கனவா….? காமெடியா…? !!!

இது ஒரு சீனக் கனவு என்பதுதான் பெரும்பாலும் அவரது பேச்சின் தொடக்கமாக இருக்கும். சீனாவின் முதன்மையான கோடீஸ் வரர்களில் அவரும் ஒருவர். பெயர் சென் குவாங்பியா. வீட்டு உபயோகப் பொருள்கள் கழிவு முதல் பெரும் தொழிற்சாலைகளில் மீதமாகும் பொருள்கள் வரை “ரீசைக்ளிங்” செய்யும் தொழில் நடத்தி பெரும் கோடீஸ்வரர் ஆனவர்.

 

சீனாவில் இவரை விடப் பெரிய கோடீஸ்வரர்கள் பலர் இருந்தும் இப்போது மேற்குலக ஊடகங்களால் பெரிதும் விரும்பி கவனிக்கப்படும் நபராகிவிட்டார் சென்.

இதுநாள் வரை சீனாவில் பெரும் கொடையாளியாகவும், ஜன சிநேகனாகவும் அறியப்பட்டு வந்த இவர் இப்போது சர்வதேச அளவிலும் கவனத்தை ஈர்க்க காரணம் இல்லாமல் இல்லை.

தனது அதிரடியான செயல்களாலும், பேச்சுகளாலும் சீனாவில் பெரும்பாலான மக்களின் கவனத்தை ஈர்த்தவர் சென்.

சமீபத்தில் தென் சீனக் கடல் தீவுகள் தொடர்பாக ஜப்பான் -சீனா இடையே பிரச்சினை ஏற்பட்டபோது ஜப்பானில் தயாரிக்கப்பட்ட 43 கார்களை வாங்கி அதனை மக்களுடன் சேர்ந்து அடித்து நொறுக்கி, எந்த அளவுக்கு சீனப் பற்றாளன் என்பதைக் காட்டினார் சென்.

அவரது சமீபத்திய அதிரடி அறிவிப்பு அமெரிக்காவின் முதன்மையான “தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸ்” நாளிதழை வாங்கப் போகிறேன் என்பதுதான்.

மேற்குலகத்தை தன்பக்கம் திருப்ப நினைத்துதான் இப்படி ஓர் அறிவிப்பை வெளியிட்டாரோ என்னவோ.

சென் இதனை கூறி வாய் மூடவில்லை. அமெரிக்காவிலும், ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளிலும் மின்னணு ஊடகங்களிலும், சமூக வலைத் தளங்களிலும் காட்டுத்தீயாக செய்தி பரவியது.

பத்திரிகையை விற்கக் காரணம் என்ன, சீனரிடம் சென்றால் அதன் எதிர்காலம் எப்படியிருக்கும் என்பது போன்ற கருத்துகள் சர்வதேச தொலைக்காட்சிகளில் அலசப்பட்டன.

இத்தனையும் நடப்பதற்கு முன்பு, “தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸை” ஏன் வாங்கப் போகிறேன் என்பது குறித்து சென் விளக்கமளித்தார்.

சீனா என்றாலே வில்லன் என்பதுபோன்ற ஒரு மாயத்தோற்றம்தான் சர்வதேச அளவில் உருவாக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது. சர்வதேச ஊடகங்கள் சீனா குறித்து மிகைப்படுத்தி வெளியிடும் தவறான செய்திகள்தான் இதற்குக் காரணம். எனவே அமெரிக்காவில் பிரபலமான “தி நியூ யார்க் டைம்ஸை” வாங்கி அதன் மூலம் சீனாவின் புகழை சர்வதேச அளவில் நிலை நாட்டப்போகிறேன். வரலாற்றுப் பிழைகள் பலவற்றை திருத்தி எழுதப் போகிறேன் என்று கூறி ஊடகங்களின் செய்திப் பசிக்கு தீனி போட்டார் சென்.

இத்தனைக்கும் சீனாவில் “தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸ்” நாளிதழும், அதன் இணைய தளமும் தடை செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளன. அந்நாட்டு பிரதமராக இருந்த வென் ஜியாபோவின் குடும்ப சொத்து விவரங்களை சேகரித்து வெளியிட்டதுதான் “தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸ்” தடை செய்யப்படக் காரணம். இது சுமார் ஓராண்டுக்கு முன்பு நடந்த கதை.

இந்த சூழ்நிலையில் பத்திரிகை நிறுவனம் விற்பனைக்கு வருகிறதா என்பது குறித்து விளக்கமளிக்க வேண்டிய கட்டாயம் “ தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸ்” நிர்வாகத்துக்கு ஏற்பட்டது. பத்திரிகை நிறுவனத்தை விற்கும் திட்டம் ஏதும் இல்லை. வதந்திகளை நம்ப வேண்டாம் என்பதுதான் நிர்வாகத்தின் ஒரே பதில்.

மேலும் பல கேள்விகள் சென் குவாங்பியாவை நோக்கித் திரும்பின. சென் நிதானமாக பேசினார். நீங்களாவது முன்பே சொல்லியிருக்கக் கூடாதா… நன்கு விசாரித்துப் பார்த்த பின்புதான் தெரிந்தது, “தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸின்” சர்க்குலேஷன் கொஞ்சம் கம்மிதானாமே. அது நமக்கு சரிப்பட்டு வராது என்று தோன்றுகிறது. எனவே அதனை விட அதிகம் விற்பனையாகும் பத்திரிகையான “தி வால் ஸ்ட்ரீட் ஜர்னலை” வாங்கலாம் என்ற யோசித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறேன் என்று பேசி அதிரவைத்தார் சென்.

அடுத்ததாக வால் ஸ்ட்ரீட் ஜெர்னல் சென்னின் வசமாகிறது என்று செய்திகள் வெளியாகி பரபரப்பை ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது. சென்னின் பேட்டிகளை தொடர்ந்து வாசிப்பவர்கள் மட்டும் இது சீனக் கனவா… அல்லது சீனக் காமெடியா… என்று புரியாமல் யோசித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள்.

Keywords: சீனா, தி நியூயார்க் டைம்ஸ், சென் குவாங்பியா, வென் ஜியாபோ

source::::The Hindu …Tamil

natarajan

Post -It Notes were invented by Accident !!!

Today I found out Post-It Notes were invented by accident.

 

There were actually two accidents that lead to the invention of the Post-It note.  The first was by Spencer Silver.  According to the former Vice President of Technical Operations for 3M Geoff Nicholson (now retired), in 1968, Silver was working at 3M trying to create super strong adhesives for use in the aerospace industry in building planes.  Instead of a super strong adhesive, though, he accidentally managed to create an incredibly weak, pressure sensitive adhesive agent called Acrylate Copolymer Microspheres.

This adhesive did not interest 3M management as it was seen as too weak to be useful.  It did have two interesting features, though.  The first is that, when stuck to a surface, it can be peeled away without leaving any residue.  Specifically, the acrylic spheres only stick well to surfaces where they are tangent to the surface, thus allowing weak enough adhesion to be able to be peeled easily.  The second big feature is that the adhesive is re-usable, thanks to the fact that the spheres are incredibly strong and resist breaking, dissolving, or melting.   Despite these two notable features, no one, not even Silver himself, could think up a good marketable use for it.  Thus, even with Silver promoting it for five years straight to various 3M employees, the adhesive was more or less shelved.

Finally, in 1973, when Geoff Nicholson was made products laboratory manager at 3M, Silver approached him immediately with the adhesive and gave him samples to play with.  Silver also suggested what he saw as his best idea for what to use the adhesive for, making a bulletin board with the adhesive sprayed on it.  One could then stick pieces of paper to the bulletin board without tacks, tape, or the like.  The paper could subsequently be easily removed without any residue being left on the sheets.  While this was a decent idea, it wasn’t seen as potentially profitable enough as annual bulletin board sales are fairly low.

Now enter the second accident by chemical engineer Art Fry.  Besides working at 3M as a Product Development Engineer and being familiar with Silver’s adhesive thanks to attending one of Silver’s seminars on the low-tack adhesive, he also sung in a church choir in St. Paul, Minnesota.  One little problem he continually had to deal with was accidentally losing his song page markers in his hymn book while singing, with them falling out of the hymnal.  From this, he eventually had the stroke of genius to use some of Silver’s adhesive to help keep the slips of paper in the hymnal.  Fry then suggested to Nicholson and Silver that they were using the adhesive backwards.  Instead of sticking the adhesive to the bulletin board, they should “put it on a piece of paper and then we can stick it to anything.”

This initially proved easier said than done, in terms of practical application.  It was easy enough to get the adhesive on the paper, but the early prototypes had the problem that the adhesive would often detach from the paper and stay on the object the paper was stuck to, or, at least, leave some of the adhesive behind in this way.  There was no such problem with the bulletin boards Silver had made because he had specifically made them so that the adhesive would bond better with the board than the paper. Two other 3M employees now entered the scene, Roger Merrill and Henry Courtney.  The two were tasked with coming up with a coating that could be put on the paper to make the adhesive stay bonded to it and not be left behind on whatever the paper was stuck to when it was removed, a task at which they were ultimately successful at achieving.

Interestingly, because management at 3M still didn’t think the product would be commercially successful, they more or less shelved it for three years, even though the Post-It notes were extremely popular internally at 3M labs during that span.    Finally, in 1977, 3M began running test sale runs of the Post-It note, then called “Press ‘n Peel”, in a certain areas in four different cities to see if people would buy and use the product.  It turned out, no one much did, which confirmed in the minds of the executives that it wasn’t a good commercial product.

Luckily for offices the world over, Nicholson and Joe Ramey, Nicholson’s boss, didn’t feel like giving up yet.  They felt the marketing department had dropped the ball in that they hadn’t given businesses and people samples of the product to use to let them see for themselves how useful the notes could be.  So a year after the initial flop, 3M tried again to introduce the Post-It note to the world, this time giving huge amounts of free sample Post-It note pads away in Boise, Idaho, with the campaign deemed “The Boise Blitz”.  This time, the re-order rate went from almost nothing, in the previous attempt, to 90% of the people and businesses that had received the free samples.  For reference, this was double the best initial rate 3M had ever seen for any other product they’d introduced.  Two years later, the Post-It note was released throughout the United States.

So after 5 years of constant rejection for the adhesive and another seven years in development and initial rejection, Post-It notes were finally a hit and have since become a mainstay in offices the world over, today being one of the top five best selling office supply products in the world.

 

Bonus Facts:

  • Ever wonder why the standard color for Post-It notes is yellow?  It turns out this was kind of an accident as well.  The official story from some at 3M is that it was because it created a “good emotional connection with users” and that it would “contrast well stuck to white paper”.  However, according to Geoff Nicholson there was no such thought given to the color.  The real reason Post-It notes were yellow was simply because the lab next door to where they were working on the Post-It note “had some scrap yellow paper – that’s why they were yellow; and when we went back and said ‘hey guys, you got any more scrap yellow paper?’ they said ‘you want any more go buy it yourself’, and that’s what we did, and that’s why they were yellow. To me it was another one of those incredible accidents. It was not thought out; nobody said they’d better be yellow rather than white because they would blend in – it was a pure accident.”
  •  Post-It notes are occasionally used in art-work.  One such famous example was in 2008 when Shay Hovell used 12,000 Post-It notes to create a replica of the Mona Lisa.  The most expensive Post-It note art piece was done by R.B. Kitaj and sold for £640 (about $1000) in 2000.

source:::::today i foundout.com

natarajan

 

The Man Who Invented AK 47 Is No More…Here is His Greatest Regret ….

Mikhail Kalashnikov, the creator of the famous AK-47 assault rifle, has died at the age of 94,according to Russia Today. He had reportedly been suffering from heart problems and was in intensive care since November.

Mikhail Kalashnikov

Russian weapon designer Mikhail Kalashnikov presents his legendary assault rifle to the media while opening the exhibition ‘Kalashnikov – legend and curse of a weapon’ at a weapons museum in Suhl, eastern Germany, in this July 26, 2002, file photo.

 

The Kalashnikov AK-47 is frequently cited as the world’s most popular assault rifle, with its only serious rival being the American M-series rifle. Still, Kalashnikov had mixed feelings about his success.

“I would prefer to have invented a machine that people could use and that would help farmers with their work — for example a lawnmower,” he said on a visit to Germany in 2002.

Kalashnikov was a self-taught peasant turned tank mechanic who never finished high school, RT writes, and he only became a weapon designer after he was shot in the shoulder in World War II. The AK-47 was introduced in 1948 and became one of the first assault rifles of the 2nd generation. Its remarkable success come from a variety of factors, including durability and low production cost — they reportedly sold in war-torn countries for as little as $US15. However, their popularity amongst criminals and terrorists led to some concern for the inventor.

“Whenever I look at TV and I see the weapon I invented to defend my motherland in the hands of these bin Ladens, I ask myself the same question: ‘How did it get into their hands?’ ” Kalashnikov said in 2006. “I didn’t put it in the hands of bandits and terrorists, and it’s not my fault that it has mushroomed uncontrollably across the globe. Can I be blamed that they consider it the most reliable weapon?”

“It is painful for me to see when criminal elements of all kinds fire from my weapon,” he explained again in 2009, on his 90th birthday.

In hindsight, too, many would have regretted another decision. The original design for the AK-47 was never patented, and Kalashnikov reportedly never saw any of the profits from his invention— a few years ago it was estimated that half the AK-47s in the world were actually counterfeits. Still, the inventor never seemed to mind.

“At that time, patenting inventions wasn’t an issue in our country,” he explained in 2006. “We worked for socialist society, for the good of the people, which I never regret.”

 

source::::: Business insider .com

natarajan

” We Have to Play a Different Game At Times ” !!!

“There once lived a great mathematician in a village outside Ujjain . He was often called by the local king to advice on matters related to the economy. His reputation had spread as far as Taxila in the North and Kanchi in the South. So it hurt him very much when the village headman told him, “You may be a great mathematician who advises the king on economic matters but your son does not know the value of gold or silver.” 

The mathematician called his son and asked, “What is more valuable – gold or silver?” “Gold,” said the son. “That is correct. Why is it then that the village headman makes fun of you, claims you do not know the value of gold or silver? He teases me every day. He mocks me before other village elders as a father who neglects his son. This hurts me. I feel everyone in the village is laughing behind my back because you do not know what is more valuable, gold or silver. Explain this to me, son.” 

So the son of the mathematician told his father the reason why the village headman carried this impression. “Every day on my way to school, the village headman calls me to his house. There, in front of all village elders, he holds out a silver coin in one hand and a gold coin in other. He asks me to pick up the more valuable coin. I pick the silver coin. He laughs, the elders jeer, everyone makes fun of me. And then I go to school. This happens every day. That is why they tell you I do not know the value of gold or silver.” 

The father was confused. His son knew the value of gold and silver, and yet when asked to choose between a gold coin and silver coin always picked the silver coin. “Why don’t you pick up the gold coin?” he asked. In response, the son took the father to his room and showed him a box. In the box were at least a hundred silver coins. Turning to his father, the mathematician’ s son said, “The day I pick up the gold coin the game will stop. They will stop having fun and I will stop making money.” 

Moral: 

Sometimes in life, we have to play the fool because our seniors and our peers, and sometimes even our juniors like it. That does not mean we lose in the game of life. It just means allowing others to win in one arena of the game, while we win in the other arena of the game. We have to choose which arena matters to us and which arenas do not….!!!

 

source::::input from a friend of mine.

natarajan

” என் ஆசி உங்களுக்கு என்றும் உண்டு ” !!!

வடநாட்டைச் சேர்ந்த பெரிய தொழிலதிபர். பிரபலமானவர். அவர் தன் குடும்பத்தாருடன் ஆசாரிய ஸ்வாமிகளைத் தரிசிக்க வந்தார். முன்பு ஸ்வாமிகள் வடநாட்டு யாத்திரை சென்றபோது ஸ்வாமிகளின் குழுவினருக்கு மிகவும் உதவியாக இருந்தவர். புன்னகையுடன் அந்தத் தொழிலதிபரைப் பார்த்துக் கொண்டிருந்தார் ஆசாரிய ஸ்வாமிகள்.

என்ன சொல்லப் போகிறார் என்பதை முன்கூட்டியே ஸ்வாமிகள் புரிந்திருப்பார் போலும்.

“இப்ப பெரிய தொகையை தர்ம காரியங்களுக்கு உதவப் போகிறேன். இனி வருடா வருடம் எங்கள் கம்பெனிகளின் வருமானத்தில் கொஞ்சம் பணத்தை தர்ம காரியங்களுக்கு உதவ முடிவுசெய்து இருக்கிறோம். அந்தப் பணத்தைத் தங்கள் இஷ்டப்படி தர்ம காரியங்களுக்குக் கொடுத்து விடுங்கள் ஸ்வாமி!” என்று பெரிய தொகையை செக்கில் எழுதிக் கொடுத்தார் தொழிலதிபர். அவரது மகனும் மனைவியும் “ஆமாம் ஸ்வாமி, நாங்கள் சம்பாதிப்பதில் ஒரு பகுதி தர்மத்துக்குக் கொடுக்கணும்னு முடிவு செஞ்சு இருக்கோம். இதுக்கு ஸ்வாமிகளின் அநுக்கிரஹம் வேணும்” என்றார்கள்.

செக்கைப் பார்த்தார் ஸ்வாமிகள். மிகப் பெரிய தொகை குறிப்பிடப்பட்டு இருந்தது செக்கில். பிரமித்தார். சிலிர்த்தார். மகிழ்ந்தார். அந்தத் தொழிலதிபரின் மனம் ஜாதியைக் கடந்து மாநிலத்தைக் கடந்து விரிந்து இருப்பதைப் புரிந்து கொண்டு அந்தக் குடும்பத்தின் மீது அருள் பார்வை செலுத்தினார். மௌனமாக ஸ்வாமிகளைத் தரிசித்தவண்ணம் இருந்தது அந்தக் குடும்பம்.

“உங்க தயாள குணத்தைக் கண்டு ரொம்ப சந்தோஷம். உங்க கம்பெனிகள் நன்னா இருக்கும். வருடாவருடம் லாபத்தில் ஒரு சிறு பகுதியை தர்ம காரியத்துக்குக் கொடுக்கப் போறேள். உங்க கம்பெனிகளின் லாபத்தில் சிறுபகுதி என்பது பெரிய தொகையாக இருக்கும். நான் சந்நியாசி. என் பொறுப்பில் இவ்வளவு பணம் இருக்க வேண்டாம். நீங்களே உங்கள் முன்னோர் பெயரில் ஒரு தர்மஸ்தாபனம் அமைத்து இந்தப் பணத்தையும் வருடா வருடம் லாபத்தில் சிறு பகுதியையும் அந்த தர்ம ஸ்தாபனத்தில் செலுத்துங்கள். அந்த தர்மஸ்தாபனம் மனிதநேயத்துடன் மக்களுக்கு உதவட்டும். நீங்களே ஒரு குழு அமைத்து அந்த தர்ம ஸ்தாபனத்தை நடத்துங்கள். என் ஆசி உங்களுக்கு என்றும் உண்டு” என்று சொல்லிக்கொண்டே அந்த செக்கைத் திரும்பக் கொடுத்தார் ஸ்வாமிகள்.

ஸ்வாமிகளின் செயலைக் கண்டு சிலிர்த்தார் தொழிலதிபர். முற்றும் துறந்த முனிவர் என்றால் இவர்தான் என்று எண்ணிய தொழிலதிபர் “ஸ்வாமி! தாங்கள் சொல்வது போல் தர்மஸ்தாபனம் அமைத்துச் செயல்படுகிறேன். முதல் காரியமாக தாங்கள் சொல்லும் திருப்பணியைச் செய்கிறேன். உத்தரவு வேணும் ஸ்வாமி!” என்று கேட்டார் தொழிலதிபர்.

சற்று நேரம் யோசனை செய்தார். சிதிலம் அடைந்த புராதனமான ஒரு கோயிலைச் சீரமைத்துக் கும்பாபிஷேகம் செய்யச் சொன்னார். அதைச் செய்ய ஒப்புக் கொண்டார் தொழிலதிபர்.

source::::www.periva.proboards.com

natarajan
Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/5979/kanchi-mahaswamigal-sri-rangavasan/#ixzz2nbX0plTP

The Song ” Happy Birthday ” is Copyrighted !!!…Read Further …

happy-birthdayToday I found out the song “Happy Birthday” is copyrighted and brings in about $2,000,000 per year to the copyright holders (currently an investment group that purchased Warner Music who in turn was the most recent owner of the copyright for the song).

The original tune for the song was created by sisters Patty Hill and Mildred J. Hill in 1893.  The title to the song they created with that tune was “Good Morning to All”, which was a sort of classroom greeting song for Kindergartners (one was a kindergarten teacher and the other a former kindergarten teacher and at that time, principal).

The copyright for the words and music of “Good Morning to All” has since expired and the song is part of the public domain.  Interestingly, this tune was almost exactly like popular songs of the day “Happy Greetings to All”; “Good Night to You All”; “A Happy New Year to All”; and many others.

So how did “Good Morning to All” become “Happy Birthday to You”?  Nobody knows, but this didn’t stop a lot of people in the last 100 years from making a boatload of money on the simple song.

The tune itself, with the lyrics “Good Morning to All”, was originally published in a songbook “Song Stories for the Kindergarten”.  The tune combined with the lyrics first showed up around 19 years later in a 1912 songbook, without including any credits or copyright notices.  It is thought that the song predates this songbook and perhaps was commonly sung at this time, though no print references have been found before this.

Fast forward to 1935, where the Summy Company registered for the copyright for the song Happy Birthday, crediting authors Preston Ware Orem and Mrs. R.R. Forman.  This was the same company that originally published the “Good Morning to All” song for the Hill sisters and at the backing of the surviving Hill sister, applied for the copyright.  Previous to this, Happy Birthday was published in numerous song books throughout the country with various composers being referenced and no copyright stated.  Once they received the copyright, the Summy Company then formed a separate company, Birth Tree Group Limited, to protect the song’s copyright.

Now, it should be noted here that neither of the Hill sisters had any children and, at the time of the copyright, the one who wrote the simple music tune itself was long dead.  Currently, the proceeds of the copyright are presumed to be all profit for the company that owns the copyright, though it is rumored that perhaps the Hill sisters nephew (from their other sister) receives a portion of the annual income from the song, but this has never been publicly confirmed.

So here’s where the legal fun begins.  The company that currently owns the song, Warner Music, which is owned by an investment group, claims that the song is still copyrighted, even though most legal experts say otherwise; indeed, many say that it should have never been copyrightable due to the fact that no one knows who put the words to the tune and the tune itself, or an extremely similar version, was very common at the time when the Hill sisters used it in their “Good Morning to All” song.  The exact tune, as applied to “Good Morning to All”, is also in the public domain.  So if the tune is in the public domain and nobody knows who put the words to the tune, then nobody should hold the copyright.  That’s the argument.

Warner music, however, still insist that the copyright doesn’t expire until 2030.  Through this, they make a couple million per year collecting revenue from any film, tv show, radio, or public performance of the song.  This includes if you were to sing Happy Birthday to someone in a restaurant, for instance, which is why restaurants that have their employees sing a Happy Birthday song make their own.

Basically, the only legal way you are allowed to sing Happy Birthday to anyone without paying is if it’s a small gathering of family and/or friends and not in a public setting.  You also aren’t allowed to have someone not a family or friend be the lead performer of the song in these small groups.  Any other place you want to sing it, you have to pay or you are violating their copyright, according to them.

Professor of law Robert Brauneis disagrees, “It is almost certainly no longer under copyright.  Many question the validity of the current copyright, as the melody of the song was most likely borrowed from other popular songs of the time, and the lyrics were likely improvised by a group of five- and six-year-old children who never received any compensation.”

source::::today i foundout .com

natarajan

Laughter The Best Medicine …” Bijiness is Bijiness” !!!

Bijness is Bijiness
One day in a school in London, a teacher said to a class of 5-year-olds
I’ll give 10 pounds to the child who can tell me who was the most famous man who
ever lived.”

An Irish boy put his hand up and said, “It was St. Patrick.”
The teacher said, “Sorry Paddy, that’s not correct.”
Then a Scottish boy put his hand up and said, “It was St. Andrew.”
The teacher replied, “I’m sorry, Hamish, that’s not right either.”
Then a Jewish boy put his hand up and said “David”,
The Buddhist boy said “Gautama Buddha” and the Muslim boy said “Mohammed”.
They all were not successful. Finally, a Gujju Patel boy raised his hand and said, “It
was Jesus Christ.”

The teacher said, “That’s absolutely right, Jignesh, come up here and I’ll give
you the 10 pounds that I promised.”

As the teacher was giving Jignesh his money, she said, “You know Jignesh, since
you’re a Hindu Gujarati; I was very surprised you said Jesus Christ.”

Jignesh Patel replied, “Yes. In my heart I knew it was Krishna, but Bijness is
Bijness!!!!! !

source::::input from a friend of mine

natarajan

Airports With Catchy Interiors !!!

MASSIVE, beautiful, weird, wonderful, futuristic and fun.

Here are some of the world’s best – and the downright craziest – airport interiors, according to travel website Skyscanner.com.au .

1. Suvarnabhumi, Bangkok, Thailand

Ancient meets modern minimalism in the main concourse of Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi Airport, designed by Helmut Jahn. Suvarnabhumi – “the airport of smiles” – has the proud claim to fame of the world’s tallest freestanding control tower (123 metres if you were wondering).

 

Suvarnabhumi, Bangkok. Picture: Ztij0, Flickr

Suvarnabhumi, Bangkok

 

2. Beijing Capital International, China

Beijing’s Terminal 3, built in time to cope with the extra millions of passengers coming for the 2008 Olympic Games, is the second largest airport terminal in the world after Dubai International Airport’s Terminal 3 (more of that later).

Beijing Airport. Picture: Simon.Brunozzi, Flickr

Beijing Airport.

3. Chicago O’Hare, US

Moving walkways are cool, but colourful moving walkways, like this one in Chicago, are cooler. Along with going on the monorail back and forth between terminals, jumping off the end of “travelators”, as they’re sometimes called, is one of the most fun ways to spend your time at an airport.

Chicago O'Hare. Picture: Pfala...

Chicago O’Hare.

 

4. Singapore Changi

The departure lounge at Singapore’s Changi airport looks like it was modelled on an imaginary retro-futuristic fast food outlet. Or Universal Studios. Or maybe a flying saucer landed on the first floor food court? Check out the matching floor and ceiling too.

Changi Airport. Picture: TravelOurPlanet.com, Flickr

Changi Airport.

Changi Airport. Picture: Kobetsai, Flickr

 

 

5. Dubai International, UAE

Terminal 3 at Dubai International Airport is, you guessed it, the single largest building in the world by floor space. It’s Dubai, what do you expect, small and subtle?

Dubai Airport. Picture: Augapfel, Flickr

Dubai Airport.

 

 

6. Lyon St. Exupery, France

If you arrive at Lyon’s St. Exupéry Airport by TGV or the Rhône Express from the city centre, it’s a long walk to check-in, especially if you’re laden down with bags and you’re leaving from Terminal 3. But do look up to appreciate the architecture

Lyon St. Exupery Airport. Picture: Exupery Bob, Flickr

Lyon St. Exupery Airport. Picture: Exupery Bob, Flickr

 

7. Madrid – Barajas, Spain

If you can get over the sensation that you are under attack from a swarm of alien jellyfish, and that you have landed in Madrid in 1968, appreciate the wonder of the arrival hall at Barajas, which looks like an unused set from 2001: A Space Odyssey.

The 11 most outrageous airport interiors

 

8. Munich, Germany

Horizontalators don’t come much more D.I.S.C.O. than this example at Munich Airport. They really should pump out Stayin’ Alive. You’ll catch Saturday night fever even if it’s Monday morning.

Munich Airport. Picture: Pterjan, Flickr

 

 

9. Charles de Gaulle, Paris

If, like the author, you missed your flight home from Paris because you were toasting your engagement with a bottle of champers on a bench outside Charles de Gaulle, then spent five hours drinking gin, slumped staring at the ceiling, this view will be familiar.

Charles de Gaulle. Picture: Thombo2, Flickr

 

 

10. Shanghai Pudong, China

Asia boasts some of the world’s most architecturally-exciting airports, and Shanghai Pudong International is no exception. The exterior of Terminal 1 is shaped like waves, while arrival by escalator feels like an ascent into a sci-fi flick version of heaven

Shanghai Pudong Airport. Picture: Kent Wang, Flickr

 

 

11. Ronald Reagan Washington National, US

There’s no mistaking which country you’re in, however jet-lagged you’re feeling. The Reagan’s classical style, redolent of tearful goodbyes in a 1920s railway station, eschewts the futurism of most major international airports.

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport. Picture: Elvert Barnes, Flickr

Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport.

source::::news.com.au

natarajan

Spain’s Famous ” ghost ” Airport Goes Up for Sale !!!

Ciudad Real Airport. Picture: AfricaTwin, Wikicommons

Ciudad Real Airport.

A HUGE airport in central Spain that cost one billion euros ($1.5 billion) to build but has not received a commercial flight since 2011 has gone up for auction for just 100 million euros.

With a runway long enough to land an Airbus 380, the world’s largest airliner, and a capacity to handle 10 million passengers per year, the airport at Ciudad Real, some 200km south of Madrid, has become a symbol of Spain’s real estate bubble.

Spain’s first private international airport operated its first flight in December 2008 but passenger traffic never took off and CR Aeropuertos, the operator of the terminal, went into bankruptcy in June 2012 with debts of around 300 million euros.

It went up for auction on Monday for a starting price of 100 million euros to meet creditor demands and the bidding will close on December 27, a spokesman for a commercial court in Ciudad Real which is overseeing its sale said.

Ciudad Real, a city of around 75,000 residents located halfway between Madrid and Cordoba, attracts few visitors and the airport was designed to serve both the Spanish capital and the Andalusian coast which are both less than an hour away by high-speed rail. The airport, which reportedly cost around one billion euros to build, had its final commercial flight, from low-cost airline Vueling, at the end of 2011.

It remained open for another six months to receive a handful of private arrivals and in 2012 Oscar-winning Spanish director Pedro Almodovar used it for a week to film part of his latest film I’m So Excited! about a doomed passenger plane.

Since then the airport’s 4200-metre-long runway, Europe’s longest, has had to be continually painted with yellow crosses so pilots flying over the airport will know they cannot land there, according to Spanish media reports.

Spain, which is gingerly emerging from a double-dip recession sparked by the implosion in 2008 of a decade-long property bubble that fuelled overspending on massive infrastructure projects, has the most international commercial airports of any country in Europe.

Ciudad Real Airport. Picture: Africa Twin, Wikicommons

Several of the country’s 47 public airports do not have any regular commercial flights and 15 move less than 100,000 passengers per year, or less than one flight per day.

Another private airport at Castellon on the Mediterranean coast has fared even worse than the one at Ciudad Real.

It opened in March 2011 but has not handled a single flight.

source::::news.com.au

natarajan