Happy New Year 2021
Thursday, October 18, 2007
A Thought for Today-105: October 8, 2007
A Thought for Today-104: October 7, 2007
A Thought for Today-103: October 6, 2007
A Thought for Today-102: October 5, 2007
A Thought for Today-101: October 4, 2007
A Thought for Today-100: October 3, 2007
A Thought for Today-99: October 2, 2007
A Thought for Today-98: October 1, 2007
A Thought for Today-97: September 30, 2007
Eyecatchers-39 : Solar Cells 200 Hundred Times Thinner than Hair - AFP
From customer devices to bioterrorism monitors to in-body diagnostics, this ultra-microscopic technology is poised to take centre stage in less than a decade from now. But finding the sources to power it has become a headache.
Two hundred billionth of a watt may not seem much, but at nanoscale it is enough to provide a steady output of electricity to run ultralow power electronics, including some that could be worn on, or even inside the body. It is also clean, highly efficient and renewable.
Monitoring bioterrorism threats, for example, would require an entire array of nanosensors, nanoprocessors to analyse the signals received, and nano-transmitters to relay information to a centralised facility, he said.
Eyecatchers-38 : Biggest Black Hole
The find, located in a galaxy called Messier 33, has an even bigger companion - a close-orbiting star that is 70 times the mass of the sun, according to an investigation led by Jerome Orosz of San Diego University, California, USA - Agencies
Eyecatchers-37 : Anne Enright Wins Man Booker Prize
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Self-Improvement: Who needs PERFECT people? - Uma Venkataraman
Perfect people, managers or employees exist only in training films and textbooks. It is the struggle towards perfection that counts and your approach towards that should be step by step. There is no other way of achieving your objectives. Set realistic short-term goals and focus on them. It does not matter even if you fail as long as you give it your best shot and stay in the game. If you quit, there is no way of winning. The real winner is the one who stays in the game, learns to play well and knows that perfection is only a fantasy.
Never fear the consequences of missing a shot or a step. Because when you fear failure, you limit your potential. Remember while deciding to do something, it is better to be almost right than totally wrong.
Self-Improvement: Twelve Things to Remember
Tuesday, October 16, 2007
Self-Improvement: Small is Beautiful
It is content to be given to shed its own little light. It is not worried how much more darkness need to be removed from over the world. Is it a small privilege to be given to remove even a jot of darkness?
Let us not be nervous about our smallness. For, without grains of sands, even the loftiest monuments could not be built. In fact, the ultimate brick of the greatest monuments is the sand particle.
Such people can never become good citizens. When we discuss momentous issues concerning mankind, and the responsibility of doing our mite, they throw up their hands and dogmatically declare that small persons like them can do nothing about these great problems.
We should clearly understand that even a small lamp has the capacity and the privilege to give light. Often enough, these days, thanks to frequent power shortages, we are given the opportunity to appreciate the usefulness of the good old, humble candles. When proud powerhouses fail, humble candles give light. Even today the basic measure of all magnificent light is the candle power!
Enlightened citizenship is very much a homegrown affair, in the sense that your home can become a lighthouse. The light that is within you, when that shines without also, that is enlightened citizenship.
Self-Improvement: Right Beginnings (from James Allen's 'Byways of Blessedness'
Letters-1: Satisfying Success Needed
It is not enough to be motivated with a sense of purpose and progress. What is wanted is not just success but a success that satisfies. This is not possible with inequitable distribution of income and the pronounced existence of a poverty line. The widespread corruption is a telltale sign of unpardonable malaise that goes with it.
This is the need of the hour in India today.
A Thought for Today-96: September 29, 2007
Saturday, October 13, 2007
Eyecatchers-36 : The Latest French Revolution by Manisha Gutman
After creating the world's fastest mode of transport, the TGV, the French are now returning to something much more simple - the bicycle (velo in French). Only July 15, 2007, ten thousand public bicycles were made available to the residents of Paris, in a new experiment on urban transport.
The basic principle is nobody owns the Velib, but everybody can borrow one. For €29 and a deposit of €150, one can subscribe to a year’s access to the cycles. Velib points have been created outside every metro station in the city. With a magnetic card in hand, one can simply help oneself to a cycle, use it to ride up to one’s destination and park it at the nearest Velib point.
It took three years of negotiations before the experiment was put into place but one week before the launch, nearly 8000 Parisians had signed up for a subscription. The city expects to have nearly 2,00,000 by the end of the year. In the last seven years, Paris has doubled its cycle tracks to 371 km at present.
The emerging new trend has quite a serious impact on urban planning, as rules are changed to suit a growing population of cyclists. Instead of the motorcar, in some places the cyclists have priority, allowing them to use one-way streets and even ignore traffic lights.
Finally, it comes down to a personal choice that the French are making. Cycling is good for one’s health; according to some studies half an hour of cycling per day can significantly elongate one’s lifespan, reducing stress and hypertension. It is also an efficient tool of weight control. On the other hand, a cycle is a non-polluting form of transport, using no fuel and creating no emissions. Until a few years ago, only 1.5 per cent of Parisians used cycles on a regular basis. Now more of urban French population is turning to a mode of transport very common in rural France.
The region of Arcachon, on the southwest coast of France offers several landmarks for tourists but, most of all, it offers an excellent network of cycle routes. These routes, which run along the sea for almost the entire circumference of the basin, originally formed a raid road track used by Germans during World War to transport soldiers and men. However, after the war, the railroad served little purpose and the path was converted into cycle tracks.
The cycle track that circles the basin is inaccessible to any motor vehicle, however small it may be. It covers a length of nearly 75 to 80 km, on a sunny day, one can see people of all ages cycling.
Cycles are available in most towns on rent for as little as €2 an hour. A variety of cycles, tandem bicycles, three-wheelers and cycles with baby carriages, makes it possible for older citizens, mothers with babies and even the physically challenged to cycle. To make it easier for tourists, cycles rented in one town can be returned in another to the same chain of stores.
The enthusiasm to return to the cycle as a form of transport as well as a hobby is not limited to Arcachon, Gironde, the department to which Arcachon belongs, boasts of a network of nearly 600 km of cycle tracks. Bordeaux, the capital of Gironde, is a university town that gives all students free use of bicycles that belong to the town. Further north, Nantes offers free raincoats and backpacks to state employees who cycle to work.
The bicycle is bringing revolutionary change to French society. It represents a growing social consciousness, as well as a willingness to make environmentally and socially sensitive choices.
Excerpt from ‘The Latest French Revolution’ by Manisha Gutman in Magazine, supplement to the Sunday edition of The Hindu of Sep.9, 2007.
Grateful thanks to Ms Manisha Gutman and The Hindu.
