படித்து சிலிர்த்தது !!!..மகாபெரியவாவின் மருத்துவம் !!!!!

நெஞ்சை ஆழ தொடும் ஒரு நிகழ்ச்சி. நெடுங்காலத்திற்கு முன் நடந்தது.

ஒரு சிறுவனின் சருமத்தில் கரும் திட்டுகள் தோன்றி உடல் முழுவதும் பரவி விட்டது. பார்க்கவே ஓர் அருவருப்பு. உடன் படிப்பவர்கள் அவனை ஒதுக்கி ஓடினார்கள்.

உடல் வியாதி பாதியும் மனோ வியாதி மீதியுமாய் சாம்பி போன பிள்ளையை தாயார்க்காரி தயாமூர்த்தியிடம் அழைத்து வந்து உருகி வேண்டினாள்.

நம்ப வொண்ணாத அருள் வாசகம் ஐயன் திருவாயில் இருந்து வந்தது. ‘கொழந்தே, இங்கே என்னோடே மூணு நாள் இருக்கியா?’

அவன் பதில் சொல்லும் முன்பே தாயார்க்காரி, ‘பாக்கியம், மூணு என்ன, எத்தனை நாள் வேணுமானாலும் பையன் பெரிவாளோட இருக்கட்டும்’ என்றாள்.

பையனும் மனமார ஒத்துக்கொண்டான்.

‘நான் என்ன சாப்பிடறேனோ, அதைத்தான் நீயும் சாப்பிடணும். செய்வியா?’ என்றார் ஸ்ரீ சரணர்.

‘பெரியவா என்ன சொன்னாலும் செய்யறேன், உடம்பு சரியா போனா போறும்’ என்றான் பையன்.

‘நான் சாப்பிடறதுக்கு மேலே ஒண்ணே ஒண்ணு மட்டும் நீ அப்பப்போ சாப்பிடணும் – உப்பு போடாத மோர் அடிக்கடி சாப்பிடு. காபி, டீ வேண்டாம்’.

‘பெரியவா சொல்றபடி’.

அடுத்த மூன்று நாள்கள் அந்த ‘யாரோ பையன்’ ஸ்ரீ மடத்தில் பெற்ற அதீத கவனிப்பு உண்டே! பார்த்து பார்த்து, மோர், MORE AND MORE மோர் கொடுத்தார்கள். பெரியவாளும் அது பற்றி அக்கறையுடன் விசாரித்த வண்ண இருந்தார்.

சாக்ஷாத் ஸ்ரீ பெரியவாள் திருவமுது கொண்ட ஆகாரத்தின் மிகுதி சிறுவனுக்கும் வழங்கப்பட்டது.

அது என்ன ஆகாரம் என்பதல்லவா முக்கியம்?

பச்சை வாழை தண்டித்தான் பொடிபொடியாக நறுக்கி எவ்வித தாளிப்பும் இல்லாமல், சிறிது தயிர் மட்டும் கலந்திருந்தது. அதுவே பெரியவாளுக்கு பிக்ஷை. சிறுவனுக்கு பிரசாதம். பெரியவாளின் பிரசாதம் ஆதலால், அதுவே சிறுவனுக்கு அறுசுவை விருந்தாக ருசித்தது.

மூன்று நாளில் நோய் நன்கு நிவர்த்தி ஆயிற்று. சாம்பி வந்த குழந்தை மலர்ச்சி கண்டான்.

‘ஆத்துக்கு போனாவிட்டும் ஒரு மாசம், உப்பு, புளி, மொளகா, சேர்க்காம சாதுவா சாப்பிடு. இந்த ‘ஒடம்பு’ ஒரு நாளும் வராது.’ என்று கூறி ஆசிர்வதித்து அனுப்பினார் வைத்தியநாதன்.

குஷியாக ஓடினான் பாலகன்.

பெரியவாளின் அன்பு கரிசனம் வாசகர் நெஞ்சை தொடவே செய்யும். ஆனாலும் ‘ஆழ’த்தொடும் என்று அடைமொழி சேர்த்ததற்கு இதனினும் காரணம் உண்டு.

பெரியவாள் அக்காலத்தில் பச்சை வாழை தண்டே உண்டாராக்கும், அதையே பாலனுக்கும் பகிர்ந்து அளித்தாராக்கும் என்று வாசகர் எண்ணக்கூடும். உண்மை அது அல்ல. பெரியவாளின் பிக்ஷையை பையனின் உணவாக்கவில்லை. பையனுக்கான உணவைத்தான் பெரியவாள் தமது பிக்ஷை ஆக்கி கொண்டார்…

ஆம், அது பெரியவாள் ஓரளவு காய்கறிகளுடன் அன்ன பிக்ஷையும் அவ்வப்போது ஏற்று வந்த காலம் தான். அது போன்ற சமயத்தில் பையனுக்கு இந்த பத்தியம் அவசியம் என்று விதித்த மஹா ஆத்மன், ஒரு குழந்தை நாவை அவ்வாறு கட்டுபடுத்தும் போது தாமும் அந்த கட்டுபாட்டை ஏற்க வேண்டும் என்றே கருதி காரியத்தில் செய்து காட்டினார்.

சேய்க்கு வந்த நோய்க்கு அந்த அருட் தாயும் மருந்து உண்டாள் என்றும் சொல்லலாம்
source:::: kanchi perivaa forum
Natarajan

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/index.cgi?board=exptamil&action=display&thread=3020#ixzz2DzAiUwl8

SMS….20 Years Old Today !!!!! …DEC 3 2012….

3 December 2012 ….BBC NEWS SITE…. AN interesting interview thro SMS…. NICE TO READ …..

Natarajan

Texting SMS pioneer Matti Makkonen 20 years on…..

In a world first, on 3 December 1992, an engineer sent the message “Merry Christmas” from a PC to a mobile device using Vodafone’s UK network.

But the origins of the idea date back further to Matti Makkonen. Over a pizza at a telecoms conference in 1984, the former Finnish civil servant put forward the idea of a mobile phone messaging service. This was to become the SMS (short message service) standard.

Dubbed the “father of SMS”- a title he dislikes because of the work others did to develop the technology – Matti Makkonen rarely gives interviews. However, he made an exception for the BBC’s tech team with an interview via SMS.

Following are the highlights of SMS text interview…. Questions of Mr. LEO KELLON from BBC are answered by MR. MATTI MAKKONEN..SMS PIONEER !!!!

Tues 15:24
It’s been estimated 8 trillion test messages were sent last year. 20yrs ago how popular did you think sms would get and what did you think it would be used for?

Tues 15:40
20yrs ago I didn’t see sms as separate issue – it was just a feature in the revolutionary mobile communications system. Very useful for quick business needs.

Tues 15:45
You never got any money for it as you didn’t patent the idea. Is that a regret – or are you glad how things worked out?.

Tues 15:58
I dont think I made a patentable innovation, but was one of the early persons to understand the need and the concept. I’m glad the work was done as part of GSM.

Tues 18:03
You’ve been described as the “reluctant father of SMS” and it took a newspaper investigation to identify you. Why were you so quiet about your achievement?

Weds 06:05
I did not consider sms as personal achievement but as result of joint effort to collect ideas and write the specifications of the services based on them.

Weds 12:22
Cn u txtspk?

Weds 12:26
No! My passion is to write correct language (Finnish), using all 160 characters.

Weds 12:28
What do you think of people who do? Do you hate it?

Weds 12:33
No, I don’t hate them. Actually sms can also be seen as a way for language to develop. More symbols, less characters.

Weds 14:26
What do you make of sexting? A lot of high profile figures have come to regret some of their more explicit messages!?!

Weds 15:18
In my mind private messages of high profile persons should be kept out of public discussion. Privacy belongs to telecommunication as much as to private letters.

Weds 17:08
Do you suffer from text spam? If so what kind?

Weds 17:16
Not at all. Finnish legislation is quite protective. Marketing messages are allowed only if you really allow them. Spam calls are more often problem.

Weds 18:47
Do you prefer typing in a keypad or touchscreen? And how fast are you?

Weds 20:11
I love touchscreen. Slow enough to think and sometimes even edit what I write.

Weds 20:13
Will sms survive another 20 years – of will Facebook, Skype and other instant messaging chat systems take over?

Weds 20:30
20 years is long time… I believe that reliable convenient to use text messaging will stay forever. Is not necessary what we call sms. No more pay per message.

Thurs 10:38
It was 8 years between your idea of SMS and the first text being sent. Were you surprised it took so long?

Thurs 14:26
No. Actually I felt myself as a customer, who had noticed a need. I was happy to see that the development was going on in a gsm working team. The real launch of the service, as I see it, was when Nokia introduced the first phone that enabled easy writing of messages (Nokia 2010 in 1994).

Thurs 14:41
Do you have any other big idea for the future!?!

Thurs 15:06
Not my idea but integration of mobile content display to my eyeglasses would be nice. Maybe someone is working working with it !!!

Dealing With a Metrosexual Patient !!!!!

December 1, 2012

Dealing with a metrosexual patient

DR. V. JOHN BENNO   in THE HINDU

Do you think the metrosexual is going to believe your last-century clinical skills? He believes only in echos, endos, angios and tomos.Don’t rub the wrong side of the metrosexual and end up being the twitters’ target!

A metrosexual patient can be defined as one who talks, walks, laughs, coughs, wheezes and sneezes like an American. He has set foot in the dreamland — America (never mind, if it was only to sit in the bench between breakfast and lunch and catch the next return flight).

Need proof of his American-ness? Well! He comes to your clinic clad in shorts and addresses you, “Doc!,” unlike the pants-clad locals who call you, “Doctorrr!” or “Sarr!” Sometimes, he prefers your second name. Oh, I forgot an important thing! Whenever I say ‘he,’ please insert an ‘s’ in brackets before ‘he.’ (Beware the female metrosexual!).

The intro (don’t you know the short form of introduction?) to the metrosexual patient’s complaints starts like this: “Doc! You know my eyes are sooo… precious to me!” (For all others, they are optional accessories!). And then he elaborates his complaints. You should be grateful to him that during the whole conversation, he keeps his notebook closed, ignores his i-phone calls and fancy SMS tones, all…….. for your sake.

Try to concentrate on his talk and suppress the temptation of yawning, or worse, laughing. Other points to remember before you lose any more of your metrosexual patients: 1.The best way (or the worst way?) to insult a metrosexual patient is to talk to him in the local tongue.

2. Don’t ask him: “Do you work on computers?” Not only because it is so obvious, but also because this silly question will, in his eyes, downgrade you to the level of computer illiterates, who call the computer a computer. (‘Computerologists’ call it ‘SYSTEM’)

And then graciously he lets you examine him, with milder comments like, “It’s so hot doc! Can you please increase the AC?” or “Are you sure you are qualified to do this, doc?” You have to increase the AC though you might feel a shiver and assure him that you were a gold medallist in medical school. (Remember! In the U.S., it’s medical school, not college!)

After examining him, you ‘must’ order special investigations. Do you think the metrosexual is going to believe your last-century clinical skills? He believes only in echos, endos, angios and tomos. (Come on! I can’t keep expanding every short form!) Mind you, the report printouts should be of the ultimate quality and in multicolour. He asks you to explain every aspect of the report and listens intently, though he doesn’t understand an iota of your explanation. He loves to carry these coloured papers, but still asks for a soft copy. (CDs and pen drives are much harder than papers, why the hell call them soft!)

Then, he asks for the diagnosis. Don’t be stupid and say things like ‘cold with fever.’ Be exact — ‘Acute viral laryngopharyngitis with pyrexia.’ He immediately googles it in his laptop/ i-phone/both and comes back with lots and lots of information (or misinformation) and starts asking you the most intelligent questions like, “Doc! Is it heat? You know, I missed my oil bath last week!” or “Doc! I had those stupid idlis for breakfast. Is it gas?” Don’t get angry at these queries; but politely say “no.” Don’t rub the metrosexual up the wrong side and end up being the twitters’ target!

After all these ordeals, the metrosexual firmly denies any form of treatment whatsoever; he has come to you only for an assurance that everything is all right with his physique. He is a member of two gyms, you know, (don’t bother him by asking whether he has ever seen the interiors of the gyms) and does pranayama regularly (twice a year). Obviously, he is in good health and doesn’t need to spend unnecessarily (!)

At last, somewhat satisfied, the metro asks you to quote your fees. He searches for petty cash (read one hundred rupees) among his platinum and gold cards; luckily he finds a hundred ‘bucks’ note. After paying, he asks you for a receipt (for the silly tax formalities, you know). After looking at the receipt a couple of times, he asks in a hushed tone, “Doc! Can you make it two hundred, please?” After all, Dil hai Hindustani!

(The writer is a consultant ophthalmologist. Email: johnbennov@yahoo.com)

Green Man of Gaya…..

The green man of Gaya

SARITA BRARA   in THE HINDU

Natarajan

  • Preserving trees and the environment for the coming generation. Photo: AP
    Preserving trees and the environment for the coming generation.
  • THE MAN BEHIND THE FORESTS: Sikander. Photo: Ranjit Ranjan
    The HinduTHE MAN BEHIND THE FORESTS: Sikander.

Sikander cycles to Brahmyoni hill every morning to tend to the thousands of trees he has grown single handedly

Sikander lives in a small, one-room house in Gaya, does odd jobs as a part time electrician or an extra hand at a shop to earn a living. But his heart, soul and mind lie in the lofty mission to spread greenery in this town, near Bodh Gaya, where Buddha attained enlightenment. He had single handedly planted countless saplings and today more than ten thousand trees stand tall in Brahmyoni hill and other places.

This is the result of his tireless efforts since he began his mission in 1982, 30 years ago. He is so devoted to the cause that notwithstanding the heat, the cold or the rain, Sikander without fail cycles his way to the hills every morning and starts either planting new samplings or tending to the fresh ones and watering the old and new plants .

“I have three children at home,” he says and “thousands on the Gaya hills to care for, nurture and protect”

He gets really hurt when some of samplings die or are uprooted by miscreants or encroachers, “and this happens constantly”, he laments.

How did it all begin? Sikander recalls that as a child, whenever he came to this area for a picnic with his family or other boys, he found that the place was barren with no trees and he decided to turn the hillock green. What began as a pastime became an obsession and now his lifelong mission. His family has suffered economically, because he refuses to be bogged down either by a full time job or accept employment outside Gaya that could take him away from his mission.

Sikander has grown plants and trees of hundreds of varieties – medicinal, fruits trees and trees that provide shade. There are guava, mango, pomegranate, tamarind, cashew nut, lemon, amla, sheesham, ashoka, neem trees and many other varieties.

“I have planted trees to attract birds,” he says, but regrets that children pluck them while they are still raw.

He also creates parks to beautify the city where he thinks there is a scope. People ask him whether it is for an institute, or an ashram or a spot. Sikander has done his bit to harvest rain water and dug several pits around Brahmayoni hills.

Sikander’s latest fad is naming trees after freedom fighters and other famous personalities. There are trees named after Mahatma Gandhi, Pandit Nehru, Subhas Chandra Bose, Khudiram Bose, Bhagat Singh, Chander Shekhar Azad, Maharana Pratap, Lala Lajpat Rai, Shivaji and others. Sikander says that he is trying to find the names of other freedom fighters so that he can name more trees after them. He is making a special corner for plants named after Kargil martyrs.

Though Gaya’s greenman has earned a lot of appreciation from many quarters and has many admirers, he has not received any help from the state government, irrespective of which party has been in power. His biggest concern today is to protect the green areas that he has created, away from encroachers and ensure that the saplings he plants with so much of hard work are not uprooted or die for want of care. He has applied for assistance many times to the local authorities and even petitioned the current chief minister, but so far has got nothing except assurances. He is keen on starting an organisation or a Trust so that he gets support for his rare mission, but says he does not have the means for it.

“My dream is to see Gaya as an international tourist city with greenery everywhere and also make people aware of the environment and the need to preserve it for coming generation,” he says.

10 Storey Building in 48 Hours !!!…

A team of Indian construction workers has claimed a new record after they erected a 10-storey building in 48 hours, news reports say.

The building, dubbed Instacon, was completed well before a Saturday-evening deadline in the northern city of Mohali, broadcaster NDTV reported.

A total of 200 workers, including 25 technicians and engineers, had worked at a furious pace since Thursday and completed nearly seven storeys in the first 24 hours.

The quality of construction – the building must be able to withstand major earthquakes – was certified by a state-run scientific agency, the report said.

The building was made with steel and pre-fabricated materials, engineers at the site told the IANS news agency.

The air-conditioning system, lighting and operational toilets will be completed later.

‘Our effort was to put the 10-storeyed structure in place within 48 hours,’ an engineer said. ‘We wanted to prove that this could be done.’

Harpal Singh, the owner of the building company, said the effort was a record for India, but it was unclear whether it was a world record.

A Chinese company claimed to have put up a 15-floor building in six days in 2010.

The idea to construct such a building came to Singh when the construction of his own house was delayed by absent workers.

source::::: Big Pond News…Australia.
Natarajan

Let All My Friends Be Happy Forever !!!

source:::: unknown….input from one of my friends….a nice one to be shared with you all thro my site..

Natarajan..

I told GOD :: Let all my friends be healthy and happy forever..

GOD said::::: OK..But for 4 days only…

I said::::::: Let them be Spring Day , Summer Day , Autumn Day, and WinterDay…

GOD said….. 3 Days

I said……. Yes…Yesterday, Today , and Tomorrow!!!

GOD said….. NO.. 2 Days …..

I said…… Yes.. A Bright Day..Day Time…and A Dark day..Night!!!!

GOD Said…. NO….Just One Day…

I Said …… YES

GOD Asked ….Which Day ?

I Said……. EVERY DAY in the living years !!!

GOD Laughed and said …All you friends will be healthy and happy EVERY DAY!!!!!!

2012…End of The World??!!!….NASA Scientist Tries to Ease the Fear!!!!!

source::::: ABC NEWS…Good Morning America…
By KEVIN DOLAK (@kdolak)
Dec. 1, 2012
Natarajan

It was 10 years ago that veteran NASA scientist David Morrison began to answer a question a day from the public about the origin of life on Earth, evolution and the mysteries of the cosmos.

Lately, though, Morrison, senior scientist at the NASA Astrobiology Institute, has been inundated with questions about both Doomsday 2012 and the Nibiru cataclysm, a supposed apocalyptic event in which Earth will collide with a massive rogue planet.

Some of these questions, he says, are increasingly alarming, and include threats of murder and suicide.

“I think it was about 4 years ago, early in 2008, I started getting 5 questions a day about 2012, and now it has increased,” Morrison told ABCNews.com. “The most common question is, ‘Will the world end on December 21, 2012?’ I find that strange because the idea of the world ending is absurd. Do they really think, ‘The world is ending, but if I build a bomb shelter in my back yard, I’ll survive’?”

The frequency of the queries has even led Morrison to add a disclaimer to the NASA “Ask an Astrobiologist” page, noting that he has now answered 400 questions about Nibiru and 2012, and to please read these before submitting a new query.

“The most specific questions are about this rogue planet Nibiru,” he said. “I think, if it were four years ago, you could say, ‘maybe.’ If it were real at this point, it would be the brightest thing in the sky.”

But over the past few years, some of the questions he’s receiving are increasingly alarming, and include a number of children who, faced with a perceived threat of impending doom, say they are planning their own deaths.

“I get 1-2 a month from a person who self-identifies as 11-12 years old, who is contemplating suicide,” he said. “It happens often enough to disturb me … to hear that children are considering ending their lives.”

Morrison said that one letter was from a middle school teacher in Stockton, Calif., who said that the parents of a student said they were planning to kill their kids and themselves. Another was from an elderly person, who said that her best friend was a little dog. The writer asked when the dog should be put to sleep, so it doesn’t suffer when the world ends.

Though he finds these messages alarming, Morrison said that he only has limited information on the people writing in. He said he does whatever he can to soothe their fears, but at the end of the day, people’s beliefs and fears are out of his hands.

“I can tell them there is absolutely nothing to be worried about. But I am in no position to provide psychiatric advice,” he said.

From theories about pole shifts to the black hole at middle of the Milky Way to galactic planet alignment, Morrison says he has heard a number of doomsday theories — the most popular of which relate to the Mayan calendar – a modern hoax. The Mayan calendar, which is made of cycles of day counts, does not end this year, he says. Rather, one cycle ends and the next cycle begins.

“It’s purely a fantasy,” he said. “It amazes me you can get so much … I sense that some of these people are into the conspiracy issues.”

Morrison says that he will give up from answering the public’s questions next year. But in the meantime he is carrying on, weathering the public’s theories and phobias. Although some of the queries border on the nasty — suggesting government conspiracy and NASA cover-ups, he said he doesn’t let it get to him.

“I’ll ask for apology on Dec 22,” he said, “when none of this happens!!!

Talakadu….Forgotten by the Sands of Time…..

Talakadu in Karnataka—a confluence of history and myths.

By    in yahoo life style    

Natarajan

  • The temple at Talakadu

    – The temple at Talakadu

It is the classical Indian story. A tale told by gods and demons, filled with kings and queens, replete with curses and boons. There is a little bit of history here, blended with some geology and topped with legends and myths. Set on the banks of the river Cauvery, this saga dates back to the 4th century and has certain intriguing elements, defying the very laws of nature. This is the tale of Talakadu, the erstwhile capital of the Ganga Dynasty which is now partially buried under sand dunes. Many rulers have reigned over this once flourishing city, but today it is a lost forgotten town, blown over by the sands of time

Talakadu

It was a natural curiosity to unearth the secrets of Talakadu that drove us from Bangalore one Sunday morning. It was one of those beautiful moments. The weather was just right. An eagle scooped down and soared away with the same ease. A herd of goats clamored for attention. Flanked by the verdant greenery, we passed fresh dewy fields, lotuses jostling for space in ponds, flitting butterflies and a few scattered hamlets. We saw glimpses of rustic life as various stages of harvest were in progress. The entire scene was an ode to the countryside. We ambled on for a couple of hours on the Mysore Road and took a detour at Maddur, passed Malavalli en-route to this sacred, historic town.

We were rather unprepared for this.  At the first glance, it was just a prosaic picnic spot, overcrowded with swarms of loud local tourists and besieged by persistent guides. We made our way towards the river bed, where the Cauvery flowed at her own pace. It presented an unusual, yet a stark picture. There were huge mounds of sand by the banks of the river, like a beach. With a canopy of tall eucalyptus trees spread out from the sand, it felt like being in the middle of a forest. The dense shrubbery, some lively birds and monkeys dangling between the branches completed the picture.

The mounds of sand were everywhere, like small hillocks, some as high as even 15 meters. It was a steep climb, as the feet sank in with each step. It was an inexplicable sight; nobody could fathom where the heaps of sand came from. The fertile soils of the Cauvery basin seemed to have become fine particles of soft sand by sheer magic. While the answer may be with a geologist, my local guide narrates this legend.

Urban legend

A curse of a woman he says is the cause of this sand blown town, an erstwhile fertile capital of several dynasties that ruled over Karnataka. A tale filled with greed and lust for power. It was the time when Talakadu and Srirangapatna were under the Vijayanagara Empire. The death of the last Viceroy, Srirangaraya provoked the Wodeyars of Mysore to declare war. As Srirangapatna fell, the Wodeyar ruler sent his soldiers to covet the jewels of the late Viceroy’s widow, Alamelamma. As she fled from her pursuers, she is supposed to have jumped into the Cauvery, uttering the curses. My guide gets all dramatic as he proclaims the curse, “May Talakadu be always covered with sand and may the kings of Mysore always remain without heirs.”  The locals fear the curse as they say that it has come true. Talakadu is mysteriously engulfed with a sea of sand and the family tree of Mysore rulers show a large number of adopted heirs.

The story moves from being a mere myth to some startling historic discoveries as well. Recent excavations have unearthed temples from these mounds of sand and each dynasty has left their architecture stamp on them.  My guide points out that 30 such temples are still buried underneath the sand dunes as we climb our way to the excavated areas

Panchalingas

Talakadu is famous for the Panchalingas – the temples dedicated to Lord Shiva called Pathaleshwara, Maruleshwara, Arkeshwara, Vaidyanatheeshwara and Mallikarjuna .Of these, the first two are the oldest, built by the Ganga kings. The locals here say that the Shivalinga in the former is said to change color according to the time of day – from red in the morning to black in the afternoon and white in the night. To us though, in the cool afternoon, it was simply black.

We paused to give our feet a bit of rest and heard the story of Tala and Kada, the two hunters, after whom my guide says, this town is named. One more story, this time, it fuses a bit of religion as well. A sage, Somadutta and his disciples were killed by wild elephants when they were doing their penance. They were said to be reborn as elephants in the same forest.  Two hunters, Tala and Kada watched the ritual of the elephants offering prayers to a silk cotton tree and out of curiosity, axed the tree down, only to find it bleeding. A voice then instructed them to heal the wound with the leaves and the blood miraculously turned milk which immortalized the hunters and the elephants as well. A temple later was built here around the tree, and the place became known as Talakadu.

We resumed our journey and reached the Vaidyanatheeshwara, the largest of them all, which was built by the Cholas. All these temples are neatly thatched and embedded in pits as we climbed down to visit them. Remnants of the bygone era were seen in some scattered stones, broken pillars, an ancient well and even some idols. The Pancha Linga festival is celebrated with much fanfare once in 12 years during the Kartika season, where the temples are allowed for worshipping. The last festival happened in 1993 and the next scheduled late this year. The lost and forgotten township sees throngs of devotees only during this period, while at the rest of times; it remains a desolate spot, with a few picnickers.

Besides the Panchalingas, another magnificent temple stands out even in the ruins. The Keerthi Narayana temple dedicated to Lord Vishnu, built by the Hoysalas, to celebrate the victory of Talakadu over the Cholas. Scattered stones lie all over the place along with the pillars, stone inscriptions and some carvings are still prevalent. The main temple, intricately carved houses an eight foot tall idol of the deity.

Excavations, they say have unearthed a 12-foot tall stone mandapa along with remnants of Garuda kamba. Work by archaeologists is still in progress here, as we stroll among the many stones, which my guide claims are ‘originals’. It looked like each piece of stone was being numbered and the mantapas were being rebuilt to recreate the splendour of the past.

We had walked for more than a couple of hours, deeply engrossed in the continuous banter of our guide. Our feet caved in many a time, as we scaled the steep sand dunes. In the last two hours, we had traveled back to several centuries. We paused for a moment, taking in the sight. The silence was overwhelming. The voices of the past were buried under the layers of sand. We sat there, trying to build castles, but the wings gently swept them down. This, we realized was the destiny of Talakadu -the confluence of the historic and the holy spirit, where myths and legends merged, but were all completely swept away by the blasts from the past.

Getting there 

Talakadu is just three hours by road from Bangalore, en route to Mysore. It is about 130 km from Bangalore, which is the closest airport. You could drive down from the Kanakpura Road or take the good old Mysore Road upto Maddur, past Mallavalli and proceed on the road towards Kollegal. About 5 km before the detour for Shivanasamudra Falls, there are sign boards indicating Talakadu, 22 km to the right. The road is bad in patches and very often, it is long and winding, without any landmarks or signboards. 

” Ugly Indian ” Look Projected by Indian Companies Abroad….Why ?

Article by T N Ninan: The ‘Ugly Indian’? IN Business Standard…

Natarajan

Companies get into all manner of scrapes in the crony-capitalist business environment at home, but continue doing business, whereas the consequences in another country are quite different

Most people in India have assumed that the Maldives is guilty of breach of contract in the case of the Malé airport, and GMR the victim. But is there another side to the story? The contract was a revenue-sharing arrangement (one per cent till 2014, 10 per cent after that; also 15 per cent and 27 per cent revenue share on fuel). The contract allowed GMR to charge an airport development fee (users of Delhi airport, also run by GMR, will be familiar with this issue). The issue went to court in Malé, which in late 2011 struck down the fee as illegal. The Maldives then allowed GMR to set off its revenue share against the fee that might have been collected. The consequences became clear in the first quarter of 2012, when a revenue share for the Maldives of $8.7 million was reduced to $0.5 million after setting off the airport fee. By the second quarter, the Maldives instead of receiving revenue share was asked to pay $1.5 million; the bill climbed further in the third quarter, totalling $3.5 million. The new Maldives government feared that, far from receiving an expected $1 billion, it might end up paying massive sums to GMR over the 25-year period of the contract, extendable by 10 years. Abrogation of the agreement followed. Readers will see parallels with the Enron/Dabhol case, where Maharashtra was in the position of the Maldives government: stuck with a contract that would ruin the state, but faced with severe penalties if it walked away. India eventually paid a price for throwing out Enron, and that may well be the fate awaiting the Maldives. Where should our sympathies lie?

Cut to another case. Back in 2011, Pankaj Oswal was riding high; his company inWestern Australia was supremely profitable, and he and his wife set up an extravagant home outside Perth that got a lot of press attention. Soon, however, the headlines became negative; there were allegations of money being siphoned out of Burrup Fertiliser to privately held firms in Singapore, and Burrup went into receivership. Mr Oswal and his wife left Australia and their fancy home outside Perth, and are said to be in Dubai or Singapore.
The question to be asked, as more and more Indian businessmen invest overseas, is whether we are risking the birth of the “ Ugly Indian”. Lakshmi Mittal’s problems in France, where the French government has threatened to nationalise a unit of ArcelorMittal, would seem to have more to do with the vagaries of French politics. But there is also the case of Jindal Steel and Power(JSP), which had to exit Bolivia in May. JSP had made headlines in 2007 by bagging the world’s largest untapped iron ore mine, and agreeing to set up a steel plant in Bolivia. Amid a welter of charges and counter-charges, a new Bolivian government said the company had not fulfilled its investment targets, while it said the government had not provided it with the required natural gas for fuel. End of project, no steel plant and no iron ore.
In both Bolivia and the Maldives, there was a change of government before contracts were cancelled. France too has seen a change of tune after the François Hollande government assumed office. India has its own history of throwing out companies after a change of government — Coca-Cola and IBMafter the Janata came to power in 1977; Enron after the Shiv Sena government took charge in Maharashtra in 1995. Now the boot is on the other foot, and poses tricky challenges for Indian diplomacy (should the government automatically back Indian companies?), as well as for India’s entrepreneurs. Companies get into all manner of scrapes in the crony-capitalist business environment at home (Jindal in the coalgate affair, GMR over the Delhi airport), but continue doing business; the consequences in another country are quite different, and also on a wider plane.

Beyond Apple, 9 Most Valuable Companies in the History!!!!!

source:::: yahoo finance…

Natarajan
For most of the people, the phrase “most valuable company” always reminds of Apple, the Cupertino tech giant who hit $623 billion valuation on August.Many referred to it as the history’s most valuable company. But it ignited a debate over why people don’t consider inflation while evaluating the companies. The fact is, if you look back into history, Apple doesn’t even make it into the top five, as there werecompanies which had hit as high as $7.4 trillion in valuation, when adjusted to inflation.

Here are history’s most valuable companies, compiled by Yahoo Finance.

#9 Exxon-Mobil in 2007
Value then: $513.3 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $572.9 billion

Exxon-Mobil, the American multinational oil and gas corporation was formed on November 30, 1999. It is still the world’s largest company by revenue. At its peak in 2007, Exxon Mobil’s reserves were 72 billion oil-equivalent barrels. With refineries in 21 countries, it is also the largest refiner in the world.

With the subsided oil prices and also the market deflections, the company now stands at a value of $401.77 billion.
#8 Apple in August 2012
Value then: $661.6 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $661.6 billion

The anticipated launch of a new iPhone, coupled with rumors of a smaller iPad and a feature-rich Apple TV had lifted Cupertino tech giant’s stocks and the valuation to $661.6 billion in August this year. The company which was valued at less than $10 billion as in 2004 and at $100 billion just three years ago grew unstoppable with its iPhone business.

The company presently has the highest market capitalization in the world. However, its stock has sunk 15 percent since September and is now valuated at $554 billion.

#7 Microsoft in 1999
Value then: $620.6 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $851 billion

Microsoft might be the one existing tech company which fell from glory to gloom in a matter of 10 years. Microsoft reigned the market from licensing deals with the computing giants especially IBM, where the company earned money for every machine they sold.

But the failure to adapt quickly into a mobile and Smartphone centric world had hurt the software giant and is now hoping for a bright future with its latest OS and debut in hardware.

The company is currently valued at $226.82 Billion.

#6 PetroChina in 2007
Value then: $1 trillion
Adjusted to 2012: $1.12 trillion

PetroChina, founded in 1999 is China’s biggest oil producer. It is the most profitable company in Asia. It entered trading following the announcement of stock issue in Shanghai in November 2007. The first-day valuations of stock fuelled by investor speculations over growth made it world’s first trillion dollar company.

However, the share values later retreated to normal levels and the company is now valuated at $233.68 Billion.

#5 IBM in 1967
Value then: $193 billion
Adjusted to 2012: $1.3 trillion

The International Business Machines Corporation, which always ran ahead of its competitors with innovations, was the first company from tech sector to mark its valuation above trillion dollars in this list. At its peak times, the company had developed deep relations with government organizations including NASA, delivering them cutting edge computing power.

Subsequently the company sold off its PC business and is now focusing more on enterprise and also technology services. It is now valuated at $216 billion.

#4 Saudi Aramco in 2012
Value today: U.S. $3.6 trillion
Adjusted to 2012: $3.6 trillion

It turns out that one of the world’s most valuable company is not even listed on a stock exchange. Saudi Aramco or officially the Saudi Arabian Oil Company owns the world’s largest oil field. The company manages over 100 oil and gas fields in Saudi Arabia. Presently, the company tops all the largest lists in the world. It is estimated to worth $781 billion in 2005 and according to the present estimation by University of Texas finance professor Sheridan Titman, it is worth $3.6 trillion.

#3 The South Sea Company in 1720
Value then: 200 Million British Pound
Adjusted to 2012: $4 trillion

The South Sea Company was a British joint-stock company founded in 1711, created as a public-private partnership to consolidate and reduce the cost of national debt. The company’s share values rose on the speculations over future business growth, which never happened, as the government pulled its strings.

Subsequently, in 1720, investors realized the truth and the share values crashed. The company was later resolved in mid- 19th century.


 

#2 The Mississippi Company in 1720
Value then: 300 million British Pounds
Adjusted to 2012: $6 trillion

The Mississippi Company or the Company of the West was founded in 1684 to facilitate trade with the then-New World. John Law, controller of the French National Bank, was named the Chief Director of this new company, which was granted a trade monopoly of the West Indies and North America by the French government. The company’s stocks shoot up twentyfold, fuelled by the value speculations and an effective marketing scheme.

However, the “bubble” burst at the end of 1720 and the company collapsed. Law was dismissed from his positions and the company was declared bankrupt. He then fled France for Venice.

#1 The Dutch East India Company in 1637
Value then: 78 million Dutch Guilders
Adjusted to 2012: $7.4 trillion

The Dutch East India Company is considered to be the first multinational corporation in the world and the first company to issue stock. It was established as a chartered company in 1602, where it is given the monopoly to carry out colonial activities in Asia.

The company eclipsed all of its rivals in the Asia trade and enjoyed huge profits from its spice monopoly through most of the 17th century.

However, corruptions in the late 18th century combined with turmoil in the trade made the Company go bankrupt and was formally dissolved in 1800.