” Food For Thought …” !!!

Illustrations: Sreejith R. Kumar
The HinduIllustrations: Sreejith R. Kumar

At marriages, all seems to be fair in the love for food and the war to reach it

“Do you know there were only 80 guests at the wedding?” A friend who had attended a marriage in the United Kingdom was describing the experience. He was full of praise for the function, but appeared a little bewildered too. “Only 80, can you beat it, and that included the families of the bride and groom. Eight tables in all with every guest allotted a particular seat.” After attending marriages here where half the population is invited and the other half gatecrashes, he had every right to sound astonished.

“Can you change seats?,” I asked, intrigued. This sounded like booking tickets for a movie. “No way,” he replied. “I can’t imagine something like this happening in our part of the world.”

I can’t, either. Kerala weddings have always been known for their brevity, but the austerity that used to be associated with them is gone. Everyone’s invited to witness the extravaganza. The hall is huge, the decorations unique – event management has seen to that – the bride is covered with gold, silk and flowers, in the order of visibility, while the groom looks self conscious and uncomfortable in an ‘Indian’ costume. He need not be, for the guests have come with their priorities firmly in place. The bride, the groom and the ceremony are mere trappings; the feast is the thing.

The beating of the drums and the ‘nadaswaram’ rising to a crescendo signals the tying of the ‘thali’ around the bride’s neck. It signals something else for the guests – it’s the welcome meal bell that indicates it’s time to make a dash for the dining hall.

The most coveted seats in the wedding auditorium are those nearest the doors to the gastronomical heaven and many canny guests have taken strategic positions there, already half out of their seats in their eagerness to sprint at the right moment.

Before you know what’s happening, almost all the guests rush out as if the fire alarm has been sounded. And then begins the jostling, the pushing and the shoving. The wedding feast is a great leveller. Class, caste and gender distinctions are ignored while good manners are thrown to the winds in this mad rush to sit reverentially before the banana leaf. The well heeled rub eager silk covered shoulders with the down at heel, men ungallantly push women aside while women, not to be out done, return the compliment – sexual harassment is not an issue here. Children cheerfully bring down old grandmothers, students think nothing of aiming well directed elbows into whomever stands in their way and all seems to be fair in the love for food and the war to reach it.

Those with the swiftest feet and the quickest reflexes manage to gain entry and the doors close leaving high, dry and hungry, a huge group that is left ruing its lack of initiative. These days it’s not just feasting that is important but telling the whole world you have feasted.

The other day I noticed a young chap taking a picture on his phone of the leaf after food was served. “Whatever for?,” I asked my husband. “To put up on Facebook, what else?,” he replied. One can imagine the likes that would appear and the comments: “Wow, three rows of curries! You lucky dude!”, “I’m hungry!”, “Oh for the taste of Kerala. Homesick!”, “What’s that interesting looking item, middle row, third from right?”…

The hungry ones, watching hawk eyed from the glass doors and windows, perk up the moment they see the buttermilk being served. “Over!”, they announce to their ravenous companions. Before the first group can exit, they rush in, causing a stampede of sorts, while the catering manager and the long suffering uncle of the bride seek vainly to bring some order into the proceedings.

“Allow us to clear the tables first”, they plead, trying to close the doors but in vain. “So what if the used leaves are just being cleared? We aren’t finicky or squeamish, are we?,” the self appointed spokesperson of the group asks rhetorically, as all scramble for seats and watch with satisfaction the leaves being taken away, fresh ones being placed and curries being served.

If you chance to glance at the stage as you leave with a burp, you might find two people in a corner with lost expressions on their faces, waiting resignedly to be taken for lunch. They are the bride and the groom.

[khyrubutter@yahoo.com]

(A fortnightly column by the city-based writer, academic and author of the Butterfingers series)

Keywords: Inside view columnmarriage foodKerala weddings

SOURCE::::THE HINDU.COM

Natarajan

Gujarat International Finance Tec -City…GIFT…India”s First Smart City !!!

India’s first smart city takes shape

KIRAN SHARMA, Nikkei staff writer

Artist rendering of Gujarat International Finance Tec-City

Gujarat, one of India’s largest manufacturing hubs and Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s home state, is the site of the country’s first smart city built from scratch.

Launched in 2007, Gujarat International Finance Tec-City (GIFT) is Modi’s dream project and a joint venture between the Gujarat state government and Infrastructure Leasing & Financial Services.

The $12 billion smart city, located 12km from Ahmedabad international airport and 8km from the state capital, Gandhinagar, aims to become a global financial hub, offering international companies world-class infrastructure.

“The project is attracting a number of companies. The Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE) Brokers’ Forum has been allotted 300,000 sq. feet (27,870 sq. meters) in GIFT city for development of a commercial tower,” Gujarat Finance Minister Saurabhbhai Patel told the Nikkei Asian Review.

The BSE Brokers’ Forum is shifting its back office operations to a $20 million tower in GIFT city from Mumbai to cut costs. “With Gujarat being a low-cost center, naturally the cost there is lower than Bombay,” said Alok Churiwala, vice chairman of BSE Brokers’ Forum, which has stake of about 40% in the BSE.

The BSE is the world’s largest stock exchange in terms of listed companies with more than 5,000. More stock exchanges from around the world are expected to set up operations in GIFT city in the coming years. GIFT plans to attract 6-8% of India’s financial services to the new smart city.

The 358 hectare smart city is still being built, however developers are trying to speed up construction.

Gujarat, which had strong growth during Modi’s tenure as its chief minister, accounts for 16% of manufacturing in India and 25% of the country’s exports. “Gujarat ports also handle 33% of India’s cargo,” Patel said.

The idea for GIFT city came about after Modi visited Hong Kong’s International Finance Center. A report by McKinsey & Co. found that financial services in India were contributing 5% to the country’s gross domestic product and that the figure is expected to rise to 15-20% by 2020.

“Gujarat has been doing well in manufacturing and trading, and needed to do something in the services sector so that there’s a balance in the economy,” Dipesh Shah, GIFT city’s vice president, told the Nikkei Asian Review.

“GIFT city’s development will happen in three four-year phases, starting in 2012, 2016 and 2020,” Shah said. GIFT city’s tallest building, the Diamond Tower, will be 410 meters high and built in the last phase of development, Shah said.

Twelve million out of the 13 million sq feet (1.2 million square meters) earmarked for development in the first phase has been filled. “Banks like HDFC, Bank of India and Bank of Baroda have already taken space in the first of the two towers built,” Shah said. Other organizations like Tata Communications, World Trade Center and State Bank of India are building their own offices.

Most of GIFT city, 67%, has been zoned for commercial development, 22% for residential development and 11% is for social facilities. A school, hospital, club, five-star hotel and a university are also planned.

“The International Finance Services Center (IFSC) at GIFT city is the only place in India where you can do offshore banking, offshore insurance and offshore asset management. Its operating guidelines are due in about four to six months, following which the city will become functional,” Shah said. He also said things are moving at a much faster pace since Modi became prime minister in May.

“If India does not develop an IFSC, then every year from 2015 we will start losing $50 billion to places like London, Singapore and Dubai, which have financial service centers,” said Shah.

According to Shah, GIFT city will create 1 million new jobs: 500,000 in capital-market trading and core financial services, and 500,000 support staff jobs.

He said the focus now is on developing infrastructure. “Most of GIFT city’s infrastructure is a first for India. A district cooling system will be operational by December, following which we will not require individual air conditioning. We are also working on an automated waste management system and a utility tunnel. We have connected all utilities to a common command and operation center.”

Shah said Japanese companies have also shown interest in GIFT city. “Jetro (The Japan External Trade Organization) and some other Japanese organizations are planning to visit the site. Japanese companies are strong in infrastructure development and smart technology, and GIFT provides both. This is the first smart city to go operational in India,” he said.

The Modi government wants to build 100 smart cities in India. During Modi’s recent visit to Japan he briefed Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on his smart cities project and his plan to renew heritage cities, such as Varanasi. Abe expressed support for his plans.

The U.S government also welcomed India’s offer for American companies to be the lead partner in developing smart cities in Ajmer, Vishakhapatnam and Allahabad.

And the Canadian government also said it is keen to partner with India to build smart cities, pointing out Toronto, Vancouver and Calgary are among world’s top 10 smart cities.

SOURCE:::: http://asia.nikkei.com/

Natarajan

“படித்து ரசித்தது ….வரவு எட்டு அணா…செலவு ஆறு அணா…அது சிக்கனம் …” !!!

நடுத்தர குடும்பங்களில் நுகர்வுக் கலாசாரத்தின் தாக்குதலால், பலர் எது ஆடம்பரம், எது கருமித்தனம், எது சிக்கனம் என்று தெரிந்து கொள்ளாமல் வாழ்வில் அல்லாடிக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள்; எந்த திட்டமும் ஒழுங்கும் இல்லாமல் வாழ்க்கையைக் கடனிலும் கவலையிலும் கழித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள். முத்தமிழ்க் காவலர் கி.ஆ.பெ.விசுவநாதம், ஆடம்பரம், சிக்கனம், கருமித்தனம் ஆகியவற்றை இப்படி கூறுவார்.
1. தேவைக்கு மேல் செலவு செய்வது ஆடம்பரம்.
2.தேவைக்குச் செலவு செய்யாதது கருமித்தனம்.
3. தேவையின் அளவு செலவு செய்வது சிக்கனம்.

ஆடம்பரம், கருமித்தனம், சிக்கனம் ஆகியவற்றுக்கு இடையே உள்ள வேறுபாடுகளை புரிந்துகொண்டு செயல்பட்டால் குடும்பத்தில் மகிழ்ச்சியும் மனநிறைவும் களிநடம் புரியும்.

வாரியார் கதை :

இதனை உணர்த்தும் வகையில் வாரியார் கூறும் ஒரு சின்னஞ்சிறு கதை:வயலில் ஒரு கிழவர் மகிழ்ச்சியாக உழுது கொண்டிருந்தார். கிழவரின் மகிழ்ச்சியைப் பார்த்து அந்த வழியே வந்த மன்னனுக்கு வியப்பு.கிழவரைப் பார்த்து, “நாள் முழுவதும் உழுதால்; உனக்கு எவ்வளவு கூலி கிடைக்கும்?” என்று கேட்டான் மன்னன்.
“எட்டணா” என்றார் கிழவர்.
“இவ்வளவு குறைந்த கூலியா? இதை வைத்துக்கொண்டு நீ எப்படி இவ்வளவு மகிழ்ச்சியாக இருக்கிறாய்?” வியப்பின் விளிம்பில் வினவினான் மன்னன்.
“எட்டணாவில், இரண்டணா குடும்பத்திற்குச் செலவழிக்கிறேன். இரண்டணா பழைய கடனுக்குத் தருகிறேன். இரண்டணா தர்மம் செய்கிறேன். இரண்டணா வட்டிக்குத் தருகிறேன்” என்றார் கிழவர்.
“எப்படியப்பா இதில் மிச்சம் பிடித்துத் தருமத்திற்கும் வட்டிக்கும் தருகிறாய்?” என்று கேட்டான் மன்னன்.கிழவர் விளக்கினார்.
“எனக்கும் மனைவிக்கும் இரண்டணா செலவழிகிறது; இது என் குடும்பச் செலவு! எனக்கு மிகவும் வயதான தாயும் தந்தையும் இருக்கிறார்கள். இளமையில் உணவும் உடையும் கொடுத்து என்னைக் காப்பாற்றிய அவர்களுக்காக இரண்டணா செலவாகிறது. அது பழைய கடன். என் தங்கை ஆதரவு இன்றி என் வீட்டில் வாழ்கிறாள்; அவளுக்கு இரண்டணா செலவாகிறது. அது தருமம். எனக்கு இரண்டு மகன்கள் இருக்கிறார்கள். அவர்கள் பொருட்டு இரண்டணா செலவழிகிறது. அது வட்டிக்குத் தருவது. பிற்காலத்தில் அவர்கள் என்னைக் காப்பாற்றுவார்கள்?”
இந்தப் பொருள் பொதிந்த சொற்களைக் கேட்டு அரசன் ஆச்சரியம் அடைந்தான். இது வெறும் கதையல்ல. வாழ்க்கைப் பாடம்; அனுபவக் கல்வி.

 

பூவிலே சிறந்த பூ:
கலைவாணர் என்.எஸ்.கிருஷ்ணன் பெண்கள் கூட்டம் ஒன்றில் அவர்களைப் பார்த்து கேட்டார்:“நீங்கள் எல்லோரும் பூ வச்சிருக்கீங்க. அதனாலேயே பெண்களுக்குப் பூவையர்னு பேரு. இந்தப் பூக்கள் எல்லாம் இன்னக்கி வச்சா நாளைக்குத் தூக்கி எறிய வேண்டிய பூக்கள். வாடாமல் வளரும் பூவே சிறந்த பூ. அது என்ன பூன்னு சொல்லுங்க?”
பலரும் விழித்தனர். ஒரு பெண்ணுக்குத் திடீர் என்று நினைவு வந்தது. கேட்பவர் நகைச்சுவை அரசர். ஆகையால் தைரியமாகச் “சிரிப்பூ” என்றார்.
கலைவாணர் சிரித்தார். சரியான விடை கூறிவிட்டதாகக் கருதி அந்தப் பெண்ணும் கூடச் சிரித்தார். கூட்டத்தில் இருந்தவர்களும் சிரித்தார்கள்.

“பார்த்தீங்களா, இதுவும் ஓரளவுக்கு வளரும் பூதான். ஆனா தொடர்ந்து வளராது. இதோ இப்ப பேச ஆரம்பிச்சதும் நின்னிருச்சு. நிற்காம, தடைப்படாம, வளர்ந்துகிட்டே இருக்கிற பூ சேமிப்பூ தான். ஓரளவு நீங்க சேமிப்புச் செய்துவிட்டு அப்படியே விட்டுட்டாக்கூட வட்டியின் மூலம் அது வளர்ந்துகிட்டே இருக்கும். நீங்க தூங்கினாலும் அது தூங்காது. ஆகையால் சேமிப்பூ தான் சிறந்த பூ. பெண்களாகிய நீங்கள் சேமிக்கத் தொடங்கணும்கிறதை வற்புறுத்தத்தான் இந்தக் கூட்டம்” என்றார் கலைவாணர்.

சிக்கனம் வேறு, கருமித்தனம் வேறு :

 
நபிகள் நாயகத்திடம் ஒரு பெரியவர் வந்து, “எங்கள் ஊரில் பள்ளிவாசல் இல்லை. அதை கட்ட பணம் தேவை. என்ன செய்யலாம்?” என்று கேட்டார்.

அதற்கு நபிகள் நாயகம், “பக்கத்து ஊரில் உள்ள ஒரு செல்வரின் பெயரைச் சொல்லி அவரிடம் கேளுங்கள், கொடுப்பார்” என்றார்.

பெரியவர், பணக்காரரைப் பார்க்கப் போனார். அப்பொழுது பணக்காரர் வேலையாளைத் தூணில் கட்டி வைத்து அவன் முகத்தில் குத்திக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.
“செல்வர் அந்த வேலையாளைப் பருப்பு வாங்கி வரச் சொன்னார். வழியில் பத்து பருப்பு சிந்திப் போயிற்று. அதற்காக அவனைப் பத்து குத்துக் குத்திக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்” என்றார்கள் பக்கத்தில் நின்றவர்கள். அதைக் கேட்டதும் பெரியவர் பயந்து ஓட்டம் பிடித்து நபிகள் நாயகத்திடம் வந்துவிட்டார்.

நபிகள் நாயகம் “செல்வர் என்ன கொடுத்தார்?” என்று கேட்டார். அவர் வேலையாளுக்குக் கொடுத்த குத்துக்களைக் கூறினார்.

நபிகள் நாயகம், “மறுபடியும் நீர் அவரிடம் சென்று கேளும்” என்று கட்டளை இட்டார். மறுபடியும் சென்ற போது அச்செல்வர் மற்றொரு வேலையாளை மரத்தில் கட்டி வைத்து அடித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.

“இந்த வேலையாள் எண்ணெய் வாங்கி வரும் போது வழியில் பத்துச் சொட்டு எண்ணெய் சிந்திப் போயிற்று. அதற்காகச் சவுக்கால் பத்து அடிகள் அடிக்கிறார்” என்று அங்கு சொன்னார்கள்.

பெரியவர் நடுங்கி, இக்கருமியிடம் பணம் கேட்பதை விட பள்ளிவாசல் கட்டுவதை நிறுத்திவிடலாம் என்று எண்ணி நபிகள் நாயகத்திடம் ஓடிவந்து விட்டார்.அவர் சவுக்கடி கொடுத்த செய்தியைக் கூறி “அவரிடம் பணம் கேட்க என் மனம் துணியவில்லை” என்று கூறினார். “போய்க் கேளும்” என மறுபடியும் உத்தரவு வந்தது. பெரியவர் மறுபடியும் செல்வரிடம் சென்றார்.

நல்ல வேளையாக அங்கு அப்பொழுது எதுவும் நடைபெறவில்லை. பெரியவர் துணிந்து தமது நோக்கத்தைத் தெரிவித்தார். செல்வர், “எவ்வளவு ரூபாயில் பள்ளிவாசல் கட்டப் போகிறீர்கள்?” என்று கேட்டார். அதற்குப் பெரியவர், “அதை கட்ட பத்தாயிரம் ரூபாய் ஆகும். நீங்கள் ஐந்தாயிரம் கொடுத்தால் வேறு சிலரிடம் ஐயாயிரம் வாங்கி கட்டி முடிக்க உதவியாக இருக்கும்” என்றார். அதற்குச் செல்வர், “இவ்வளவு காலம் பள்ளிவாசல் இல்லாமல் இருந்ததே தவறு. இன்னும் பலரிடம் சென்று காலம் தாழ்த்த வேண்டாம். நானே பத்தாயிரமும் தருகிறேன். இதற்கு உதவாமல் என்னிடம் பணம் எதற்காக இருக்கிறது?” என்று கூறி பெரியவரிடம் பணத்தை கொடுத்து அனுப்பினார்.

பெரியவர் மனக்குழப்பத்தோடு நபிகள் நாயகத்திடம் வந்து, “பத்துப் பருப்புச் சிந்தியதற்காகவும், பத்துச் சொட்டு எண்ணெய் சிந்தியதற்காகவும் வேலைக்காரர்களை துன்புறுத்திய இவர், பள்ளிவாசல் கட்ட ஐயாயிரம் கேட்ட பொழுது பத்தாயிரம் கொடுத்தாரே. என்ன காரணம்?” என வினவினார் பெரியவர்.

அதற்கு நபிகள் நாயகம், “கருமித்தனம் வேறு, சிக்கனம் வேறு. அந்த செல்வர் கருமியல்ல; சிக்கனத்தைக் கையாள்பவர். அவர் அப்படியெல்லாம் பொருளை பாழாக்காமல் சேர்த்து வைத்திருந்ததனால் தான் அப்பணம் பள்ளிவாசல் கட்ட பயன்படுகிறது” எனத் தெளிவுபடுத்தினார்.
வரவு எட்டணா – செலவு பத்தணா என்றால், அது மிகை; ஆடம்பரம்!வரவு எட்டணா – செலவு எட்டணா என்றால், அது இயல்பு; சரி.வரவு எட்டணா – செலவு ஆறணா என்றால், அது தான் சேமிப்பு; சிக்கனம்!

 

SOURCE:::: http://www.dinamalar.com

Natarajan

 

” வாழ்வில் ஒருமுறை காசி யாத்திரை அவசியம் …”

காஞ்சிப்பெரியவர் 1932ல் ராமேஸ்வரம் வந்தார். கடலில் ஸ்நானம் செய்த அவர் சிறிதளவு மணலைச் சேகரித்துக் கொண்டார். அதை அலகாபாத்திலுள்ள பிரயாகை திரிவேணி சங்கமத்தில் சேர்ப்பிக்க வேண்டும் என்பது அவரது எண்ணம். அது மட்டுமல்ல! தீபாவளி கொண்டாடப்படும் அக்டோபர் மாதத்தில் காசிக்கு சென்று கங்கா ஸ்நானம் செய்யவும் அவர் முடிவெடுத்திருந்தார். இதற்காக, அவர் வாகனங்கள் எதுவும் ஏற்பாடு செய்யவில்லை. நடந்தே செல்ல திட்டமிட்டார். அப்போது பெரியவருக்கு வயது 39 தான்.

இந்த திட்டத்தை செயல்படுத்தும் பொறுப்பு, தென்காசியைச் சேர்ந்த அனந்த கிருஷ்ண சர்மாவிடம் ஒப்படைக்கப்பட்டது. அவர் முன்னதாகவே காசிக்கு நடந்தே புறப்பட்டார். எந்தெந்த ஊர்களில் பெரியவர் தங்கிச் செல்ல வேண்டும் என்பதை செல்லும் வழியில் குறித்துக் கொண்டார். அவ்வாறு அவர் நடந்து செல்ல ஆறு மாதங்கள் பிடித்தன.

அவர் திரும்பி வந்து பயணத்திட்டத்தை பெரியவரிடம் அளித்தார். பெரியவரும் சிஷ்யர்களும் 1933 செப்டம்பர் இரண்டாவது வாரத்தில் தஞ்சாவூரிலிருந்து பயணத்தைத் துவக்கினர். செல்லும் வழியில் இந்தியாவின் முக்கிய நகரங்களில் பெரியவர் தங்கினார். அங்கெல்லாம் ஏராளமான பக்தர்கள் வந்து ஆசி பெற்றனர். அனந்தசர்மா வேகமாகச் சென்று திரும்பியதால் ஆறுமாதங்கள் தான் பிடித்தன. ஆனால், மகாபெரியவர் பல ஊர்களில் தங்கியதால், பிரயாகையை அடைய 1934 ஜூலை 23ம் தேதி ஆகி விட்டது. அங்கு தான் கொண்டு சென்ற ராமேஸ்வரம் மணலை, திரிவேணி சங்கமத்தில் சேர்ப்பித்தார். அங்கேயே செப்டம்பர் மாதம் வரை தங்கி விட்டார். செப்டம்பர் இறுதியில் காசி கிளம்பினார்.

அவரிடம் பக்தர்கள்,””இப்போதே நீங்கள் வெகு தூரம் நடந்து வந்து விட்டீர்கள். இனியும் நடக்க வேண்டாம். சாலை வசதி நன்றாக இருக்கிறது. வாகனத்தில் வாருங்கள்,” என கோரிக்கை வைத்தனர். மகாபெரியவர் அதை ஏற்கவில்லை. தொடர்ந்து நடந்தே காசியாத்திரையைத் தொடர்ந்தார். பிரயாகையில் இருந்த பக்தர்கள் பலரும் அவருடன் சென்றனர். அக்டோபர் 3ம் தேதி காசி எல்லையை அடைந்த சுவாமிகளை காசி மகாராஜா உள்ளிட்டோர் பூர்ண கும்ப மரியாதையுடன் வரவேற்றனர்.

வரவேற்பு விழாவில் 25 ஆயிரத்துக்கும் மேற்பட்டோர் பங்கேற்றனர். அக்டோபர் 7ல் மகாபெரியவர் கங்கையிலுள்ள மணிகர்ணிகை உள்ளிட்ட தீர்த்தக்கட்டங்களில் தீர்த்தமாடினார். பண்டித மதன்மோகன் மாளவியாவின் அழைப்பை ஏற்று காசி இந்து சர்வகலாசாலையில் (பல்கலைக்கழகம்) உரையாற்றினார்.

ஒவ்வொரு இந்துவும் வாழ்வில் ஒரு முறையேனும் காசி யாத்திரை செய்ய வேண்டும் என வலியுறுத்தினார்.

நாமும் மகாபெரியவர் ஆசியுடன், அடுத்த தீபாவளிக்குள் ஒருமுறை காசி யாத்திரை சென்று திரும்புவோம்.

Rea d more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/8187/#ixzz3H3oLJzUS

 

Source::::www.periva.proboards.com

Natarajan

Highest Observation Deck in the World @ 1821 Feet !!!

At the Top, Burj Khalifa SKY Level 148 HRCourtesy of ‘At the Top, Burj Khalifa SKY’ The 148th floor of the Burj Khalifa.

Dubai’s Burj Khalifa is the tallest tower in the world at 2,722 feet tall with 160 floors.

And now it also has the highest observation deck on level 148 — a stunning 1,821 feet above the ground. It beat out the previous world record holder Canton Tower with its 1,601 foot high observation deck in Guangzhou, China.

This makes the fourth Guinness World Records title for the Burj Khalifa, including the tallest building, tallest man-made structure, and highest restaurant.

1. Burj Khalifa © Michael MerolaMichael Merola/Emporis The Burj Khalifa now has four Guinness World Records titles.

And because it’s not enough just to see the view, the Burj Khalifa put together an entire experience called At the Top, Burj Khalifa SKY.

First, it takes visitors from the ground level of The Dubai Mall to level 125. Not even the elevator ride is boring — the elevators travel at 33 feet per second with special projections that make it appear as though you’re soaring above other global landmarks.

Once you reach Level 125, you have 360-degree views of the city plus more interactive features. You can then get back on another high-speed elevator and shoot up to the 148th floor — the SKY level — for the highest outdoor terrace in the world. The entire experience lasts over an hour.

At the Top, Burj Khalifa SKY Level 125 HRCourtesy of ‘At the Top, Burj Khalifa SKY’ The 125th floor of the Burj Khalifa.

SOURCE:::: Business insider india.com

Natarajan

 

Most Stunning Wedding Venues in India …

India’s most stunning wedding destinationsPhoto courtesy: Devi Garh by Lebua, Udaipur
01

India’s most stunning wedding destinations

For some it’s a ceremony on the sands overlooking the azure waters of the ocean. For others it’s a regal affair in an opulent venue. Weddings in India can be extravagant affairs and it’s no longer kosher to exchange vows in a humble farmhouse or an ancestral home. Couples today dream of an exotic destination to tie the knot at — impeccably manicured gardens, private stretches of sand, immaculately-carved gazebos and opulent courtyards. Here are some of the grandest venues in India that can turn any dream-wedding fantasy into an unforgettable reality.

Neemrana Fort Palace, Delhi-Jaipur HighwayPhoto courtesy: Neemrana Fort Palace, Delhi-Jaipur Highway
02

Neemrana Fort Palace, Delhi-Jaipur Highway

Sprawling over five acres and tiered on a hillock, the 15th century Neemrana Fort Palace is one of the oldest heritage properties in the country. Here, the beautiful dome-shaped gazebos, courtyards bounded by intricately-carved walls and verdant lawns can elevate your wedding from a been-there-done-that passé to something ethereal. Whether you choose an intimate sunset ceremony or an extravagantly-lit arrangement under the night sky, the Neemrana Fort Palace is one jaw-dropping venue. (http://fort-palace.neemranahotels.com/)
03

Umaid Bhawan Palace, Jodhpur

One of the most opulent residences in the world, the Umaid Bhawan Palace is an enchanting venue. Home to lavish front lawns and the grand Marwar Hall, this 15th century palace is much famed for the most upscale weddings. If you’ve always dreamt of a traditional elephant-ride welcome, an authentic Rajashthani ambience and a wedding in an ancient palace, then make reservations at Umaid Bhawan Palace for your special day.(http://www.tajhotels.com/Luxury/Grand-Palaces-And-Iconic-Hotels/Umaid-Bhawan-Palace-Jodhpur/Overview.html)

Devi Garh by Lebua, UdaipurPhoto courtesy: Devi Garh by Lebua, Udaipur
04

Devi Garh by Lebua, Udaipur

Host to elaborate celebrations steeped in Rajasthani culture, Devi Garh by Lebua is a breathtaking destination to stage weddings that look like straight out of a fairy tale. Nestled amidst the majestic Aravallis, this heritage hotel is housed in an 18th-century palace in the village of Delwara, and has been converted into a luxurious, romantic retreat. Here, weddings at Garden Suite Lawns, Main Lawn, Pool-side venue and Reception Lawn, and ceremonies enclosed in concrete wonders of Durbar Hall and Silver Lounge are both à la mode as well as rooted in rich Indian traditions.(http://www.lebua.com/devi-garh)

Jai Mahal Palace, JaipurPhoto courtesy: Jai Mahal Palace, Jaipur
05

Jai Mahal Palace, Jaipur

Another addition to Rajasthan’s regal palaces is the majestic Jai Mahal Palace in the pink city, Jaipur. Set amidst 18 acres of Mughal Gardens, this heritage property is built in Indo-Saracenic style of architecture and reeks of opulence from every corner. The palace houses grand outdoor as well as indoor venues for your big day.(http://www.tajhotels.com/leisure/jai%20mahal%20palace,jaipur/default.htm)

Park Hyatt, GoaPhoto courtesy: Park Hyatt, Goa
06

Park Hyatt, Goa

If you’ve dreamt of tying the knot at an intimate beachfront ceremony at sundown, then Park Hyatt, Goa is where your wedding fantasies can come true. The lush ‘Seaside Lawns’, enchanting landscapes of ‘The Forest’, the elegant ‘Boathouse’, and the tastefully-decorated indoor venues ‘Salcete’ and ‘Colva and Loutolim’—Park Hyatt Goa is laden with immaculate enclosures that exude grandeur and luxury at every turn.(http://goa.park.hyatt.com/en/hotel/home.html)

Palace Grounds, BangaloreCredit: ThinkStock Photos
07

Palace Grounds, Bangalore

Boasting of sprawling acreage, the Palace Grounds, Bangalore, are ideal for those who wish for an elaborate wedding ceremony not far away from the cityscape. Owned by the Mysore royal family, the complex houses beautifully manicured gardens, a ballroom and Durbar Hall where extravagant weddings, private parties and cultural events are a common affair.

Suryagarh, JaisalmerPhoto courtesy: Suryagarh, Jaisalmer
08

Suryagarh, Jaisalmer

From sun-kissed sand dunes and camel rides in the desert to culturally captivating ceremonies that evoke Indian traditions, Suryagarh in Jaisalmer packs in all this and much more to make your wedding day an unforgettable one. Vast courtyards bounded by fort walls, candle-lit cobblestoned paths that mark your arrival, gleaming mandaps and Rajasthani folk music adding the musical touch—you will feel nothing less than royalty as you celebrate your union at this imperial destination. (http://www.suryagarh.com/)

The Leela, KovalamPhoto courtesy: The Leela, Kovalam
09

The Leela, Kovalam

The Leela, Kovalam is home to a bouquet of exotic locations liberally shaded by palms, which are a perfect backdrop to your special day. Picture yourself exchanging vows on the white sands, overlooking the turquoise-blue waters of the Arabian Sea. And if you’d prefer a spot sans sand, the beautifully decorated convention centre is ideal.(http://www.theleela.com/locations/kovalam)

Taj Falaknuma, HyderabadPhoto courtesy: Taj Falaknuma, Hyderabad
10

Taj Falaknuma, Hyderabad

The opulence of grand marble staircases, Venetian chandeliers, gurgling fountains and exquisitely carved arches add a touch of nawabi royalty to your special day at Taj Falaknuma, Hyderabad. Perched 2000 feet above the city, the historical palace provides one of the most idyllic backdrops for you to celebrate your union. The gold-hued Durbar Hall, lush gardens, aristocratic 101-seater dining hall or the immaculately-manicured Rajashthani Garden—take your pick from the palace’s picturesque venues to tie the knot.(http://www.tajhotels.com/Luxury/Grand-Palaces-And-Iconic-Hotels/Taj-Falaknuma-Palace-Hyderabad/Overview.html)

City Palace, UdaipurPhoto courtesy: Fatek Prakash Palace, City Palace, Udaipur
11

City Palace, Udaipur

Exchanging vows in a centuries-old palace or a fort is nothing short of a fairy tale. Vast courtyards and sprawling gardens of the royal City Palace are all impressive backdrops that will make you feel like a royalty on your big day. The palace houses ‘Manek Chowk’ that can comfortably accommodate up to 1000 guests. For a gathering up to 500 people, the Zeena Mehal—informally referred to as the Queen’s Palace—hosts grand weddings in its 17th century courtyard. (Text by: Mayank Kumar)
SOURCE::::www.happytrips.com
Natarajan

” Three Things I Have Learned From Warren Buffett “…. Bill Gates

I’m looking forward to sharing posts from time to time about things I’ve learned in my career atMicrosoft and the Gates Foundation. (I also post frequently on my blog.)

Last month, I went to Omaha for the annual Berkshire Hathaway shareholders meeting. It’s always a lot of fun, and not just because of the ping-pong matches and the newspaper-throwing contest I have with Warren Buffett. It’s also fun because I get to learn from Warren and gain insight into how he thinks.

Here are three things I’ve learned from Warren over the years:

1. It’s not just about investing.

The first thing people learn from Warren, of course, is how to think about investing. That’s natural, given his amazing track record. Unfortunately, that’s where a lot of people stop, and they miss out on the fact that he has a whole framework for business thinking that is very powerful. For example, he talks about looking for a company’s moat—its competitive advantage—and whether the moat is shrinking or growing. He says a shareholder has to act as if he owns the entire business, looking at the future profit stream and deciding what it’s worth. And you have to be willing to ignore the market rather than follow it, because you want to take advantage of the market’s mistakes—the companies that have been underpriced.

I have to admit, when I first met Warren, the fact that he had this framework was a real surprise to me. I met him at a dinner my mother had put together. On my way there, I thought, “Why would I want to meet this guy who picks stocks?” I thought he just used various market-related things—like volume, or how the price had changed over time—to make his decisions. But when we started talking that day, he didn’t ask me about any of those things. Instead he started asking big questions about the fundamentals of our business. “Why can’t IBM do what Microsoft does? Why has Microsoft been so profitable?” That’s when I realized he thought about business in a much more profound way than I’d given him credit for.

2. Use your platform.

A lot of business leaders write letters to their shareholders, but Warren is justly famous for his. Partly that’s because his natural good humor shines through. Partly it’s because people think it will help them invest better (and they’re right). But it’s also because he’s been willing to speak frankly and criticize things like stock options and financial derivatives. He’s not afraid to take positions, like his stand on raising taxes on the rich, that run counter to his self-interest. Warren inspired me to start writing my own annual letter about the foundation’s work. I still have a ways to go before mine is as good as Warren’s, but it’s been helpful to sit down once a year and explain the results we’re seeing, both good and bad.

3. Know how valuable your time is.

No matter how much money you have, you can’t buy more time. There are only 24 hours in everyone’s day. Warren has a keen sense of this. He doesn’t let his calendar get filled up with useless meetings. On the other hand, he’s very generous with his time for the people he trusts. He gives his close advisers at Berkshire his phone number, and they can just call him up and he’ll answer the phone.

Although Warren makes a point of meeting with dozens of university classes every year, not many people get to ask him for advice on a regular basis. I feel very lucky in that regard: The dialogue has been invaluable to me, and not only at Microsoft. When Melinda and I started our foundation, I turned to him for advice. We talked a lot about the idea that philanthropy could be just as impactful in its own way as software had been. It turns out that Warren’s brilliant way of looking at the world is just as useful in attacking poverty and disease as it is in building a business. He’s one of a kind.

SOURCE:::: Bill Gates in http://www.linkedin.com

Natarajan

Meet Mr. Arvind Subramanian … Chief Economic Adviser to Govt. Of India…

After his candidacy first emerged in August, US based economist Arvind Subramanian has finally been selected as chief economic adviser by the Indian government.

 

This announcement came at a newsconference in New Delhi where Subramanian was present. He is a development economist who worked closely with Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan when both were at the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

According to analysts, one of the prime factors that tipped scales in favour of Arvind Subramanian was his proximity to RBI governor Raghuram Rajan. Narendra Modi personally handpicked Arvind to be his chief economic adviser.

Confirming his appointment in an impromptu news conference outside the Finance Ministry, Mr Subramanian said: “It is a great honour… to serve in a government that has a mandate for reform and change.” He said macro-economic stability and creating favourable conditions for investment will be priorities.

Traditionally, the chief economic adviser is responsible for producing the annual Economic Survey – a document on the state of economy that underpins the drafting of the Budget – and a mid-year economic update that is presented to Parliament.

Recently, Mr Subramanian criticised the Indian government’s decision to derail a WTO deal struck last year to streamline trade procedures by tying it to a separate controversy over food subsidies.

He also criticised Mr Jaitley’s maiden budget in July for being too optimistic in its revenue forecasts.

Mr Subramanian was educated in India and Britain and went on to serve at the IMF and at the forerunner to the World Trade Organization, before taking senior academic posts at Harvard and Johns Hopkins universities in the United States.

In 2011, Foreign Policy magazine has named him as one of the world’s top 100 global thinkers. He obtained his undergraduate degree from St. Stephens College, Delhi; his MBA from the Indian Institute of Management at Ahmedabad, India; and his M.Phil and D.Phil from the University of Oxford, UK.

Below is a small bio of Arvind Subramanian (Courtesy- Peterson Institute of International economics) 

Arvind Subramanian is the Dennis Weatherstone Senior Fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics and senior fellow at the Center for Global Development. His book Eclipse: Living in the Shadow of China’s Economic Dominance was published in September 2011, and he is coauthor of Who Needs to Open the Capital Account? (2012). Foreign Policy magazine has named him as one of the world’s top 100 global thinkers in 2011.

He was assistant director in the Research Department of the International Monetary Fund. He served at the GATT (1988–92) during the Uruguay Round of trade negotiations and taught at Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government (1999–2000) and at Johns Hopkins’ School for Advanced International Studies (2008–10).

He has written on growth, trade, development, institutions, aid, oil, India, Africa, and the World Trade Organization. He has published widely in academic and other journals, including the American Economic Review (Papers and Proceedings), Review of Economics and Statistics, Journal of International Economics, Journal of Monetary Economics, Journal of Public Economics, Journal of Economic Growth, Journal of Development Economics, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Oxford Review of Economic Policy, International Monetary Fund Staff Papers, Foreign Affairs, World Economy, and Economic and Political Weekly.

He has also published or been cited in leading magazines and newspapers, including the Economist, Financial Times, Washington Post, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Newsweek, and New York Review of Books. He contributes frequently to the Financial Times and is a columnist in India’s leading financial daily, Business Standard.

He advises the Indian government in different capacities, including as a member of the Finance Minister’s Expert Group on the G-20. His book India’s Turn: Understanding the Economic Transformation was published in 2008 by Oxford University Press.

With agency inputs  

Source::::www.dnaindia.com

Natarajan

 

” No One Can Believe We Have Won Rs.7 Crores on KBC …!!! “

“Ever since the news of our win got out, I’ve received six-seven marriage proposals!” Achin Narula exclaims. “I wasn’t thinking about marriage but afterKBC, it will definitely be easier to find a match.”

Here’s what happens when two 20-something Delhi boys become crorepatis overnight.

Image: Achin (far left) and Sarthak Narula (far right) on Kaun Banega Maha Crorepati with Amitabh Bachchan and their parents

“Arey yaar, they edited out my Dil Chahta Hai dialogue there,” Achin Narula, 28, purses his lips in mild disappointment.

The joint winners of the whopping Rs 7 crore prize on Kaun Banega Maha Crorepati — Achin and his younger brother Sarthak Narula, 23, — are glued to the television, reliving their glory as their momentous KBC episode unfolds on the TV screen in their room.

Sitting on their respective beds in Hometel, a comfortable budget hotel in Malad, a western Mumbai suburb, the two brothers — who are working their way through tricky questions on the popular game show — are a study in contrasting personalities.

Achin restlessly paces the room every time he gets a congratulatory phone call and rocks back and forth at crucial points in the episode. His brother, on the other hand, sits calmly with his legs covered with the comforter.

Presumably because they have done quite a few interviews till now, they have learnt to periodically tune out an outsider presence for brief, private victories with each other.

When we politely decline their offer of tea/snacks — I suspect it’d be a mindless interruption for them — Achin quips, “Don’t worry, it’s all on Sony (the channel).

They are obviously in a very good mood.

While the show progresses, it becomes clear that more than witnessing their moment ofKBC glory, the duo is interested in how they have conducted themselves on TV.

They are acutely conscious of how many of their wisecracks and quips were edited out.

“He (Achin) thinks everything he’s said and done should be shown on TV,” Sarthak remarks.

“They must have sold these slots for exorbitant prices and longer duration ads,” concludes Achin, who works in the marketing department in a real estate firm based out of New Delhi.

“They have edited so much, I’m getting calls from my friends saying, “Tu toh kuch bol hi nahi raha (You aren’t saying anything at all),” says Sarthak, sounding concerned.

The brothers bought new spectacles for their appearance on the show.

“I used one pair for many years but when we had to come here, I decided to get another pair just in case the old one broke. The new pair you see on him (Achin) are photochromatic,” Sarthak offers, even as Achin squirms — he is more conscious of how he’s presenting himself than his soft-spoken younger brother.

The Narula brothers’ preparation for the show was (obviously) top notch — Achin had been trying to get on the show for the last 10 years and had made it to the fastest finger first four times before.

The KBC team would say,’Tu phir se aa gaya? When will you quit?’

“I told them I’ll keep trying until they let me through the next level,” Achin says.

So did they have a certain number in their mind that they intended to win?

“We were looking at winning at least Rs 25 lakh. Since there were the two of us, it seemed like an achievable goal,” Sarthak chimes in.

Image: Achin and Sarthak Narula in their hotel room. Photograph: Afsar Dayatar/Rediff.com

When asked about his very unusual sounding name, Achin says, “It means a man without worries — my parents wanted to name me Sachin but, at the same time, didn’t want to break the family naming convention in which all names must begin with an A.”

But then, why was Sarthak named differently?

“My mom wanted me to be different,” pat comes the reply from Sarthak.

The big win hasn’t sunk in yet for the Narula brothers even though it’s been three weeks since they shot for the episode and won. Their friends and family are still ‘shell-shocked’ as well.

“They can’t believe that such a thing has happened. How many people can reach even the 1 crore question, after all?” asks Achin.

Friends and friends of relatives they hadn’t even heard of, or have met briefly, have been calling in to congratulate them.

“The guy I was talking to over the phone is a cousin of a friend who I met once, when I was in the 12th standard. It’s a bit of a hassle to attend each and every call since the phone is on roaming at present,” Achin confides.

But money is surely no matter now?

“Middle class values always remain intact. More importantly, the money hasn’t come in yet,” the brothers burst into peels of laughter.

“We have already spent a lot of money — CCTV cameras have been installed in the house, we have thrown three parties — for friends, work friends and relatives. Paisa aane se pehle hi chala jaa raha hai (money has been spent even before we’ve got it),” they note.

 

Achin took an indefinite break from work when the first call from KBC came in.

“It was an opportunity of a lifetime and I needed to prepare for it,” Achin says.

“I can show you emails of the number of books I’ve ordered for quizzes over the years. We’ve also watched a lot of quiz shows. There’s one on the Disney Channel that airs at 3 am,” Sarthak, who has done his graduation in Commerce, informs.

“Then we read Derek O’Brian’s Bournvita Quiz contest books, another one by Siddharth Basu, one called Mastermind; we have also been regular subscribers of Competition Success Review (a staple for Government entrance exam aspirants),” he adds.

“Since I was trying for KBC for 10 years, we made notes of what areas of GK were asked from the most and worked at them accordingly,” Achin says.

The Rs 7 crore prize money brings with it a set of new career plans for him.

“I will look at viable business opportunities now. We have the capital now, loans will also be more easily available to us,” he notes.

A string of marriage offers for Achin have also come in.

“Ever since the news of our win got out, I’ve received six-seven proposals,” Achin informs. “I wasn’t thinking about marriage but after the win, it will definitely be easier to find a match.”

Achin and Sarthak’s father is a marketing officer with National Insurance.

“We also had a mattresses business in our mother’s name but we had to shut it down after some regulation changes. It just wasn’t viable for us anymore. We incurred heavy losses and had to sell our house. We now live in our grandfather’s house,” says Sarthak.

Their mother was detected with ovarian cancer in July 2013. The chemotherapy sessions are over, and she’s on the road to recovery.

“She will recover but she will need regular tests for the rest of her life. Chemo has been tough — we’ve all suffered emotionally too, besides her own physical pain,” Sarthak adds.

But they don’t want to dwell on that.

“We wanted to talk about it on the show only because there are now vaccines for certain types of cancers. Many people don’t know it so we just wanted to get that information out there through television,” they explain.

SOURCE:::: rediff.com

Natarajan