” நம்ம சென்னை … ஒரு புகைப்பட தொகுப்பு …”

An aerial view of Marina beach
01
Chennai, or Madras as it was formerly known, lies on the Coromandel Coast. As the capital of Tamil Nadu, it has been an important centre of regional politics and economy, but it is equally well-known for its vibrant culture and culinary landscape.

Marina Beach
02
Chennai’s Marina Beach covers a distance of 13 km, making it the longest natural city beach in India and the second longest in the world. It runs from Fort St. George in the north to Besant Nagar in the south. It’s one of the most popular hangouts for Chennai residents. Here, a boy somersaults at Marina beach, early in the morning.

Marina beach
03
The Marina beach is dotted with numerous food stalls, statues and memorials of political leaders, shops and joyrides. Here, a vendor carries a basket containing onions and potatoes to prepare Chilli Bhaji, a popular local snack, at his stall which has been decorated with green chillies to attract customers.

Kapaleeshwar Temple
04
Chennai has numerous beautiful Dravidian-style temples. The Kapaleeshwarar Temple is one of the city’s oldest and best-known temples. Originally built in the 7th century, it is dedicated to Shiva and located in the neighbourhood of Mylapore.

San Thome Basilica
05
The San Thome Basilica is the best testament to Chennai’s vibrant and multi-cultural history. This Roman Catholic basilica was built in the 16th century by Portuguese explorers, over the tomb of St Thomas, an apostle of Jesus. It was rebuilt in its present Neo-Gothic architectural style by the British in 1893.

Food in Chennai
06
Tamil cuisine has a wide range of vegetarian as well as non-vegetarian delicacies. Its flavourful and makes liberal use of local spices and condiments. Chennai is blessed with restaurants that cater to all budgets, and offer local dishes from within Tamil Nadu, as well as the cuisines of its neighbouring states.

Shopping in Chennai
07
Tamil Nadu has a vibrant tradition of textile weaving. Chennai has innumerable shops selling the region’s famous silk saris. The most popular among these are the Kanchipuram variety, which are named after the city in which they are woven. Made with heavy silk and zari, these make for excellent gifts and heirlooms.

Spencer Plaza
08
The Spencer Plaza is an important Chennai landmark that dates back to colonial times. Originally built as a departmental store in the 19th century, it was reconstructed in 1985. It contains over 400 stores, while its atrium has been built in the Indo-Saracenic style of the original building.

A bharatanatyam performance
09
Chennai has a vibrant music, dance and theatre scene. It is one of the important centres for Bharatanatyam, a classical dance form. It’s also known as a hub for Carnatic music and hosts the annual Madras Music Season, which includes performances by hundreds of artists.

Kalakshetra Foundation
10
The Kalakshetra Foundation is a cultural academy dedicated to Bharatanatyam, one of the oldest classical dance forms taught and practiced in India. It was founded by dancer Rukmini Devi Arundale in 1936, and has had a long and illustrious history as a centre for the arts. The campus is open to visitors, who can see its museum and crafts centre, and learn about the rich living traditions that are practised here.

Theosophical Society, Adyar
11
The vast complex of the Theosophical Society is located next to the Adyar River in south Chennai. It houses shrines of various faiths, such as Hinduism, Christianity, Islam and Buddhism. Its gardens contain a huge variety of trees, but their highlight is undoubtedly the 400-year-old Adyar Banyan Tree with vast, sprawling roots.

Dakshinachitra
12
Spread across ten acres, Dakshinachitra is a heritage village located south of Chennai. It recreates the traditional architecture of homes in several south Indian states, and has demonstrations by potters and craftspersons, and performances by folk dancers.

Mamallapuram
13
Chennai is also a convenient base to make trips to some of southern India’s most important heritage sites. Mahabalipuram, also known as Mamallapuram, is an ancient port town, located close to Chennai. Now a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it is dotted with beautiful temples and monuments built between the 7th and the 9th centuries.
Source::::: http://www.happytrips.com/  and The Hindu
Natarajan

Image of the Day…Super Moon with Rainbow !!!

Waxing toward a supermoon, with rainbow

Kimmie Randall caught this photo of Thursday night’s gibbous moon, waxing toward the supermoon … with a portion of a rainbow. Beautiful!

Waxing gibbous moon on August 7, 2014, with a portion of a rainbow, by Kimmie Randall

All eyes are on the moon this weekend, with a supermoon coming up on Sunday. It’s not just any supermoon, but the closest supermoon of this year. The moon on both Saturday and Sunday nights will appear very round and full – and very beautiful. As seen from across the Earth, the moon will be rising around the time of sunset and will be in the sky all night.

Full moon falls on August 10, 2014 at 18:09 UTC (1:09 p.m. CDT in the U.S.).

The moon will be closest to Earth (356,856 km) at approximately that same time (18:00 UTC).

Read more: Most “super” supermoon of 2014 on August 10

Video: Why does the moon look so big on the horizon? It’s not because of the supermoon

Discern a supermoon’s large size with the eye? An observer says yes

Source::::Earthskynews

Natarajan

” 16 Months Without Mobile Phones…” !!!

‘I went 16 months without my mobile phone and my life

is so much better’…

TOM GROTEWOHL

Is sharing everything we do in our lives stopping us from actually experiencing it?

Is sharing everything we do in our lives stopping us from actually experiencing it? Source: Supplied

I’VE spent the last year and a half without a mobile phone.

You’re probably reacting to that line as if it read, “I’ve spent the last year and a half without breathing air.” Mobile phones have become such a crucial part of our daily lives that most folks rely on them more than the majority of organs in their bodies.

Without it, you cannot expect to have a job, a consistent network of friends or a GPS guiding you to your destination, not to mention porn on-the-go.

For this last period of my life, I haven’t had those things because I’ve been travelling. I’ve been crossing borders too frequently to hold on to friends, and sleeping anywhere that offered a free bed or a bit of floorspace so I didn’t have to work. It’s what has allowed me to conduct this experiment.

I recognise that this is not a lifestyle most people are seeking because for the reasons listed above it simply isn’t practical. Soon I will make my re-entry into the world as a real human being and, though somewhat reluctantly, purchase a phone again.

For now, though, I am a freak among my generation, and that gives me the valuable freak’s perspective.

In the same way that one can only see the lily pads in a Monet painting clearly when standing far away, distance from a mobile phone has allowed me to observe its role in our lives with more clarity than is possible for those who are pressed right up against the blurry brushstrokes.

Read on and I’ll share what I’ve learned:

1. BEING IN TWO PLACES AT ONCE MEANS YOU AREN’T ANYWHERE.

Not taking in the world around him.

Not taking in the world around him. Source: AP

I’ve witnessed countless situations where this occurs, but here’s one in particular: I was in a restaurant eating vegetable fried rice, marvelling at how, in Spain, even cheap Chinese food comes with a full bottle of delicious wine.

Across the room from me was a couple on a dinner date. The guy had his phone smashed up against his cheek like he was trying to merge with it, yammering about a gig he had coming up while the girl across the table stared vacantly at her soggy egg rolls.

When, at last, the call finished, the guy explained the conversation to his date as if she hadn’t just heard the whole thing. Then when he concluded his monologue, the phone rang again, and the same sequence repeated itself.

He got the meal to go and left with his arm around her waist yakking on his phone to his provider about getting a new model.

I couldn’t help but think maybe she was the one who needed to get an upgrade.

People go to the movies and stare at their phones the whole time, reading articles about the film that’s happening right in front of them. But most common is when people pull their phones out in the middle of conversation in order to “send a quick text” or “look something up.”

I wonder how these people would react if, while they were talking to me, I pulled out a book and said, “Just a second,” and proceeded to leisurely read a few pages and then say, “Thanks for waiting, sorry about that.” Would they feel I was devaluing their presence in favour of a bit of reading, which obviously could wait until later?

For me, it’s the same. Technology gives us access to another dimension at the cost of depriving us of the one we come from.

2. INSTANT COMMUNICATION HAS TRANSFORMED US ALL INTO PARANOID, OVER-PROTECTIVE MUMS.

Less than a century ago, if you wanted to talk to someone, you had to either travel directly to his or her house or write a letter. Then, with landlines, at least people were not able to carry their phones with them when they left their homes, and so their lack of response could be attributed simply to having gone out.

Now, the phone clings to us with the unfaltering loyalty of a tapeworm, and it sucks us dry of our excuses. To not respond is nearly the same as plugging your ears and humming when someone asks you a question.

Maybe the same kind of irrational worrying occurred in the days before mobile phones were so universal, but with letters, it was on the scale of weeks and months; with landlines, hours and days; now it’s minutes, seconds and the infinitesimal spaces between delusions.

I’ve never spoken on the phone nor texted with my current girlfriend, and that I believe is one of the reasons it’s been the most rewarding relationship of my life. We’ve rediscovered the pleasure of letter writing.

Letters are like vinyl records: Though technologically obsolete, it has a warmth and romance that should never go out of style. But more importantly, slowing down our communication has forced us to build our relationship on sturdier, less fleeting foundations than machinegun texts.

Plus, it’s way hotter to read dirty talk when you can see a person’s excitement in his or her frantic scrawl and inhale the scent of his or her skin still clinging to the paper, than it is on a cold, impersonal screen.

Let me take a selfie!

Let me take a selfie! Source: Supplied

3. WE’VE MISTAKEN BEING ALONE FOR LONELINESS.

Having a mobile phone is like carrying your friends with you everywhere you go. Say goodbye to contemplative moments on park benches, long walks with nothing to think about or even a bit of peace and quiet while you’re taking a crap.

Even if you aren’t conversing with your real friends, mobile phones provide an endless supply of imaginary friends to distract you from yourself, in the form of rapid fire updates on the lives of celebrities, viral videos of people you’ll never meet, Tinder and so on.

We’ve become so accustomed to this state of semi-being that the second our phones run out of battery, coldness sweeps over us and we feel ourselves teetering over an abyss of loneliness and despair, like when an addict is deprived of his vice.

Humans are social animals. It is normal to want to be surrounded by others; in fact, it’s necessary for our mental health. That’s why solitary confinement is the highest punishment.

A party today is a bunch of people on their screens not interacting, just being alone together. Then it’s an emptier, more chronic loneliness that sets in: the loneliness of only existing in the eyes of others.

That’s the irony: We use our phones to medicate our loneliness, but at the same time our phones are causing it.

For most of us, life is a slot machine slide show of streaming videos, news feeds, texts and tweets and pixelated twats. Where then is the time left to exist as ourselves?

Remember that music is made not just of sound, but silence, and a painting without space to resonate in is impossible for the eyes to navigate. Set aside time to exist for yourself and no one else, for we can only learn to not be lonely through being alone.

IPHONIES ANONYMOUS

Group hug, everybody. I acknowledge mobile phones aren’t going anywhere, so don’t mistake this article as the ravings of an out-of-touch geezer shouting at speeding trains because, hey, I’m only 25.

It’s important to recognise that we are the first generation to become so obsessed by mobile phones and other screen-based gadgets, and that makes us the guinea pigs. We won’t know the effects of any of these technologies on our bodies, minds and souls until it’s too late.

People used to drink mercury because they thought it was a medicine until they found out the hard way that it wasn’t. New is not the same as good, and so everything should be considered guilty until proven innocent.

Rather than passively accepting each gizmo that comes our way, it’s important to criticise and question what it wants from us.

These technologies should be like the garnish to life, perhaps even a side dish, but never the main course. Seek out what makes us human; discover what makes you you.

Then, once you’ve come to terms with those things, feel free to check out that latest YouTube video of the dog walking around on his hind legs dressed as a butler. Just don’t forget your date across the table.

This article originally appeared on Elite Daily.  

TOM GROTEWOHL

Tom is a successful musician. Well, he successfully plays music, though no one pays him for it. After a year of putting his anthropology degree to good use by gardening for rich people in Minneapolis, a sudden existential crisis led to him buying a one-way plane ticket to Colombia instead. He’s spent the last year and a half traveling and now, at long last back in Kansas, is asking the dreaded question: “Uh… what next?”

Source::::news.com.au

Natarajan

” மறக்காம சொல்லுங்க…. உங்க தாய் மொழி தமிழ் என்று …”

 

தடுக்கி  விழுந்தால் மட்டும்  ..அ    ஆ

சிரிக்கும்  போது  மட்டும்  …இ …ஈ …

சூடு  பட்டால்    உ….ஊஊ

அதட்டும்   போது  மட்டும்   …எ   …ஏ ஏ…

மகிழ்ச்சி   மிதப்பில்  ஒலிப்பது….ஐ…ஐ !!!

ஆச்சரியத் தின்  போது   …..ஒ…ஓ…

 வக்கனை  பேசும்போது  மட்டும்  …ஓள ….

 விக்கல்  எடுக்கும் சமயம்  மட்டும் … அக்  அக்…!!!

  என்று  நம் மொழி தமிழ்  பேசி …மற்ற

  பிற  நேரம் எல்லாம்  வேற்று  மொழி

   பேசும்  தமிழ்  நண்பர்களுக்கு  மறக்காமல்

    சொல்லுங்க …. உங்க  தாய்  மொழி

    தமிழ்  தமிழ்  என்று !!!!

..

Source:::thangarajkavidhaigal.blospot.in….

Natarajan

Message For the Day…” Without Moral Values Humanity Can not Survive…”

The foundation for everything is morality. Without moral values, humanity cannot survive. Often, people of different religions hold on to different objectives and are unable to see the underlying reality, and as a result have different opinions. For example: one says a rupee consists of 4 quarter rupees and another says it is 2 half-rupees and the third says it is ten 10 paisa. All these denominations mean the same rupee. Only ignorant people, who become dogmatic and fail to perceive this oneness, imagine differences and resort to criticizing each other. Sacred scriptures have taught that there should be no arguments or debates on religious matters. They must be resolved peacefully. The guidelines of all religions lead to the end goal of Truth and Righteousness.

Sathya Sai Baba

Image of the Day…California Fire Clouds…

California fire clouds

Fires raging over California last week created these towering pyrocumulus clouds – aka “fire clouds.” A close look from jets flying nearby.

Photo credit: NASA

Photo credit: NASA

These two photographs, taken from an Oregon Air National Guard F-15C on July 31, give a close look at a developing pyrocumulus cloud above the Oregon Gulch fire, a part of the Beaver Complex fire on the Oregon/California border.

Pyrocumulus clouds—sometimes called “fire clouds”—are tall, cauliflower-shaped, and appear as opaque white patches hovering over darker smoke in satellite imagery. Pyrocumulus clouds are similar to cumulus clouds, but the heat that forces the air to rise (which leads to cooling and condensation of water vapor) comes from fire instead of sun-warmed ground. Under certain circumstances, pyrocumulus clouds can produce full-fledged thunderstorms, making them pyrocumulonimbus clouds.

Here’s a satellite view of the fast-moving fires. More than 100,000 acres (400 square kilometers) were charred in a few days as fires raged through forests and grasslands in northern California. NASA’s Terra satellite captured this image on August 2, 2014. Red outlines show where MODIS detected high surface temperatures associated with active burning.

Image credit: NASA

Read more from NASA Earth Observatory

Source::::Earthskynews

Natarajan

Busiest Flight Routes in the World …

A LOT of people take to the skies every day.

A LOT of people take to the skies every day. Source: ThinkStock

Fun facts about flying coming at ya.

Did you know that every day 8.3 million people are cruising the skies on some 93,500 flights? That’s about the population of NYC. Every. SINGLE. Day.

So where are most people travelling?

Our guesses were between Rio and Sao Paulo, between somewhere and Dubai and someplace in Asia. We asked the folks at FlightStats to compile data on the busiest FLIGHT routes around the world over the course of a year, and we had the gurus at FlightAware compile the busiest flight routes over the course of a single day (July 30, in this case).

From January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013, these were the busiest flight routes around the world:

Flight routes.

FLIGHT routes. Source: Supplied

While these routes were the busiest for the entire calendar year, different routes were more popular for a SINGLE day in 2014. The busiest route for July 30, 2014 was from Seoul’s Gimpo International to Jeju International with 94 flights. The busiest route in America on July 30 was Los Angeles International to San Francisco International with 55 flights.

For the curious, the busiest route between two American cities in all of 2012 was Chicago to New York.

As the saying goes: The more you know.

Source::::news.com.au

Natarajan

Message For the day…” What is the Difference Between Truth and Fact …” ?

There is no God other than Truth. What is the difference between Truth and fact? You may put on a coat today and wear a different dress tomorrow. This is not Truth, it is only a fact, because it is subject to change. But Truth always remains the same. The Gita refers to Truth as Ritham. So Truth is not reporting what you see, hear, and experience. What you see and hear is worldly truth. It is not Truth in the strict sense of the word. It is only external truth (pravritti satyam). But the inward Truth (nivritti satyam) remains the same in the past, present, and the future. In this world of plurality, there is the underlying principle of unity. Of all the numbers 1,2, 3, 4.. the most important number is 1. AIl the other numbers are mere modifications of the number 1. 1+1 becomes 2. 9–1 becomes 8. Thus 1 forms the basis for all the numbers. This is the unity in multiplicity, this Unity is the Truth.

Sathya Sai Baba

Joke of the Day…” Do You Have any Questions … ” !!!

A woman is walking on the road and a voice shouts out, “Don’t take a step further.” She obeys and suddenly a ton of bricks fall on the place where she would have otherwise been. She thinks she imagined it and keeps walking until suddenly the voice calls out again. “Don’t take a step further.” She stops and a car skids past. Then suddenly she hears the voice saying “I am your guardian angel, and I will warn you before something bad happens to you. Now do you have any questions to ask me?” Yes! Shouts the woman, “Just where were you on my wedding day!”

Source::: joke a day. com

Natarajan

Watch the Power of People ….!!!

 

Perth: Dozens of Australians tilted a train Wednesday to free a commuter whose leg was trapped between a carriage and a platform, with authorities praising their efforts as an example of “people power”.

The man was boarding in the Western Australia city of Perth when he slipped and became jammed in the five-centimetre (0.4-inch) gap between the carriage and the station, operator Transperth said in a statement.

Passengers were initially told to move to the opposite side of the train in the hope their weight would shift it away from his leg, a passenger who gave his name as Nic told The West Australian newspaper.

But when that failed, staff told commuters to get off the train and about 50 of them lined up in a row along the platform to tilt the carriage away from the man so he could be lifted out.

“It is the first time we’ve seen something like this happen,” Transperth spokeswoman Claire Krol told AFP.

“We were really fortunate that the staff were there straight away… and all of the passengers not only listened to the instructions from staff, but pitched in and helped.

“This is a real case of passengers of working together… and people power are the perfect words to describe it.”

Transperth said the man was treated by paramedics but was able to catch a later train.

“The end result here is: really lucky for the man involved, but really nice as well to see that everyone came together as a community,” Krol added.

Source::::You Tube  & NDTV.com

Natarajan