The Stuff We Learn After A Plane Goes Missing ….

 

While we search for flight MH370, what else have we learnt? Photo: Vasudevan Mukunth

While we search for flight MH370, what else have we learnt?

During the search for Malaysian Airlines flight 370, many interesting facts have cropped up – about how planes navigate, how phones ring, even disturbing things like pilot suicide. What other secrets does the world of aviation hold?

It’s likely any of you knew many of or all the following, but these are things I became aware of from reading news items and analyses of the missing Malaysian Airlines flight 370, currently one of hijacked, crashed into a large water-body or next-plausible-occurrence. While some of them may not directly apply to the search for any survivors or the carrier, all of them shine important and interesting light on how things work.

Ringing phones aren’t actually ringing. Yet. – After the relative of a passenger on board flight 370 called up the person’s phone, it started to ring. This was flashed on TV channels as proof of the plane still being intact, whether or not it was in the air. A couple hours later, some telecom experts wrote in that the first few rings you hear aren’t rings that the call’s receiver is hearing, too. Instead, those are the rings the network relays to you so you don’t cut the call while it looks for the receiver’s device.

Air-traffic controllers don’t always know where the plane is* – Because planes are flying at 35,000 feet, controllers don’t anticipate much to happen to them, and they’re almost always right. This is why, while cruising at that altitude, pilots don’t constantly buzz home to controllers about where their flight is, its altitude, its speed, etc. To be on the safe side, they buzz home over specific intervals, a process that’s automated on some modern models. Between these intervals, of course, the flight might just as well be blinking in and out of extra dimensions but no one is going to have an eye on it.

Radar that controllers have access to don’t work so well beyond a range of 150-350 km** – If civilian aircraft are farther than this, they no longer show up as pings on the scanning screen. In fact, in another system, called automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast (ADS-B), a plane determines its location based on GPS and transmits it down to a controller.  Here again, there’s a distance limit of up to 300 or so km. Beyond this, they communicate over high-frequency radio. Of course, this depends on the quality of equipment, but it’s useful to know such limitations exist.

If a plane’s communication systems have been disabled, there’s no Plan B – There’s radar, then radio, then GPS, then a fourth system where the aircraft’s computers communicate via satellite with the airline’s offices. The effectiveness of radar and radio is contingent on weather conditions. Beyond a particular altitude and, again, depending on the weather, GPS is capable of blinking out. The fourth system can be be manually disabled. If a renegade technician on the flight knows these things and how to work them, he/she can take the flight off the grid.

For pilots, it’s aviate, navigate, and then communicate – If the flight is in some kind of danger, the pilot’s primary responsibility is to do those things necessary to tackle the threat, and try and get the carrier away from the danger area. Only then is he/she obligated to get in touch with the controllers.

The ocean is a LARGE place – Sure, we studied in school that the oceans cover 71% of Earth’s surface and contain 1.3 billion cubic km of water, but those were just numbers – big numbers, but numbers nonetheless. I think our sense of bigness isn’t reliant any bit on numbers but only on physical experiences. I’m 6’4″ tall, but you’ll have to come stand next to me to understand how tall I really am. That said, I now quote former US Navy sailor Jim Wright (from his Facebook post):

… even when you know exactly, and I mean EXACTLY, where to look, it’s still extremely difficult to find scattered bits of airplane or, to be blunt, scattered bits of people in the water. As a navy sailor, I’ve spent days searching for lost aircraft and airmen, and even if you think you know where the bird went down, the winds and the currents can spread the debris across hundreds or even thousands of miles of ocean in fairly short order. No machine, no computer, can search this volume, you have to put human eyeballs on every inch of the search area. You have to inspect every item you come across – and the oceans of the world are FULL of flotsam, jetsam, debris, junk, trash, crap, bits, and pieces. Often neither the sea nor the weather cooperates, it is INCREDIBLY difficult to spot [an] item the size of a human being in the water, among the swells and the spray, even if you know exactly where to look – and the sea conditions in this part of the world are some of the worst, especially this time of year.

Mr. Wright goes on to write that should flight 370 have crashed into the Bay of Bengal, the South China Sea or wherever, its leaked fuel wouldn’t exactly be visible as an oil slick because of two reasons: first, high-grade aircraft fuel evaporates really fast (if it hasn’t already been vaporized on its way down from the sky); second, given the size of the fuel-tank, such a slick might cover a few square kilometers: on an ocean, that’s a blip. The current extended search area spans 30,000 sq. km.

One of the simplest ways armored units know what they’re seeing in the sky is not a missile but a civilian aircraft is by their trajectory – This is the shape of their path. Most missiles are ballistic, which means their trajectories are like upturned Us. Aircraft, on the other hand, fly in a straight line. I suppose this really is common sense.

The global positioning system doesn’t continuously relay the aircraft’s location to controllers – See * and **.

Smaller nations advance pilots with fewer flying hours than is the norm in bigger nations – According to a piece on CNN, one of flight 370’s two pilots had clocked only 2,763 flying hours as a pilot, and was “transitioning from flight simulator training to the Boeing 777-200ER”. The other pilot had a little over 18,000 hours under his belt. As CNN goes on to explain, smaller nations tend to advance pilots they think are very talented, farther than they could go in the same time in other countries, through intensive training programs. I couldn’t find anything substantive on the nature of these supposedly advanced programs, so I can’t comment further.

Pilot suicide – Nobody wants a person at the controls who’s expressed suicidal tendencies, and it’s the airline’s responsibility to treat or accordingly deal with such people. However, the moment you’ve said that, you realize how difficult such situations could be to predict, not to mention how much more difficult to prevent. A report by the US Federal Aviation Administration titled ‘Aircraft-Assisted Pilot Suicides in the United States‘, from February 2014, describes eight case-studies of flights whose pilots have killed themselves by crashing the aircraft. Each study describes the pilot’s behavior during the flight’s duration and is careful to note no other electric/mechanical failures were present. In the case of flight 370, of course, pilot suicide is just a theory.

The Boeing 777 is one safe carrier – Since its first flight in 1994, the Boeing 777-200ER (for ‘Extended Range’) had an estimated full loss equivalent (FLE) of 0.01 as of December 31, 2012, over 6.9 million flights. According to AirSafe.com, the FLE…

… is the sum of the proportions of passengers killed for each fatal event. For example, 50 out of 100 passengers killed on a flight is an FLE of 0.50, 1 of 100 would be a FLE of 0.01. The fatal event rate for a set of fatal events is found by dividing the total FLE by the number of flights in millions.

The same site also lists the 777-200ER as having the second lowest crash rate – 0.001 per million flights – of all time, among all models with 2 million flights or more, as of September, 2013. Only the Airbus A340 is better with a crash rate of 0, although it has clocked 4 million fewer flights (just saying).

Southeast Asia is a busy area for aviation – Between April-2012 and October-2013, the number of seats per week per Southeast Asian country grew by an average of 19.4%. In the same 18 months, the entire region’s population grew by 6% (both numbers courtesy the Center for Asia-Pacific Aviation). Then, of course, there’s Singapore’s Changi Airport. It’s one of Asia’s busiest, if not the world’s, handling 6,100 flights a week. And it was in this jam-packed area that people were trying to look for one flight.

source::::Vasudevan Mukunth  in The Hindu …

BLOGS » THE COPERNICAN

natarajan

படித்ததில் பிடித்தது ….” பணம் சம்பாதிக்க பல வழி இருக்கு … ”

 

பணம்  சம்பாதிக்க  பல வழி இருக்கு …ஆனால்

 

உணவு  சம்பாதிக்க  விவாசாயம் மட்டும்தானே

 

இருக்கு ….

 

 

தற்செயலாக  கிடைப்பது  இல்லை  வெற்றி

 

தன்  செயலால்  வருவது  வெற்றி ….

 

source:::::: unknown

natarajan

 

 

 

 

” I am with You In Every Situation …”

 

 

May Shri Shirdi Sainath give us the strength to realize that Our heart is on the left side but still ,-it is always right !   

 

May Shri Sadguru Sainath bless us to be true to our heart and our soul. May we always remember that it is better to be slapped by the truth then to be hugged by an illusion. May He shower his kind grace on us so that we do not end up hurting ourselves and others by our own Karma..  

 

source:::::debu7370.blogspot.com

natarajan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ஏப்ரல் ஒன்று -முட்டாள் தினம் வந்தது எப்படி!!!…

 

ஈரானில் இருந்து ஈராக்கிற்கு  ஒருவர் வழி தவறி போய்விட்டார். ஈராக்கின் எல்லை காவல் படை அவரை கைது செய்தது. பின்  கோர்ட்டில் கொண்டு போய் நிறுத்தினார்கள்.

அவர் மீது சுமத்தப்பட்ட குற்றசாட்டு என்ன தெரியுமா?

நீ உளவாளி.

கைது செய்யப்பட்டவர் விளக்கம் சொல்ல முற்பட்டார்.

நீ எந்த விளக்கமும் சொல்ல வேண்டியதில்லை. நீ குற்றவாளி  உன் குற்றத்தை  ஒத்து   கொள்.  உனக்கு தூக்கு தண்டனை தான்.  நீ பெரிய குற்றத்தை செய்ய துணிந்ததால்,  உன்னை துண்டு துண்டாக வெட்டி தான் தண்டனை கொடுப்பார்கள்.

அதுவும் ஒரே நாளில் நடக்காது.  வாரம் ஒரு பாகமாக வெட்டுவார்கள். இதுதான் அவருக்கு அளிக்க பட்ட தண்டனை.

அவருக்கு தண்டனை அளிக்கும்  நாள் வந்தது. தண்டனையை நிறைவேற்றும் முன்,  அந்த அதிகாரி கேட்டார்.  இப்போது உன் ஒரு காலை மட்டும் வெட்ட போகிறோம்.

உன் கடைசி ஆசை என்ன என்பதை சொல்.

வெட்டப்படும் என் காலை என் சொந்த ஊரில் புதைக்க வேண்டும்.  அதற்கு ஆவன செய்ய வேண்டும்.

சரி …. என்றார் அந்த அதிகாரி.

கால் வெட்டப்பட்டது.  அவர் விருப்பப்படியே அவரின் சொந்த ஊருக்கு அனுப்பி வைக்க பட்டது.   பின் அடுத்த வாரம்.  அவரின் ஒரு கை வெட்டப்பட்டது.

மீண்டும் அந்த அதிகாரி கேட்டார்.  உன் விருப்பம் என்ன?

முன் சொன்ன பதிலையே சொன்னார். அவர் விருப்பம் நிறைவேற்றப்பட்டது.  இப்படியே அவரின் உடல் பாகங்கள் ஒவ்வொன்றாய் வெட்டப்பட்ட பிறகு கடைசியில் அவர் தலை வெட்ட  பட வேண்டும்.

இப்போதும் அந்த அதிகாரி கேட்டார்.  உன் கடைசி ஆசை என்ன?

என் உடல் என் நாட்டில் புதைக்க பட வேண்டும்.  இதுதான் என் கடைசி ஆசை.

இப்பதானே உன் திட்டம் தெரியுது.  நீ பார்ட் பார்ட்டா தப்பிச்சு போயிடாலாம்ன்னு  நினைக்கிறியா உன் நாட்டிற்கு.  அதுதான் நடக்காது என்றாராம் அந்த அதிகாரி.

இது எப்படி இருக்கு.  இப்படி முட்டாள் தனமாக யோசிப்பவர்களுக்கு என்றே இருக்கும்  நாள் தான், ஏப்ரல் 1 .

இந்த நாளில் நீங்களும் யாரையாவது முட்டாளாக்க முயற்சி செய்திருப்பிர்கள்.  உங்கள் வலையில் யாரவது சிக்கி இருக்கலாம்.  ஹையா … ஏப்பரல் பூல் என்று நீங்கள் சிரித்திருக்கலாம்.

சரி… அந்த நாளின் வரலாறு தெரியுமா?  தெரிந்தால் சந்தோசம்.  தெரியலையா இப்போ தெரிஞ்ச்சுகோங்க.

முட்டாள் தினம் என்றில்லை.  வருஷம் முழுவதும் இப்படி எதாவது ஒரு நாள் வந்து கொண்டு தான் இருக்கிறது.   இதில் பெரிய விழேஷம் என்னன்னா … இந்த நாளுக்கு யாரும் உரிமை கொண்டாடுவது இல்லை.

சரி… காரணம் இல்லாமல் எந்த காரியமும் இல்லை.  அந்த வகையில் இந்த முட்டாள் தினம் வந்த காரணம் என்ன?  இதோ வரலாறு.

நான் எப்படி சித்திரை ஒன்றை புத்தாண்டாக கொண்டாடுகிறமோ (சித்திரையா  தை மாதமா ) அதை போல் ஏப்ரல் ஒன்றாம் தேதியை ரோமானியர்கள் புத்தாண்டாக கொண்டாடினார்கள்.

இந்த புத்தாண்டு கொண்டாட்டம் ஏப்ரல் 25 ம் தேதியே ஆரம்பம் ஆகிவிடும்.  அதன் நிறைவு நாள் ஏப்ரல் 1 .

காலம் காலமாக கடை பிடிக்க பட்ட இந்த நடை முறையை அப்போதைய போப்பாண்டவரான 13 வது கிரகரி 1562 ம் ஆண்டில் மாற்றி அமைத்தார்.

இந்த மாற்றத்தின் படி ஜனவரி ஒன்றாம் தேதிதான் புத்தாண்டு வருகிறது.  ithai நாடு முழுவதும் அறிவிக்கவும் செய்தார்.

ஆனால் காலம் காலமாக கடை பிடித்த நடைமுறையை மாற்றி புது நடை முறைக்கு மாற பலருக்கு மனம் இடம் தரவில்லை.  கிடக்கிறது எல்லாம் கிடக்கட்டும் கிழவனை  தூக்கி மனையில் வை என்ற கதையாக இது என்ன கூத்து என்று,  பலர் பழைய ஏப்ரல் ஒன்றையே புத்தாண்டாக கொண்டாடினார்கள் .

இப்படி மாற மறுத்தவர்களை, மாறியவர்கள் முட்டாள்கள் என்றார்கள்.  இது தான் முட்டாள் தினமாக வந்ததற்கு முதல் காரணம்.  இது இப்படியே ரெக்கை முளைத்து பல நாடுகளுக்கும் பரவி விட்டது.

april-fools-dayஓன்று வந்து விட்டால் அதன் பின்னால் ஆயிரம் கதைகள் பின்னாலையே வந்து விடுமே.  அந்த வகையில் முட்டாள் தினத்திற்கு என்று பல புனை கதைகள் இருக்கிறது.   அவற்றில் சில உங்கள் பார்வைக்கு.

இந்த நடைமுறை வருவதற்கு முன்பே பிலிப்பை  என்ற மன்னனை அவரது அரண்மனை விகடகவி பந்தயம் ஒன்றை வைத்து, அந்த பந்தயத்தில் மன்னனையே  முட்டாளாகினாறாம்.  அந்த நாள் ஏப்ரல் ஓன்று.

முதலாம் நெப்போலியன் ஆஸ்திரியாவை சேர்ந்த மேரிலுயிசை  திருமணம் செய்து கொண்டார்.  அப்போது அந்த பெண்ணின் தோழிகள் உன்னை அவர் உண்மையாக திருமணம் செய்து கொள்ளவில்லை. உன்னை முட்டாளாக்கவே திருமணம் செய்துள்ளார்  என்று என்றார்களாம்.

காரணம் திருமணம் நடந்த நாள் ஏப்ரல் ஓன்று.   இப்படி சரித்திரத்தின் பக்கங்களில் பல கதைகள் உலா  வருகிறது.

கட்டுரை: ஸ்ரீகிருஷ்ணன்

source::::dinamani.blogspot.com

natarajan

Best Airports in the World… For A Stopover …

 

Take advantage of day spas at the airport. Picture: Holidayextras.

Take advantage of day spas at the airport. Picture: Holidayextras. Source: Flickr

DAY spas, showers, free food, comfy chairs, fine dining, free internet — all facilities you’d expect to find at the airport if you’re flying at the pointy end of the plane.

These days the perks are not just for first and business class passengers. Expediabrings you the airports that have a lot more to offer than Duty Free shops and VIP Club lounges.

Samui Airport, Thailand

If you’re flying into Thailand, Koh Samui’s quaint Samui Airport sets the scene for a fly and flop holiday.

Open air, thatched roof bures stand in for gates and the terminal has sprawling manicured lawns and carved wooden chairs.

It’s more fun on the way out — deck chairs and snacks at the departure gate are free for everyone.

 

Samui’s open air terminal. Picture: KLGreenNYC.

Samui’s open air terminal. Picture: KLGreenNYC. Source: Flickr

 

Incheon International Airport, Seoul

At Incheon International Airport in Seoul, the Airstar Terrace bar looking out over the runways is a popular spot to spend some time before boarding.

There’s the Cultural Museum of Korea if you ran out of time to find out about the history of the country, watch Korean movies in space age pods in the Advanced Technology area or head to the International Business Area for a game of golf, yes golf.

 

A movie theatre at Incheon airport. Picture: woofiegrrl.

A movie theatre at Incheon airport. Picture: woofiegrrl. Source: Flickr

 

Schiphol International Airport, Amsterdam

Schiphol International Airport in Amsterdam is another hub known for looking after its guests in transit. The 24-hr library sees more than 300,000 visitors a year.

The books are focused on Dutch art and culture but there’s also a book swap section where you’ll see plenty of Dan Brown novels.

There’s also a piano next door so you can tinkle the ivories for a while. Take the kids to the Kids Forest playground, hang out on the comfy couches in the Living Room and squeeze in a quick foot massage.

A small version of the Rijksmuseum is just a taster if you missed out on the amazing State Museum in Amsterdam. Don’t forget to stop by the giant tea cups cafe.

 

The 24-hour library in Schiphol Airport. Picture: generalising.

The 24-hour library in Schiphol Airport. Picture: generalising. Source: Flickr

 

Changi International Airport, Singapore

Singapore’s Changi International Airport is probably one of the most well known airports for entertainment value.

A movie theatre, koi pond, outdoor pool, gardens, waterfall, spa, live butterflies … the list goes on.

If you’ve got more than five hours to spare and have had your fun at the airport, hop on one of the free two hour tours of the city. Departing four times a day, the bus tours head to Marina Bay Sands, Merlion Park, the Colonial District, Chinatown, even Little India.

 

The Butterfly Garden at Changi International Airport. Picture: Michael — Spencer

The Butterfly Garden at Changi International Airport. Picture: Michael — Spencer Source: Flickr

 

Other honourable mentions go to Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, where the pulled pork burgers are cheap and tasty, Dubai for the comfortable plastic lounge chairs by the departure gates and Cancun where you can drink Coronas and margaritas while lining up to check in.

 

source::::news.com.au

natarajan

Joke Of the Day … !!!…One For April 1 !!!

 
An Accident Report   !!!

I am writing in response to your request for “additional information.” In block number 30 of the accident report form, I put “poor planning” as the cause for my accident. You said in your last letter that I should explain more fully. I trust that the following detail will be sufficient.

I am an amateur radio operator. On the day of the accident, I was working alone on the top section of my new 80-foot antenna tower. When I completed my work, I discovered that I had, over the course of several trips up the tower, brought about 300 lbs. of tools and spare hardware. Rather than carry the now unneeded tools and materials down by hand, I decided to lower the items in a small barrel by using a pulley, which fortunately was attached to the pole at the tip of the tower. Securing the rope at ground level, I went up to the top of the tower and loaded the tools and materials into the barrel. Then I went back to the ground and untied the rope, holding it tightly to insure a slow descent of the 300 lbs. of tools.

You will note in block number 11 of the accident report form that I weigh 155 lbs. Due to my surprise at being jerked off the ground so suddenly, I lost my presence of mind and forgot to let go of the rope. Needless to say, I proceeded at a rapid rate up the side of the tower. In the vicinity of the 40-foot level, I met the barrel coming down. This explains my fractured skull and broken clavicle.

Slowed only slightly, I continued my rapid ascent, not stopping until the fingers of my right hand were two knuckles deep into the pulley. Fortunately by this time I had regained my presence of mind and was able to hold tightly on the rope in spite of the pain. At about the same time however, the barrel hit the ground. The bottom fell out of the barrel. Devoid of the weight of the tools, the barrel now weighed 20 pounds.

I refer you again to my weight in block number 11. As you might guess, I began a rapid descent down the side of the tower. In the vicinity of the 40-foot level, I met the barrel coming up. This accounts for the two fractured ankles and the lacerations or my legs and lower body.

The encounter with the barrel slowed me enough to lessen my injuries when I fell into the pile of tools, and fortunately only three vertebras were cracked. I am sorry to report, however, that as I lay there on the tools in pain, unable to stand, and watching the empty barrel 80 feet above me, I again lost my presence of mind.

I let go off  the rope…

 

source:::: joke a day.com

natarajan

Message For The Day…” God is Very Kind in Showering Infinite Grace on You … ”

 

In this world, to receive one thing, you need to give up another. When you want a simple handkerchief, you need to pay rupees ten, only then will the shopkeeper sell it to you. God is a very kind merchant. If you offer even a small amount of devotion, the Merciful Lord will, in return, shower infinite amount of Grace on you. The poor devotee, Kuchela offered a handful of beaten rice to Lord Krishna and received His blessings in abundance. Queen Draupadi, during a distressful moment, prayed with a pure heart. Because of the little sacrifice she made earlier, Lord Krishna rushed to respond to her call and showered His infinite Grace to protect her. The fruits of action are inevitable and no one can escape them. However you can nullify or modify the consequences to a certain extent, if you become worthy and deserve His Grace.

 

Sathya Sai Baba

Why ” Ambulances ” are called so…?

 

Why Ambulances are Called Ambulances

ambulanceThe word “ambulance” ultimately derives from the Latin “ambulare,” meaning “to walk.” This gave rise to the French “hôpital ambulant,” essentially meaning “mobile hospital.” In the beginning, this didn’t mean as we think of it today, but was generally just used to refer to a temporary medical structure that could be easily moved, particularly early on referring to movable army medical hospitals.

“Ambulance,” in English, first appeared around 1798, which also referred to these temporary hospital structures at first.

Mobile medical transport vehicles were also being called ambulances in French around this time thanks to Frenchman Dominque-Jean Larrey and his “flying ambulance” (ambulance volantes). These ambulances were designed to get injured soldiers off the battlefield and to medical aid during battle, rather than waiting until the fight was over as was common before.

By the mid-nineteenth century, the word (in English) extended to refer to any vehicle used to transport the wounded from battle fields to the military hospitals. One of the first instances of this was during the Crimean War (1853-1856). Shortly thereafter, during the American Civil War, such medical transport vehicles were known as “ambulance wagons.” The former, “ambulance,” name for mobile medical vehicles has stuck around ever since.

 

source:::: today i founout .com

natarajan

” OK ” … Now 175 … Not Out !!!

OK!

OK! Source: ThinkStock

WHATEVER you’re doing, wherever you might be, take a moment to reflect on the most popular word in the English language, OK?

Yesterday it was 175 years since OK — or, as some prefer, okay — first appeared in print, on page two of The Boston Morning Post, then one of the most popular newspapers in the United States.

“I think OK should be celebrated with parades and speeches,” Allan Metcalf, an English professor in Illinois who is the world’s leading authority on the history and meaning of OK, told AFP.

“But for now, whatever you do (to mark the anniversary), it’s OK.”

In his 2001 book, OK: The Improbable Story of America’s Greatest Word, Metcalf calls OK “the most frequently spoken (or typed) word on the planet” — used more often than “Coke” or an infant’s “ma.” Concise and utilitarian, it’s quintessentially American in its simplicity. Etymologically, it has no direct relationship with Latin or Greek or any other ancient tongue.

Oxford Dictionaries, on its website, rejects speculation that OK is derived from the Scottish expression “och aye,” the Greek “ola kala” (it’s good) or the French “aux Cayes,” which refers to a Haitian port famous for its rum.

Rather, it favours a theory — shared by Metcalf — that it’s an abbreviation of “orl korrekt,” a derivative of “all correct” from the 1830s when jokey misspellings were all the rage, like internet memes are today.

 

OK could be an abbreviation of orl korrekt.

OK could be an abbreviation of orl korrekt. Source: ThinkStock

 

First use

Credit for finding its first use in print goes to Allen Walker Read, a Columbia University professor who died in 2002 after a lifetime interest in ok.

It appeared in the Post in the context of an article concerning the ironically named Anti-Bell Ringing Society, founded in 1838 to oppose a municipal law in Boston prohibiting the ringing of dinner bells.

Society members were en route to New York, it reported, adding cryptically that if they should transit Rhode Island en route home, the newspaper editor in the New England state might well “have the ‘contribution box,’ et ceteras, o.k. — all correct — and cause the corks to fly, like sparks, upward.”

Other abbreviations proliferated at the time, like NG for “no go,” GT for “gone to Texas” and SP for “small potatoes.” But OK truly entered the national lingua franca in 1840, when spin doctors for Democratic presidential nominee Martin Van Buren, a native of Kinderhook, New York, insisted to voters that it meant “Old Kinderhook.”

 

Feeling OK?

Feeling OK? Source: ThinkStock

 

‘I’m OK, You’re OK’

Today, OK is used “to ask for or express agreement, approval or understanding” or to add emphasis to a sentence, as in “I’m going to stay here, OK?” according to its entry in the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

“I’m OK, You’re OK,” published in 1967, remains one of the best-selling self-help books of all time, while Rodgers and Hammerstein declared Oklahoma in song to be OK! in their eponymous 1943 musical.

There’s also the OK Corral in Tombstone, Arizona — but in this instance, OK stands for Old Kindersley and the infamous 1881 shootout that supposedly took place there but actually occurred down the street.

Internationally, OK has travelled remarkably well on the wings of American popular culture — and found a niche in the digital era, fitting easily into 140-character Twitter and text messages.

Using Google Glass eyewear, in fact, calls for a voice command that begins: “OK, Google Glass.” “It’s a nice, short abbreviation and it fits abbreviations in other languages,” said Metcalf, the executive secretary of the American Dialect Society who teaches at MacMurray College.

“It’s distinctive, yet easily pronounced and very readily understood … It uses the vowel O, the vowel A and the consonant K — and those are found in almost all languages of the world,” he added.

“So if you’re speaking with somebody who has a totally different language than you, chances are you can get by with gestures and OK in various tones of voice.” Metcalf, who blogs about the English language for the Chronicle of Higher Education, personally celebrates OK’s birthday by ordering up to four dozen frosted cookies with OK in green on a white background.

 

OK is everywhere.

OK is everywhere. Source: ThinkStock

 

Global OK Day

In New York, retired English tutor Henry Nass has been pounding the sidewalks of Manhattan, handing out cards to passers-by inviting them to celebrate “Global OK Day.”

“Some people say OK too much. I can’t say there’s anyone who uses it too little,” Nass, who is making customised US postage stamps honouring his pet word, said in a telephone call.

Letting the anniversary pass without fanfare was Okay, Oklahoma, population 620, where residents trace its toponymy to the long-gone Okay Truck Manufacturing Company in the early 20th century.

Four hours’ drive from Okay, OK, as it’s known by the US Postal Service, is Okay, Arkansas — but don’t expect any OK festivities there, either. The one-time limestone quarry town has been all but abandoned for years.

 

source::::news.com.au

natarajan