub filled with hot water. Add Mustard powder for a more effective relief. After about 30 minutes, you can stop and dry off.
Headache
Wear a Headband – Put a headband, bandana or something similar on your forehead and tie it to the back of the head. This will reduce blood flow to the scalp and decrease throbbing headaches.
Headache
Head Massage – Before you start, make sure you drink plenty of water.Now, place your thumbs on either side of the bridge of your nose (where it meets the eyes) and squeeze for 10 seconds about 4-5 times, make sure not to cause yourself pain. Now rotate your thumbs so they’re facing down and the pads are under your eyebrows. Press upwards and hold for 10 seconds. Repeat 4-5 times.

Proceed by placing your three middle fingers on your temples and apply steady pressure for 10 seconds while massaging the area in circular motions.

Source::::ba-ba mail site

Natarajan

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

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

 

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

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

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

 

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

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

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

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

Natarajan

Message for the Day…” Be Like the Lotus on Water..on it , not in it …”

A young college student can roam free on his two legs; when he marries, he becomes four-footed! A child makes him six-footed; now the range of his movements is restricted. The more the feet, the less the speed, the stronger their grip on the ground; a centipede can only crawl. More hurdles, more handicaps. Accumulation of sofas, chairs, cots, tables and shelves clutter the hall and render movements slow and risky. Attachment brings sorrow in its wake; at last, when death demands that everything be left behind and everybody be deserted, you are overpowered with grief! Be like the lotus on water; on it, not in it. Water is necessary for the lotus to grow; but it will not allow even a drop to wet it. The objective world is the arena of virtue and the gymnasium for the spirit. But use it only for that purpose; do not raise it to a higher status and adore it as all-important.

Sathya Sai Baba