How This Traveller Flies For Free !!!!!

You would be smiling too if you were flying for free. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

You would be smiling too if you were flying for free. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

IMAGINE not having to deal with airport security, spend hours waiting for your flight or put up with annoying passengers. Even better, what if you never had to pay for a flight again?

Sound too good to be true? Not for this woman.

Meet US travel writer Amber Nolan. After years of corporate work, Amber went backpacking around South America and vowed never to be chained to her desk again.

Amber came up with a radical plan for her life which involved taking the hitchhiking concept to a whole new level … in the skies. She decided to fly to all 50 US states, for free.

So she set up a website called JetHiking.com and began researching her idea. It wasn’t long before she was contacted by a private pilot in New York, who loved her plan and helped get her started.

Amber hitchhiked on her first plane in July last year, flying from Rochester, New York, to Nashville, Tennesse. Since then she’s made it to 31 states, and she won’t stop until she’s flown to them all.

So how does she manage to get pilots to fly her for free?

Amber gets in touch with the pilots of private jets and light aircraft who are planning an upcoming trip and asks to join them. She has to be completely flexible on the destination, date, and time.

“I find most pilots enjoy sharing their passion for aviation with people,” Amber told news.com.au. “They are adventurers too, and want to help be a part of my project so I can reach my goal. They think it’s a cool idea.”

Travelling on smaller planes has its upsides. She even gets to fly them sometimes.

“I always associate travelling on planes with commercial airlines. I think a lot of people do. Long lines, security scans, being miserable in general,” Amber said.

“Also, hitchhiking this way offers an opportunity to see the country from a different perspective that you will not find if you fly commercial airlines.

“We can do a lot of low flying and really see the landscape. Yesterday, I flew up the Hudson River parallel to the New York City skyline at about 1100 feet (335 metres) – just over the bridges and next to the Statue of Liberty.

“On the way to Georgia, I was able to experience some aerobatic rolls in the plane, and often the pilots will let me fly a little to practice – I want to get my license. On a seaplane, we can land on a small lake in the middle of nowhere.

“And when I land at some of these smaller airports, I feel like I am time-travelling to a ‘romantic era’ of aviation.”

Among the states she’s flown to are California, Texas, Arizona, Washington, Maine and Florida.

What about the challenges?

“It isn’t easy and there is a lot of waiting involved,” Amber warns. “I can’t really plan much since I often have no idea where I’m heading to next, and flights get cancelled all the time for weather (or anything really).

“I’ll land in an area and have to find a place to stay on a shoestring budget. The airports are often far away from any public transportation, so getting to and from the airport is challenging and there’s often a lot of walking.

“I have to be totally flexible to just roll with whatever comes my way, and I often rely on the kindness of strangers.”

Amber has made it to 31 US states already. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.com

 Amber has made it to 31 US states already. Picture: Amber Nolan/JetHiking.comWhen she needs a place to sleep she uses the website couchsurfing.com and stays with pilots and their families and friends. Sometimes she’ll stay in a hotel if she’s “really stuck”.

Her next stop is Maryland and New Jersey, followed by Alaska. She still works as a freelance travel writer, earning enough money – along with her savings – to keep her going during her trips.

Amber is also considering taking her “jethiking” international, and is writing a book.

source:::::news.com.au.
natarajan

Message For The Day….Stick To Your Own Code Of conduct !!!

For you to relish the dish (pappu) it must have enough salt (uppu). But if you add a little extra, it spoils the dish. So too, life becomes very difficult to bear, if you have too much of desire. Limit your desires to your capacity and even among them, have only those that will grant you lasting joy. Do not run after fashion and public approval and strain your resources beyond repair. Also stick to your own code of conduct (Dharma) that regulates your life or the stage you have reached. Do not place your needs and joy first. Consider the joy of others as more important than your own. Respect elders and cultivate cordiality between brothers and sisters, teachers and students, employers and employees. Respect the culture of your land and bring honour to the land you were born in and live in. Nourish your parents, revere them. If you do so, the Lord of the Universe will guard you against harm.

 

Sathya Sai Baba

Rebuild A jeep in 4 Minutes !!!!!

This is fabulous!!!!

Willys Jeep…..Unbelievable
6 soldiers pull up on a main street in Halifax, Nova Scotia
as part of a parade. They’re in a standard issue WWII type Willys Jeep. In the span of about 4 to 5 minutes they completely disassemble the vehicle and reassemble it and drive off in it fully operable! The idea being to show the
genius that went into the making of the jeep and its basic simplicity.

pl click the link below ….

source ::::input from a friend of mine ….. you tube .com

natarajan

Message For The Day…Do Good and Be in Good Company !!!

The attachment to sensual objects and to the pleasure they give is like the soot that sticks to the inside of the chimney and dims the light. Clean the chimney by namasmarana (repetition of the Lord’s name) every day and the flame will shine for you and others. Also do good deeds and be in good company. Proper atmosphere is very essential for the development of a spiritual aspirant. That is why spiritual seekers in the past left their homes and lived in the hermitages maintained by the sages. This is akin to keeping a pot of water immersed in water. That way, the water in the pot will then not be lost through evaporation. Therefore be careful, that the success you have won in the promotion of virtue, in the conquest of baneful habits and in the assumption of regular disciplines, are not frittered away by trite company, loose talk, cynical criticism or lackadaisical effort.

 

Sathya Sai Baba

” எங்கள் தெய்வம் இனி இவர்தான்” !!!

 

 
ஆனந்த விகடன் ஆசிரியராக இருந்த எழுத்தாளர்
மணியன். பிற்காலத்தில் தனக்குச் சொந்தமாக-
இதயம் பேசுகிறது என்கிற பத்திரிகையை
ஆரம்பித்தார்.

அந்தப் பத்திரிகையில் அவர் வெளிநாட்டுக்குச்
சென்று இருந்தபோது நடந்த ஓர் அற்புதமான
விஷயத்தைக் குறிப்பிட்டு இருக்கிறார். எந்த
நாட்டிற்குப் போனாலும் அவர் தங்கும் அறையில்
இருக்கும் மேஜை மீது காஞ்சி மகானின் படத்தை
வைத்து, தினமும் வணங்குவது வழக்கம். அவர்
அப்போது தங்கி இருந்தது ஓர் ஆங்கிலேயரின் வீடு.

வீட்டின் சொந்தக்காரர், மணியனிடம் 
“படத்தில் இருப்பவர் யார்?” என்று கேட்டு
இருக்கிறார். “அவர் நான் வணங்கும் தெய்வம்”
என்று பதில் சொன்னார் மணியன்.

“சக்தி வாய்ந்த தெய்வமா அவர்? நாம் நினைத்தது
நடக்குமா? என்று ஆங்கிலேயர் ஒரு வினா எழுப்ப
அதற்கும் மணியன் பதில் சொன்னார்.

“நாம் உண்மையாக வேண்டிக் கொண்டால்,
நிச்சயம் நாம் நினைத்தது நடக்கும். அந்த
கருணைக்கடல் அதை நிறைவேற்றி வைப்பார்.

மணியன் சொன்ன தோரணை,அவர் குரலில்
ஒலித்த
பக்தி, ஆங்கிலேயரை நம்பச் செய்தது.

“என் மகன் எங்கோ போய்விட்டான்…அவனைப்
பிரிந்து என் மனைவி ஓயாமல் அழுது கொண்டு
இருக்கிறாள். அதனால்தான் ஒரு நம்பிக்கையோடு
உங்களிடம் கேட்டேன்.

“எங்கள் குருவான காஞ்சி மகானை நீங்கள்
மனமுருகி
பிரார்த்தியுங்கள்..உங்களுக்கு அவரது அருள்
நிச்சயம் கிட்டும்.

மணியன் வாக்கை அப்படியே ஏற்றுக்கொண்ட
ஆங்கிலேயர், காஞ்சி தெய்வத்தின் படத்தின்
முன் நின்று மனமுருகி வேண்டி தனக்கு
அருள் புரியும்படி வேண்டிக் கொண்டார்.

சில மணி நேரம் கடந்ததும், அவரது வீட்டு
போன் ஒலித்தது.ஆங்கிலேயர் போய் போனை
எடுத்தார். போனில் வந்த செய்தி அவருக்கு
அளவு கடந்த வியப்பை அளித்தது.

காணாமற்போன அவரது மகன்தான் பேசினான்,
தான் எங்கேயோ பொயிருந்ததாகவும்,
இப்போது ஊருக்கு வந்துவிட்டதாகவும்,உடனே
வீட்டுக்கு வருவதாகவும் தகவல் சொன்னான்.

ஆங்கிலேயருக்கு மெய் சிலிர்த்தது.காஞ்சி மகானை
வணங்கியபடியே,மணியனுக்கு நன்றி சொன்னார்.

“எங்கள் தெய்வம்…இவர்தான்….இந்த உருவில்தான்
தெய்வத்தைப் பார்ப்போம்” என்று கடல் கடந்து
எங்கேயோ இருந்த ஆங்கிலேய தம்பதிகள்
ஆனந்த அனுபவத்தில் உருகி நின்றார்கள்.

 
source :::::input from my friend 
natarajan

Success Story Of Turkish Airlines with Simple Planning !!!

Turkish Airlines is dominating in its field.

turkish airlines cartoon

 

In an industry where making money is insanely hard, the airline’s operating profit nearly tripled in 2012 (after dropping in 2010 and 2011).

One of the world’s fastest growing airlines, it’s adding destinations and buying planes at a rapid pace.

And it’s collecting tons of awards, including the Skytrax award for “Best Airline in Europe,” announced at the Paris Air Show in June.

In an interview, Turkish Airlines CEO Dr. Temel Kotil said his company excels by offering top of the line service, but also benefits from its geographical position.

“We are in the center,” he explained, which makes it easy to connect growing markets in Asia, Africa, and the Middle East with established areas like Europe.

It helps that passenger numbers in Turkey alone are up 16.7% year-over-year — a rate topped only by Indonesia (18.2%) and Thailand (17.7%), according to new stats from the International Air Transport Association (IATA).

Asked how the carrier plans to continue that pace of growth, Kotil said it was focused on adding destinations. Turkish Airlines already reaches more than 230 airports in 103 countries. Since May 20, it has issued ten different press releases announcing new destinations.

 

Turkish Airlines ceo temel kotilTurkish Airlines CEO Dr. Temel Kotil has big plans for growth.

“Of course we’ll keep on growing,” Kotil said, suggesting the addition of another 100 locations in the next decade, or less. “We are very aggressive in going different places.”

 

Along with more destinations come more airplanes. Today, the carrier has 228 aircraft in its employ — “still not enough,” Kotil said.

That will nearly double by 2020, to 415 planes, according to Kotil. The current fleet is mostly narrowbody (single aisle) aircraft, and the airline would consider ordering bigger, more advanced aircraft like the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and Airbus A350, which tout fuel efficiency as a key feature.

While Kotil acknowledged the high cost of fuel (which accounted for 33% of global airline operating costs in 2012), he said that adding capacity to meet demand is more important for now than buying more economical planes.

“It’s okay whatever you have,” he said.
source :::::businessinsider.com

natarajan
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/turkish-airlines-growth-plan-2013-7#ixzz2ZHgueLyU

The Great Indian Rope Trick and Other Illusions of Progress !!!!

Rajeev Srinivasan on how Indians are satisfied with illusions, not reality :::

source ::::rediff.com

natarajan

Indians live in a state of illusion: they believe there is progress, there is a democracy, and that the State is a benign mai-baapnanny State. It turns out that they are wrong on all counts, but apparently this political and economic theatre is quite enough as anodyne for the long-suffering ordinary Indian.

I was impelled to write this after reading ‘The Great Indian Rupee Trick’ by Krishnara at and a piece in The Economist magazine of June 13, 2011 (Big Mac index: Value Meal). Although the two disagree — the former suggests the rupee has a long way left to fall, while the latter suggests that the rupee is the most undervalued currency around right now — it is a tribute to the fecklessness of the Indian government that the rupee has tumbled so far so fast (from around $1=Rs 45 in 2011 to $1=Rs 61 now, some 30 percent).

I also happened to leaf through an old issue of National Geographic from 1988 with a story on Kerala, and it mentioned that $1=Rs 12 at that time. Thus, the rupee has, in about 25 years, lost 80 percent of its value, and quite a bit of that in the last few years (mostly coinciding with UPA 2). In simple terms, the fall of the Indian rupee reflects the lack of competitiveness of the Indian economy.

The dramatic increase in the current account deficit suggests the same thing: that there is little India makes that foreigners want; whereas Indians want to import a lot of things others make. It was blithely predicted by India’s mandarins that the rupee’s fall would lead to a surge in its exports, but on the contrary, India’s exports have actually shrunk by 4.6 percent year to year.

We don’t need to go far to understand why this has happened: it is because of pure economic mismanagement. The immense potential of the country and its people has been wasted — a colossal crime against the people and indeed against humanity, which has prevented half a billion people from clawing their way out of poverty.

Why have Indians allowed a clutch of clever political entrepreneurs to do this to them? It must be because Indians are satisfied with delusion (is that why Bollywood is so big?). They are happy with the illusion of progress; they are happy to have the illusion of a democratic republic; they are happy to have the illusion that our wretched are being looked after. In fact none of these is true, but they happily suspend their disbelief. They live in a make-believe world.

The fact is that India is falling further and further behind the rest of the world. Half the world’s poor, half the world’s blind, half the world’s sick and malnourished, are in India. Things are not getting better; they are getting worse by the day. India is regressing rapidly.

Remember how India was compared to China and other developing nations, courtesy Goldman Sachs and the convenient BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) epithet? But have you noticed that these days India is increasingly bracketed with Africa — and sometimes contrasted negatively with sub-Saharan Africa, for instance in malnourishment — as the last reservoir of the world’s miseries? China appears to have decisively trounced India in the race for growth and prosperity.

There is, some argue, the effect of democracy, as though there were a democracy penalty. But this is absurd, because India is not a democracy. It is a hereditary feudal monarchy with a large set of court jesters and other hangers-on. Parliament is a chimera, or at best a smokescreen. There are what look like elections, what looks like an assertion of the people’s will. But this is a hugely expensive, elaborate charade like the Potemkin villages of Tsarist Russia.

In fact, Parliament is merely a place to park the hereditary scions of the ruling castes. Patrick French’s 2011 research (‘The Princely State of India‘, in Outlook magazine, January 17, 2011) showed that 100 percent of the Congress party’s members below the age of 35 were sons or daughters of some senior party person.

Furthermore, Parliament is just a rubber stamp. There is the gigantic Food Security Bill, which will add many a billion dollars to the nation’s budget deficit. It was enacted not after parliamentary debate, but as an ordinance, or executive order.

Similarly, a few years ago, the ‘nuclear deal’ with the US was signed by the executive without ever informing Parliament about how much was being given up in national security in return for virtually nothing.

Therefore, the Indian Parliament is merely ornamental, and a playground for the children of political bigwigs. But Indians are under the comfortable illusion that they live in a parliamentary democracy. Yes, that and ten rupees will get them a cup of coffee.

Then there is the fantasy that the Indian State is benign. And that it looks after its poorest and worst-off. Which is the alleged reason that the unelected National Advisory Council (a truly motley crew) has rammed through various hare-brained schemes such as National Rural Employment Guarantee Act, Right to Education, and the latest turkey, FSB. And what is the reality with all this spending — which amounts to hundreds of billions of dollars? The Indian State is actually a predatory State, the direct descendant of the colonial construct intended to loot and pillage.

In a March 23, 2011, article titled ‘India can’t fumble its ‘food right’ plan‘, the Wall Street Journal noted that, according to theGlobal Hunger Index, India is in the category of ‘alarming’ along with Haiti, Bangladesh, Sudan, Cambodia and Nepal. This is worse than war-ravaged Afghanistan and Iraq. The only countries were hunger is worse than India are: war-torn Congo, Haiti and Bangladesh.

Even worse, reporting on a study in the British medical journal LancetThe Economist pointed out in February 7, 2011 (‘Global Obesity: An expanding world. How men’s waistlines have grown since 1980‘) that there are only three countries in the world where people have grown thinner in the recent past (ie. 1980-2008): Afghanistan, Congo and India! That means malnutrition is endemic in India, while much of the rest of the world struggles with obesity. (Note that Congo and Afghanistan are wretched, war-torn States).

A more recent update is even more damning. Quoting the Asian Development Bank, The Economist of July 6, 2013 (‘Widefare‘) points out that of all the welfare states in Asia, India’s is the worst-performing: it has neither depth nor breadth. That is, neither is the alleged welfare net reaching a large proportion of the people, nor is the per-person welfare amount high. Even Pakistan manages to give its welfare recipients more.

So this is the reality of the welfare State: yet another figment of your imagination.

I will close with a final illusion: that of toilets in trains. Even in higher-class compartments, if you use the stinking toilets, you will notice that there is no way you can clean your bottom with dignity. There is a chained mug and a faucet, thus giving you the idea that you can wash yourself. Much of the time, there is no water. The rest of the time, you are frustrated because the chain is just slightly too short — there is no way you can wash yourself without twisting yourself into contortions, or without spilling soiled water all over the toilet floor.

The bureaucrat who specified the length of that chain — just three inches too short — is a perfect metaphor for India’s ruling classes. They have no interest in your welfare, only in giving you the frustrating impression that you can actually accomplish something, which of course you cannot.

All hyperlinks in the story are external links

 A thought provoking article by Rajeev Sreenivasan in rediff.com 

An Aircraft To Fly Anywhere in the World In Just 4 hours !!!!

British aerospace firm Reaction Engines is working on an aircraft it believes would be able to take passengers anywhere in the world in just four hours.
The vehicle would also be able to fly in outer space.

skylon reaction engines

A rendering of Reaction Engines’ Skylon aircraft taking off.

 

Reaction Engines says there’s only one truly new technology in the aircraft that makes those things possible: the precooler.

In a new video, chief engineer Alan Bond explains that air entering the new “Sabre” engine system could be cooled by more than 1,000 degrees Celsius in .01 seconds. That ability would allow a jet engine to run at higher power than what is possible today.

More power = more speed. Enough to fly at Mach 5, five times the speed of sound, “pretty easily,” Bond says.

The Telegraph explained the technology in an article in late 2012:

The breakthrough technology is a cooling system which uses an array of thin pipes, arranged in a “swirl” pattern and filled with condensed helium, to extract heat from air and cool it to minus 150C before it enters the engine.

In normal circumstances, this would cause moisture in the air to freeze, coating the engine with frost, but the company has also developed a method which prevents this from happening.

The company eventually hopes to use its cooling technology to build a plane that transports 300 passengers and flies like a rocket. It will “transform high-speed aviation,” Bond says, adding, “we have no competitors. We are unique.”

The aircraft itself will measure 276 feet long, and be called the Skylon. It would take off and land horizontally (like a plane), which would make it easier to reuse than a standard rocket. But in addition to the $1.1 billion price tag for each one, there’s another big downside: The Skylon has no windows, a major bummer for those excited to fly in space.

The company is currently in the process of testing the system. Test flights of the Skylon are planned for 2019.

source:::::businessinsider.com

natarajan

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/reaction-engines-tests-new-cooling-system-2013-7#ixzz2ZHU061xq

Birth of Ctrl +Alt + Del !!!

By Virginia Hughes

In the spring of 1981, David Bradley was part of a select team working from a nondescript office building in Boca Raton, Fla. His task: to help build IBM’s new personal computer. Because Apple and RadioShack were already selling small stand-alone computers, the project (code name: Acorn) was a rush job. Instead of the typical three- to five-year turnaround, Acorn had to be completed in a single year.

One of the programmers’ pet peeves was that whenever the computer encountered a coding glitch, they had to manually restart the entire system. Turning the machine back on automatically initiated a series of memory tests, which stole valuable time. “Some days, you’d be rebooting every five minutes as you searched for the problem,” Bradley says. The tedious tests made the coders want to pull their hair out.

So Bradley created a keyboard shortcut that triggered a system reset without the memory tests. He never dreamed that the simple fix would make him a programming hero, someone who’d someday be hounded to autograph keyboards at conferences. And he didn’t foresee the command becoming such an integral part of the user experience.

Bradley joined IBM as a programmer in 1975. By 1978, he was working on the Datamaster, the company’s early, flawed attempt at a PC. It was an exciting time—computers were starting to become more accessible, and Bradley had a chance to help popularize them.

In September 1980, he became the 12th of 12 engineers picked to work on Acorn. The close-knit team was whisked away from IBM’s New York headquarters. “We had very little interference,” Bradley says. “We got to do the design essentially starting with a blank sheet of paper.”

Bradley worked on everything from writing input/output programs to troubleshooting wire-wrap boards. Five months into the project, he created ctrl+alt+del. The task was just another item to tick off his to-do list. “It was five minutes, 10 minutes of activity, and then I moved on to the next of the 100 things that needed to get done,” he says. Bradley chose the keys by location—with the del key across the keyboard from the other two, it seemed unlikely that all three would be accidentally pressed at the same time. Bradley never intended to make the shortcut available to customers, nor did he expect it to enter the pop lexicon. It was meant for him and his fellow coders, for whom every second counted.

The team managed to finish Acorn on schedule. In the fall of 1981, the IBM PC hit shelves—a homely gray box beneath a monitor that spit out green lines of type. Marketing experts predicted that the company would sell a modest 241,683 units in the first five years; company execs thought that estimate was too optimistic. They were all wrong. IBM PC sales would reach into the millions, with people of all ages using the machines to play games, edit documents, and crunch numbers. Computing would never be the same.

 

And yet, few of these consumers were aware of Bradley’s shortcut quietly lingering in their machines. It wasn’t until the early 1990s, when Microsoft’s Windows took off, that the shortcut came to prominence. As PCs all over the country crashed and the infamous “blue screen of death” plagued Windows users, a quick fix spread from friend to friend: ctrl+alt+del. Suddenly, Bradley’s little code was a big deal. Journalists hailed “the three-finger salute” as a saving grace for PC owners—a population that kept growing.

In 2001, hundreds of people packed into the San Jose Tech Museum of Innovation to commemorate the 20th anniversary of the IBM PC. In two decades, the company had moved more than 500 million PCs worldwide. After dinner, industry luminaries, including Microsoft chairman Bill Gates, sat down for a panel discussion. But the first question didn’t go to Gates; it went to David Bradley. The programmer, who has always been surprised by how popular those five minutes spent creating ctrl+alt+del made him, was quick to deflect the glory.

“I have to share the credit,” Bradley joked. “I may have invented it, but I think Bill made it famou

source:::::mentalfloss.com

natarajan

Read the full text here: http://mentalfloss.com/article/51674/history-ctrl-alt-delete#ixzz2ZGXMJXdw
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Message For The Day….. Shiva and Vishnu Are one and the same !!!!

Foolishness, egoism and sheer ignorance are the root-causes of misery. The eye, the ear and the tongue lead people to anger and malice, instead of making them the messengers of peace and harmony. Intellect is the root of pride and envy. Lord Vishnu is called Lord Jagannatha at Puri. Lord Shiva is Vishweshwara, the Lord of Universe at Kashi. Vishnu is Gopal (protector of cows) and Shiva is Pashupathi (master of cows). Where is the room for rivalry between those who worship Shiva and Vishnu? Still the innate urge to fight comes up in the heart of people and they use the Names of the Lord as excuses for provoking the fights they relish. Stay away from these instincts.

 

Sathya Sai Baba