Tuesday, February 28, 2006

From Our President.......

Dr. Abdul Kalam's Speech in Hyderabad


This is a real strong speech from our president.
I hope we all can really contribute at least some time
to read it, if not implement it.




Quote: I have three visions for India. In 3000 years of our history
people from all over the world have come and invaded us, captured our
lands, conquered our minds. From Alexander onwards, the Greeks, the Turks,
the Moguls, the Portuguese, the British, the French, the Dutch, all of
them came and looted us, took over what was ours. Yet we have not
done this to any other nation. We have not conquered anyone. We have
not grabbed their land, their culture, their history and tried to
enforce our way of life on them.

Why? Because we respect the freedom of others.

That is why my first vision is that of FREEDOM. I believe that India got
its first vision of this in 1857, when we started the war of
independence. It is this freedom that we must protect and nurture
and build on. If we are not free, no one will respect us.
My second vision for India is DEVELOPMENT. For fifty years we have been
a developing nation. It is time we see ourselves as a developed nation.

We are among top 5 nations of the world in terms of GDP. We have 10
percent growth rate in most areas. Our poverty levels are falling. Our
achievements are being globally recognized today. Yet we lack the
self-confidence to see ourselves as a developed nation, self-reliant
and self-assured. Isn't this incorrect?
I have a THIRD vision. India must st and up to the world. Because I
believe that unless India stands up to the world, no one will respect us.
Only strength respects strength. We must be strong not only as a military
power but also as an economic power. Both must go hand-in-hand.
My good fortune was to have worked with three great minds. Dr.Vikram
Sarabhai of the Dept. of Space, Professor Satish Dhawan, who succeeded
him and Dr. Brahm Prakash, father of nuclear material. I was lucky to have
worked with all three of them closely and consider this the great
opportunity of my life.

I see four milestones in my career:

ONE: Twenty years I spent in ISRO. I was given the opportunity to be the
project director for India's first satellite launch vehicle, SLV3. The
one that launched Rohini. These years played a very important role in my
life of Scientist.

TWO: After my ISRO years, I joined DRDO and got a chance to be the part
of India's missile program. It was my second bliss when Agni met its
mission requirements in 1994.

THREE: The Dept. of Atomic Energy and DRDO had this tremendous
partnership in the recent nuclear tests, on May 11 and 13. This was the
third bliss. The joy of participating with my team in these nuclear
tests and proving to the world that India can make it, that we are no
longer a developing nation but one of them. It made me feel very proud
as an Indian. The fact that we have now developed for Agni a re-entry
structure, for which we have developed
this new material. A Very light material called arbon-carbon.

FOUR: One day an orthopedic surgeon from Nizam Institute of Medical
Sciences visited my laboratory. He lifted the material and found it so
light that he took me to his hospital and showed me his patients.
There were these little girls and boys with heavy metallic callipers
weighing over three Kg. each, dragging their feet around. He said to me:
Please remove the pain of my patients. In three weeks, we made these
loor reaction Orthosis 300 gram callipers and took them to the
orthopaedic centre. The children didn't believe their eyes. From dragging
around a three kg. load on their legs, they could now move around!
Their parents had tears in their eyes. That was my fourth bliss!

Why is the media here so negative? Why are we in India so embarrassed to
recognize our own strengths, our achievements? We are such a great
nation. We have so many amazing success stories but we refuse to
acknowledge them. Why?

We are the first in milk production.

We are number one in Remote sensing satellites.

We are the second largest producer of wheat.

We are the second largest producer of rice.

Look at Dr. Sudarshan, he has transferred the tribal village into a
self-sustaining, self-driving unit.

There are millions of such achievements but our media is only obsessed
with the bad news and failures and disasters.

I was in Tel Aviv once and I was reading the Israeli newspaper. It was
the day after a lot of attacks and bombardments and deaths had taken
place. The Hamas had struck. But the front page of the newspaper had
the picture of a Jewish gentleman who in five years had transformed
his desert land into an orchid and a granary. It was this inspiring
picture that everyone woke up to. The gory details of killings,
bombardments, deaths, were inside in the newspaper, buried among other
news. In India we only read about death, sickness, terrorism, crime. Why
are we so NEGATIVE?

Another question: Why are we, as a nation so obsessed with foreign
things?

We want foreign TVs, we want foreign shirts. We want foreign technology.
Why this obsession with everything imported. Do we not realize that
self-respect comes with self-reliance?

I was in Hyderabad giving this lecture, when a 14 year old girl asked me
for my autograph. I asked her what her goal in life is: She replied: I
want to live in a developed India. For her, you and I will have to
build this developed India. You must proclaim. India is not an
under-developed nation it is a highly developed nation.

Allow me to come back with vengeance. Got 10 minutes for your country?

YOU say that our government is inefficient.

YOU say that our laws are too old. YOU say that the municipality does
not pick up the garbage.

YOU say that the phones don't work, the railways are a joke, the airline
is the worst in the world, mails never reach their destination.

YOU say that our country has been fed to the dogs and is the absolute
pits.

YOU say, say and say.................

What do YOU do about it?

Take a perso n on his way to Singapore. Give him a name - YOURS. Give him
a face - YOURS.

YOU walk out of the airport and you are at your International best. In
Singapore you don't throw cigarette butts on the roads or eat in the
stores.
YOU are as proud of their Underground Links as they are. You pay $5
(approx. Rs.60) to drive through Orchard Road (equivalent of Mahim
Causeway or Pedder Road) between 5 PM and 8 PM. YOU comeback to the
parking lot to punch your parking ticket if you have over stayed in a
restaurant or a shopping mall irrespective of your status identity. In
Singapore you don't say anything,
DO YOU?

YOU wouldn't dare to eat in public during Ramadan, in Dubai. YOU would
not dare to go out without your head covered in Jeddah. YOU would not
dare to buy an employee of the telephone exchange in London at 10
pounds (Rs.650) a month to, "see 0r to it that my STD and ISD
calls are billed to someone else."
YOU would not dare to speed beyond 55 mph (88 kmph) in Washington and
then tell the traffic cop, "Jaanta hai sala main kaun hoon (Do you
know who I am?). I
am so and so's son. Take your two bucks and get lost."

YOU wouldn't chuck an empty coconut shell anywhere other than the
garbage pail on the beaches in Australia and New Zealand.

why don't YOU spit Paan on the streets or Tokyo?

Why don't YOU use examination jockeys or buy fake certificates in
Boston?

We are still talking of the same YOU. YOU who can respect and conform to
a foreign system in other countries but cannot in your own.

You who will throw papers and cigarettes on the road the moment you
touch Indian ground. If you can be an involved and appreciative citizen
in an alien country why cannot you be the same here in India.

Once in an interview, the famous Ex-municipal commissioner of Bombay Mr.
Tinaikar had a point to make.

"Rich people's dogs are walked on the streets to leave their affluent
droppings all over the place," he said. "And then the same people turn
around to criticize and blame the authorities for inefficiency and
dirty pavements. What do they expect the officers to do? Go down with a
broom every time their dog feels the pressure in his bowels? In
America every dog owner has to clean up after his pet has done the job.
Same in Japan. Will the Indian citizen do that here?"

He's right.

We go to the polls to choose a government and after that forfeit all
responsibility. We sit back wanting to be pampered and expect the
government to do everything for us whilst our contribution is totally
negative.
We expect the government to clean up but we are not going to stop
chucking garbage all over the place nor are we going to stop to pick a up
a stray piece of paper and throw it in the bin.

We expect the railways to provide clean bathrooms but we are not going
to learn the proper use of bathrooms. We want Indian Airlines and Air
India to provide the best of food and toiletries but we are not going
to stop pilfering at the least opportunity. This applies even to the
staff who& nbsp; is known not to pass on the service to the public. When
it
comes to burning social issues like those related to women, dowry, girl
child and others, we make loud drawing room protestations and continue
to do the reverse at home.

Our excuse? "It's the whole system, which has to change, how will it
matter if I alone forego my sons' rights to a dowry.

" So who's going to change the system? What does a system consist of?

Very conveniently for us it consists of our neighbors, other households,
other cities, other communities and the government. But definitely not me
and YOU.

When it comes to us actually making a positive contribution to the
system we lock ourselves along with our families into a safe cocoon
and look into the distance at countries far away and wait for a Mr.
Clean to come along &work miracles for us with a majestic sweep of his
hand.

Or we leave the country and run away. Like lazy cowards hounded by our
fears we run to America to bask in their glory and praise their system.

When New York becomes insecure we run to England.

When England experiences unemployment, we take the next flight out to
the Gulf.

When the Gulf is war struck, we demand to be rescued and brought home by
the Indian government.

Everybody is out to abuse and rape the country. Nobody thinks of feeding
the system our conscience is mortgaged to money.
Dear Indians, The article is highly thought inductive, calls for a great
deal of introspection and pricks one's conscience too.... I am echoing
J.F. Kennedy's words to his fellow Americans to relate to Indians.....

"ASK WHAT WE CAN DO FOR INDIA AND DO WHAT HAS TO BE DONE TO MAKE INDIA
WHAT AMERICA AND OTHER WESTERN COUNTRIES ARE TODAY"

Lets do what India needs from us.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Monday, February 20, 2006

Sketch of a Woman

Fellows,

I found a very good link .....
great flash work.. creating sketch of a woman ... starting from the bones....
take a look
Sketch of a Woman

Tanul Karkare

Thursday, February 16, 2006

Avatar

Added my yahoo avatar to the blog.. check My Avatar in the side box

Monday, January 23, 2006

Addicted to Wikipedia

I revisited my blog after so many days...
actually I am deeply involved with wikipedia nowadays and can't refrain myself from updating/ reading editing the wikis.....
There is a speacial song on the lines of Hotel California which goes like this:

On a dark office evening,
Sat down in my chair.
Sharp smell of stale coffee
Circling round in the air.
Suddenly on the webpage
There came a flickering light.
My head grew heavy, and my sight grew dim;
I had to stop for the night.
There it was in the link list:
"Edit page; you'll do well"
And I was thinking to myself
This could be Heaven or this could be Hell!
Then it lit up the quickbar
And it showed me the way.
There were pages begging clean-up;
I thought I heard them say:


Welcome to the Hotel Wikipedia
Such a lovely place
So much empty space
Plenty of work at the Hotel Wikipedia
Any time of year
You can find us here...


Many links in the Portal
Disambigs won't suffice
And users said,
We are all just prisoners here
Of our own device.
And in the Most Requested
The list of pages increased;
They edit with their steely knives
But they just can't kill the beast.
Last thing I remember,
I couldn't take any more.
I had to find the passage back
to the life I had before
Relax, said the Rambot,
We are programmed to receive.
You can log out any time you like
But you can never leave.


Welcome to the Hotel Wikipedia
Such a lovely place
So much empty space
They're typing it in at the Hotel Wikipedia
Things that you can do—
Revert vandals, too—

Wednesday, July 06, 2005

Its just an Ad.....

These four classified ads appeared in a local newspaper on four consecutive days. The last three hopelessly trying to correct the first day's mistake.

MONDAY:

For sale - SK Shah has a sewing machine for sale. Phone 2555-0707 after 7PM and ask for Mrs Mani who lives with him cheap.

TUESDAY:

Notice: We regret having erred in SK Shah's ad yesterday. It should have read,

"One sewing machine for sale cheap. Phone 2555-0707 and ask for Mrs Mani, who lives with him after 7PM."

WEDNESDAY:

Notice: SK Shah has informed us that he has received several annoying telephone calls because of the error we made in the classified ad yesterday. The ad stands correct as follows:

"For sale - SK Shah has a sewing machine for sale. Cheap. Phone 2555-0707 after 7PM and ask for Mrs Mani who loves with him."

THURSDAY:

Notice: I, SK Shah, have no sewing machine for sale. I smashed it. Don't call 2555-0707 as I have had the phone disconnected. I have not been carrying on with Mrs Mani. Until yesterday, she was my housekeeper but she quit.

Sunday, July 03, 2005

Quick Exercise for the Mind

Carry out this test; it's quite bizarre......
Just follow the instructions as quickly as possible but only one question at a time. Do not carry on reading the following questions before you finish the previous one.

You do NOT need to write the answers OR remember them - just do it using your mind.

You'll be surprised by the result.

How much is:

15+6


3+56


89+2


12+53


75+26


25+52

63+32


I know! Calculations are hard work but this is the real thing!



Come on a few more.


123+5


QUICK! THINK ABOUT A TOOL AND A COLOR!



You have just thought about a red hammer, haven't you?


If this is not the case, you are among the people who have a "different" if not "abnormal" mind. Most folks answer a "red hammer" while doing this exercise.

If you do not believe this, pass it around and you'll see.

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

My Israel visit.....

Last weekend I went for a trip to Eilat which is the southern most (almost) part of Israel. Surrounded by Jordan and Egypt ... the borders are really close ..
U can enjoy different water sports like paragliding, sailing, surfing , scuba diving etc...

Eilat is also famous for the marine life there ... u can see all kinds of corals and underwater life in the red sea.
There is a very good underwater observatory...


Monday, June 20, 2005

Israel....

Presently I am on a visit to Israel, and it has a lot of spots to visit....
A view near the hotel

here's a cool pic of a water fall at yahudia natural reserve in north east of israel.

and a beautiful view of bahai gardens at Haifa

Tuesday, May 31, 2005

Letters of Kids to God

Very cute letters............... These are actual letters that kids have written to God. This was done in a Sunday School class and were too cute to miss.

Dear God... Instead of letting people die and having to make new ones, why don't you just keep the ones you have now?


Dear God... Who draws the lines around the countries?


Dear God... I went to this wedding and they kissed right in church. Is that okay?


Dear God... Thank you for my baby brother, but what I prayed for was a puppy.


Dear God... It rained for our whole vacation and is my father mad! He said some things about you that people are not supposed to say, but hope you will not hurt him anyway.


Dear God... Please send me a pony. I never asked for anything before. You can look it up.


Dear God... If we come back as something, please don't let me be Jennifer because I hate her.


Dear God... I want to be just like my daddy when I get big, but not with so much hair all over.


Dear God... I think about you sometimes, even when I'm not praying.


Dear God... I bet it is very hard for you to love all the people in the world. There are only four people in our family and I can never do it.


Dear God... Of all the people who worked for you, I like Noah and David the best.


Dear God... If you watch me in church Sunday, I'll show you my new shoes.


Dear God... I do not think anybody could be a better God. Well, I just want you to know that I am not just saying this because you are God already.


Dear God... I didn't think orange went with purple until I saw the sunset you made on Tuesday. That was cool!

Monday, March 14, 2005

The Way to get Educated

This is a mail by first year NITIE ( one of the leading Institutes for Management education in India) student:

O yes dear! Degrees do differ a lot. Engineering keeps us busy with Kirchoff¡¦s laws, Laplace transformations, Distribution curves blah blah blah. Sadly, we never use them on anything beyond pieces of paper. In contrast, a MBA is an excursion to reality; a confrontation with hideous facts.
Dear friends, in my 7 months of MBA education so far, I¡¦ve come across plenty of quite-disturbing truths. Each of these has a potential to stir a thinking mind. I wanted to document some of those and share them with you.
I hope you can spare a few minutes for them.

@ My first lesson was like a ¡¥wake up¡¦ alarm. Without ever realising it
I¡¦ve always lived on foreign brands. Right from the Farex which my mom
fed me many moons ago to the Reeboks I now wear; from the Colgate with
which I begin my day, to the Mortein which burns after I fall asleep,
hardly anything is Indian. Ditto for you.
¡§Wah Wah Globalisation¡¨ some might utter. But go a step below that
rhetoric and you¡¦ll notice the fact that we don¡¦t have a single truly
global brand of our own except Kamasutra and Yoga. Why?
I¡¦ve identified some of the culprits. It¡¦s us ¡V the so called best
B-schools of the country. We slog day and night dreaming to be picked up
by the Goldman Sachs¡¦, McKinseys, E&Ys and other blue chip companies. We
follow the system too soon, forgetting to question it when required.
Perhaps we need a Munnabhai MBA who can think different. And until that
happens we will continue to eulogise dynasties like Tatas, Birlas et al,
but never see an entrepreneurial genius like a FedEx, a Dell or a Google.
@*@ The next time you come across the ubiquitous blue coloured Parachute
Coconut Oil dabba, notice it carefully. Though majority uses it as hair
oil, it never mentions ¡¥hair oil¡¦ on the package. That brings us to our
next lesson -Play with the rulebook. It pays.
Edible products are exempted from excise duty and also enjoy benefits on
sales tax. Therefore Marico/HLL officially promote their Coconut Oil
brands as edible products ONLY. By doing this they avoid paying excise
duty (16%) which maximises their profits.
@*@ Now some trade news. I assume you know that 95% of India¡¦s trade
happens through sea. We have 12 major ports in India. As per the last
Indian Ports report these 12 ports have TOGETHER handled 287.6 million
tonnes of cargo in fiscal 2001-02, which is lesser than a single Singapore
port (325.6 million tonnes) or a single Rotterdam port (320 million
tonnes).
Now you¡¦ll easily agree that we indeed contribute less than 1% to total
world trade.
@*@ Manufacturing has lost its pride. Today a Babulal & Sons manufactures
the goods, a Ghanshyamji Brothers Ltd packages it and then passes it to a
Nike/HLL. These guys offer it to you with the w-i-d-e-s-t artificial smile
and rob you off thousands in the name of ¡¥customer delight¡¦ and other
concocted management jargons.
You might think the profit pie is shared equally between all partners.
Take this. ..
There are many small enterprises in Bombay who manufacture toothbrushes
and sell it to the big FMCG companies for anything between Rs.1.75 to Rs
4. These toothbrushes are then ¡¥brandedised¡¦ and sent to primary market
with a price tag ranging between Rs 11 to Rs 20. Can you visualise the
easy profits after removing the advertising and distribution costs? It¡¦s
whopping!! Btw, this toothbrush market is alone worth Rs 2000 crores in
India.
@*@ Does price of a good always reflect ¡¥added value¡¦ inside it? Or is
the poor ignorant customer paying for something else? Let data answer this
question.
Most premium goods use raw materials which are imported. They pass through
our ports which are grossly inefficient. The importers have to make a
freight payment which is a proportion of the total import value. The world
total freight payment is 6.2%. In India the figure is a terrifying 12%.
This obviously gets added to the basic price.
Also, we are always over-staffed. Mumbai port alone has 23, 600+
employees. Their salaries and wages amount to 77% of its operational
earnings.
Who pays for these inefficiencies? The customer of course!!
@*@ After several years of deliberation a good thing is finally happing in
Indian Taxation System ¡V implementation of VAT. A little reading revealed
some interesting facts. VAT was first introduced in Morocco (1962) and is
being currently used in about 120 nations. In spite of many advantages
like general reduction in prices this bill faced huge resistance from many
traders. Guess why?
Because VAT mandates complete transparency. It requires traders to
maintain records of the transactions they make. Simply put, it makes pay
their income taxes which they have been evading since ages.
@*@ How urban are our cities? Does urbanisation mean constructing
commercial centers, malls, theme parks or iMax theatres? What about
sanitation, public health, transport? Forget the cities, why can¡¦t we
ever ¡¥urbanise¡¦ an Indian? Why do men treat this country like an
open-air toilet?
This is my first stay in Bombay and I¡¦m enjoying the love-hate
relationship with it. This city is the true microcosm of India. I¡¦ve seen
grandeur which can make any middle class guy gape. I¡¦ve also seen gauns
(villages) right here which made me chuckle. You¡¦ll be surprised to know
that in a mega-city like Bombay the distribution of kerosene still happens
through bullock carts. Yes, bullock driven carts fº Click this link.

@*@ India got independence in 1947. Israel, a year later, in 1948. In the
last 50 odd years they have fought more wars than us. Had more bitter
enemies (Jordan, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon and Syria) than just China and
Pakistan. Terrorism never let them breathe peacefully. Add to it severe
shortages of water, land and capital.
Today, they are irrefutably more advanced than us in most departments. We
take their help in Agricutute (drip irrigation), Weather (artificial
rain), Defence (Phalcons, Tavor rifles) and even peacetime reconnaissance
(advanced UAVs).
Where did we go wrong?
@*@ Lemme end this list with that fact which pushed me into writing this
mail. Every year, the World Bank comes out with a compendium ¡¥World
Development Indicators¡¦ which has rankings of all nations on various
parameters.
The 2004 edition of the same has the World income map on its inside cover.
The map pictorially categorises 210 nations into 4 slots ¡V Low income,
Low middle income, Upper middle income and High income. Guess where we
stand?
Low income; alongside nations like Ethiopia, Rwanda, Togo, Cameroon, Sudan
and other no-so-glorious names. How does it feel? Doesn¡¦t it feel worse
than losing the World Cup finals to Australia?

My dear reader, I can go on like this forever, but I¡¦ll stop here. I hope
you have got the gist of what I¡¦m trying to say. It will be a shame if
you think my sole purpose was to criticise or mock the system. NO. I am as
much a part of it as anybody else. My only motive was to make you aware of
the malaise around us. To make you ¡¥think¡¦ over some basic issues. God
willing, one of us will probably solve a few of those.
A departing note ¡V A country as great as India cannot be judged solely on
a few hiccups like mentioned above. Agreed, these are some aspects which
make us feel uncomfortable. But the fact that this nation braves to fight
this cancer is what makes us all proud. On some other day, I¡¦ll tell you
about innovative projects like Tripura¡¦s Rubber Parks or mighty moves
like the Iran-Pak-India pipeline, Kochi¡¦s Hybrid Port etc which have the
potential to affect even the last common man.

Before I sign out, I¡¦d like to thank my college for making me capable enuff to write this mail.


Praveen Gattu
First Year, PGDIM
National Institute of Industrial Engineering (NITIE)
Mumbai.
(praveenk.im11@nitie.edu)
PS: This mail is going to a lot of people from diverse fields. I¡¦d love
to know the ¡¥weak-links¡¦ in your part of the system. Thanks.

Friday, March 04, 2005

Vaidik Tradition - A commentry

This is an article written by my uncle ..... he's a preacher for vaidic tradition and feels that its the oldest on this earth and holds answers to most of the queries of present....
He wrote this in hindi and is translated to english by my aunt Priyamvada kolhatkar.
Long but worth reading article.
A commentary on Hinduism
(With a definition of Islam)

Dr. Ishwar Chandra Karkare

This matter is not just a thousand or lakhs of years ago. It is a crore years old matter. You may or may not believe, may even ridicule but the tradition meant here is really a crore years old. The oldest tradition, culture and a system of life meant here is called vaidic tradition.

Vid means to know and vaidic menas after acknowledging - to line life that way. The same tradition was then called Sanatan, then Aryan and Dravid. And then the same was called Hinduisim from this only Jani and Baudh cults came later on. And from the same, from the only wisdom and scientific tradition, from the oldest and yet the most modern and highest Aryan and Hindu tradition two different cults took birth. They are known as Christianity and Islam.

San means to move forward towards wisdom and Atan means everlasting everyday. And so Aryan and Dravid tradition was called Sanatan Dharma. Then came the word Hindu. "Hinsa Duriyate Chittam" means "One who becomes sad because of violence is a Hindu." He may or may not have faith in God, may or may not pray to Allah but who is non-violent in real sense of the word Hindu. He may not then belong to any cult.

Now we should find out the meaning of Dharma. A cow will even die of hunger bit will not eat meat. A tiger will prefer to die of hunger but will not consume grass. The Dharma of a cow is to eat grass and that of a tiger to eat his kill. This is the meaning of Dharma. "Dharyati iti dharma", the nature borne by oneself is his Dharma. Dharma does not mean religion. Dharma does not mean Hindu, Muslim or Christian. Dharma of a teacher is to teach, that of a student is to learn. Dharma of a road is to give way to pedestrian and vehicles' traffic. These days people build temple, Mosque or chapel on roads. That is not fair. Human Dharma is to love and oblige. There is no other Dharma better than these. Thus we see that Hinduism is not a religion. It is not a cult, but it is a way of living, one which climbs on the top of Himalayas and declares "Live and let live", You can not create so you have to right to kill.

A few thousand years ago this Hindu tradition was the only one teaching formless God, Love and piety. Tolerance was and still main declaration. Worship of idols started after Gautam Buddha.

The word Krishna changes to Keshto in Bengal and to Karsan in Gujrat. Similarly it changed to Krist-Christ in Europe. Neeti changed to Nity. And so the yogi who taught Krishnaneeti there, became Christ. And Krishnaneeti became Christianity just by a different way of pronunciation.

Then is the same vaidic tradition one more yogi took birth. He was a shepherd doing meditation under a tree. Gibral (Gibrial) appeared before him. This gibrial is mentioned in Vedas also. He used to sing hymns during meditation and someone used to write those. The collection of these hymns is called Kuraan. And its prophet is known as Mohammad Paigambar. This happened 1400 years ago. As it was mentioned earlier Vaidic Tradition is a crore years old. Vedas were already written. At that time there was only one language 'Sanskrit'. The stories told by Christ have their origin in the epic 'Mahabharata';2000 years old. And those 1400 years old stories told by Mohammad Paigambar also have their origin in the same one and only 'Vaidic tradition'. Even the words 'Kuraan', 'Musalmaan' and Allah are from original single language Sanskrit. One by one we will see that, Kuru means to do and aan means to get, the highest yogi stage. Kuru + aan = Kuraan. Slaam is a Sanskrit word which means peace. Aa means of a great quality. This Aa changed to Ee. As 'Aadtyawaar' became 'Eitwaar', Abraham became Ibrahim, etc. Thus Islaam means who lives in a high quality peace. One who is not in Islam is 'Kaafir', kill him. It means that kill the person who is not peaceful. But because of ignorance, the meaning of kaafir is perverted. Simple, innocent people are killed just because they are idol worshippers. Human mind is created in such a way that he can not worship formless God, he needs some or the other form. If not an idol it becomes a Mosque. Then to insist on mosque is in opposition of formless worship. Islam agreed with the formless worship of Vaidic tradition, but did not accept tolerance. And so they started violence. Hindu view of life accepted formless as well as idol worship with tolerance and so did not resort to violence. Next is the word Musalmaan. Meaning: Mu means no/not, Sa means to move, Al means God, Iman means faith. In trying conditions also, whose implicit faith in God is not shattered, is Muslalmaan. Today's Muslims must understand the real meaning of Islam and Musalmaan and practice it, otherwise this world will trade on way of violence and will be destroyed. Allah is also a Sanskrit word: Amm -> Amma, Akk -> Akka, All -> Alla and Ha means the greatest. Amma and Akka mean mother. Thus the word Allah means the greatest mother. Jagat janani. They take the name Allah, recite it and torture the mother (woman), this is ignorance and this is irony.

In the original Vaidic tradition many Saints, yogi, Paigambar (Pag means foot, amber means the one whose foot is in the sky.) described by Hinduism but they never did idol worship or of any book. It is a pity that later on they started worshipping of either saint or a book. Sam means similar, pradaay means to give. So the word Sampradaay or cult means have faith in only one saint or Yogi, a bible or a kuraan. And so the Muslim cult started. And they lost faith in unity of all and they turned communal. Hinduism is not a cult. It is a system of living. It has accepted all under its wings; including monistic and agonist, worshipper of formless as well as of idol. It is a scientific fact that our body (our teeth and intestines) are not suitable for non-vegetarian food. So Hindus don't eat it. It is cause of many diseases as well. Islam also mentions non-violence. Kuraan says "Don't move on earth quarrelling others." As Arabia didn't have water, no agriculture, they were forced to eat meat. Because of shortage of water they used to do vaju (washing hands and feet from one pot), taking bath only once a week. This was not religion; it was only an adjustment according to the circumstances. As days were hot and nights were cool, they used to worship setting sun and love moon and stars. This is not a religion, not even a way of living. It was just an adjustment.

Now is the time to understand the meaning of Hindu, Muslim, Sikh and Christian as one and to behave accordingly. To become a real Hindu is to be a real non-violence follower. Now is the time to live in peace; to be a real Muslim is to have faith in God. To be a real Jaini means Gnyani (In Sanskrit 'Dnya' is called 'Jya'). To a real Baudh means Buddhiwan (intelligent) To be a real Sikh means to become a real disciple of Guru. To become real Christian means to follow Krishnaneeti.

Only by colouring our clothes, our outer appearance, saffron, green or red will be of no use. Let us colour our inside with the colour of love and charity. Then only we will be called real religious.

Om sahana vavatu, sahananu bhunaktu
Sahaveeryam karavav hai, Tejaswimam vadhit mastu
Mam vid vishar hai, om shanty shanti shanty.

(Lets all join together in becoming bright, and not in envying others)

Tuesday, February 15, 2005

Breakfast at Tiffany's?

I really like this song having some plain simple lyrics:


you say that we've got nothing in common
No common ground to start from
And we're falling apart
You'll say the world has come between us
Our lives have come between us
But I know you just dont care


And I said "What about Breakfast at Tiffany's?"
She said, "I think I remember the film,
And as I recall, I think we both kinda liked it."
And I said, "Well, thats the one thing we've got."


I see you - the only one who knew me,
And now your eyes see through me
I guess I was wrong
So what now? It's plain to see we're over,
And I hate when things are over -
When so much is left undone.

-- Deep Blue Something

Wednesday, February 09, 2005

Calvin and Hobbes are the Best

yesterday i was browsing thru the net looking for some comics and incidently found a web page dedicated to calvin and hobbes. It had 25 best calvin strips of author's choice.
I got introduced to calvin when one of my colleague forwarded me a mail having some of his comic strips... they were mind boggling, really amazing. After that i became an avid fan of calvin...looking out for whatever i could get of him. The creator Mr walterson has trapped the mind of a very clever boy who loves his toy tiger (hobbes) very much and has his own way of looking at the world as any other child .... im sure we in our childhood did some of these ..

just have a look at the strips and u'll get to know who/how calvin is..

http://www.progressiveboink.com/archive/calvinhobbes.htm

Monday, January 17, 2005

Room Service

Recently purchased "Room Service - Bryan Adams". Has superb collection of songs, especially Flying, Nowhere Fast and Open Road are my favs. Bryan Adams as usual is at its best when it comes to lyrics.
As a bonus, a DVD of his Japan tour is free with pack and has four song videos from live concert there.

For more reviews:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0002ZMIE4/104-2321175-3887166?v=glance

Tuesday, December 21, 2004

simpest way to create jar files

This ia the simpest way to create jar files....

How to create a jar file - by Tanul Karkare:

create a file MANIFEST.MF having 2 lines:
Manifest-Version: 1.0
Main-Class: path of ur main class file..

create a folder META-INF in ur application dir.
put this MANIFEST.MF into that.

execute the command:
jar cvfm xyz.jar META-INF/MANIFEST.MF *.class

to create an executable jar file.

just that's it.


-----------


Take an example:
create a folder test(any name will do)
create a file TestJar.java in that:

import javax.swing.*;

class TestJar extends JFrame
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{
TestJar tj = new TestJar();
tj.setSize(200, 200);
tj.setVisible(true);
tj.show();
}
}

compile this file , test with java command.
it should show a window.

create a manifest file as above inside meta-inf folder (which is inside test folder) with content:-

Manifest-Version: 1.0
Created-By: Tanul
Main-Class: TestJar


execute the command inside test folder:(test.jar can be any name)
jar cvfm test.jar META-INF/MANIFEST.MF *.class

ur executable jar is ready.
double click on it and it will show u a window.

u can give this to anybody without letting him have ur source files.

Professional League

I think this is one news that may help Indian Hockey achieve its earlier status.... I hope it does that !!!

The Indian Hockey Federation (IHF) will launch a professional domestic league in January involving foreign players to help the country regain its past glory in the game.
India have not won a major title since claiming the last of their eight men's Olympic gold medals at Moscow in 1980. The team finished seventh at the Athens Games in August.
Each of the five top tier teams - the league will be played in two levels - will include five foreign players each with both domestic and foreign players signing up financial contracts, IHF president KPS Gill told reporters on Wednesday.
"The premier hockey league is the beginning of a landmark journey of re-capturing the glory of hockey and rebuilding India's supremacy in the game internationally," Gill said.
"The rebuilding has to start at ground level by giving a platform to our players to hone their talent by playing in an active league," he said.
The league, offering a total prize money of around Rs seven million ($155,380), will be played over five weeks from January 13 in the southern city of Hyderabad.
Many top Asian players now figure in European leagues and the IHF will schedule the league during winter to attract the best talent from Europe as well as major continental sides like South Korea and Pakistan.
Global sports channel ESPN have said they will broadcast the games live for 10 years to help bring in sponsorship which is almost entirely focussed on cricket in India.
The games would be played NBA-style, over four quarters in an effort to package the league better. Hockey matches are normally played over 70 minutes in two sessions.

Thursday, November 18, 2004

Bryan Adams : Career in brief

Im a great fan of bryan adams.. anyone who listens him becomes his fan.. that's the magic of his voice...
enjoy,

Bryan Adams: Career in brief

Bryan Adams' solo career was launched with the release of his self-titled debut album Bryan Adams in February of 1980 on A&M Records.
His second album, You Want It, You Got It, which was recorded in NYC in two weeks and released in the spring of 1981.
His third album, Cuts Like a Knife was released in January of 1983, with the single "Straight from the Heart", leading the way.
Adams' fourth album Reckless was released on his 25th birthday, November 5, 1984, and was preceded by the single "Run to You", which reached the Top Ten. Reckless reached No. 1 in the U.S. selling five million copies in America and a reported three million more in the rest of the world.
Into the Fire, followed in March of 1987, prefaced by the single "Heat of the Night," which became Adams' fifth Top Ten hit in the U.S.
Live! Live! Live! a concert album drawn from the 1988 Belgium show, was initially released only in Japan but later garnered a wider audience.
In June of 1991, Adams went back on the road in Europe co-headlining with ZZ Top. This coincided with the release of the single "(Everything I Do) I Do It for You" which topped the U.S. charts for seven weeks - the longest any song had remained at No. 1 in eight years. Its international success was even greater; spending 16 weeks at No. 1 in the U.K., making it the longest-running chart-topper in the history of the British charts.
Waking Up the Neighbours was released in September of 1991, and Adams once again hit the road - this time until July of 1993.
Adams began to look forward to his next studio album, but in the interim released a hits compilation, So Far So Good, in November 1993 featuring the single "Please Forgive Me," a new Adams/Lange track. The song would also find its way into the Top Ten. Then came the Adams' theme song for the movie The Three Musketeers, "All for Love", recorded with Rod Stewart and Sting, which hit No. 1 in the U.S. in January of 1994.
At the beginning of 1996 Adams released a new album 18 'Til I Die. The album featured the flamenco-tinged "Have You Ever Really Loved a Woman?" from the Johnny Depp/Marlon Brando film Don Juan DeMarco
Adams filmed an appearance for MTV's popular Unplugged series in the fall of 1997, and it was released as an album in December.
It was a modest success, and served as a stopgap until the appearance of his next studio album, On a Day Like Today, which was released in October 1998
In November 1999, Adams issued a second hits compilation, The Best of Me, but the American branch of A&M/Interscope declined to release it.
Adams returned in the spring of 2002 collaborating with Hans Zimmer on his first full-length song score for a film, the animated DreamWorks feature Spirit: Stallion of the Cimarron.
His most recent work is entitled Room Service, which was released in September of 2004 where it debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard European Top 100 albums Chart.

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