Sunday, September 5, 2021

Out of the WhatsApp, video-calling world


Out of the WhatsApp, video-calling world

Parth.Shastri@timesgroup.com

05.09.2021 

The time-table of Nathabhai Chavda, a school teacher from Bhavnagar district, is a bit different. Instead of classes, the timings show the ‘sheri’ (bylane) he will be conducting classes at. Chavda starts off from the lanes of Sipaiwada at Hathiyadhar village near Palitana and proceeds to nearby areas.

“I have about 45 students to teach. While colleagues elsewhere conducted classes through WhatsApp calls, my students didn’t have the facility – their fathers have just one phone and would take it to work. They also did not have TVs. Thus, I started conducting classes at their doorstep,” says Chavda, a teacher at Jhaverchand Meghani Primary School. “We also installed a few TVs in houses so students can catch classes through DD Girnar.” While many teachers toyed virtual classrooms, for many in the state, that was not possible due to the lack of phones or TVs. Thus, these teachers went the conventional way to take education to their students.

The In-Shodh platform of the Ravi J Matthai Centre for Educational Innovation (RJMC) at IIM Ahmedabad (IIM-A) documented several such practices over the past 18 months. In all, the online platform has 800-odd innovations, which are accessed by teachers from Gujarat and beyond.

Another innovation documented is by Gaurav Joshi, a teacher from Pahadbhai ni Muvadi primary school in Gandhinagar district. When Joshi goes to the village to teach, he carries a load worthy of a small carrier. The students get a mini library, a space to conduct science and mathematics experiments, and a ‘performance space’ for kids to sing and dance.

“We call it ‘Bal Melo’ or Children’s Fair, so students are attracted to the space and learn while having fun,” said Joshi.

You may take drones on domestic flights soon


You may take drones on domestic flights soon

Govt Working On New Rules, Say Officials

Saurabh.Sinha@timesgroup.com

New Delhi:05.09.2021

You may soon be able to take your small drones with you on domestic holidays by air and post envyinducing pictures of chilling out on beaches or hills. After relaxing rules for drone usage, the government is working out ways to ensure that people can take drones with them on domestic flights for recreational purposes.

“Drones can’t be taken on (domestic) flights as of now, but we have to find a way to let people carry it for vacations for use at their destination. Whether they can be taken in handbags or check-in (luggage) and how, these things are being worked out,” said top aviation officials. For international travellers, regulations on carriage of drones at destination countries will have to be complied with.

This clarity of rules is needed to ensure people can at least take nano drones (weighing up to 250 grams), that now come with great cameras, on vacation when flying within the country. A new set of relaxed drone rules were enforced late last month, by junking stringent regulations put in place this March. The carriage of drones by air travellers passengers still remains a grey area that needs to be cleared.

People operating nano and micro (weighing between 251 grams and 2kg) drones for non-commercial or personal uses do not require a remote pilot licence.

The government is working out an airspace map for unmanned aircraft system operations that will have three colour zones. This map is expected to be on Digital Sky drone platform by the month-end. That will clearly show where a drone can be operated or not. Red, like areas in vicinity of airports, will be “no go” areas. In yellow zones, air traffic control clearance will be required.

Education amid Covid-19: Road to recovery


Education amid Covid-19: Road to recovery

The traditional education system will get back on track post mass vaccinations. With the schools reopening for the higher classes in Tamil Nadu, we look at the challenges and examine the benefits of reopening schools

Respedit.Chennai@timesgroup.com

05.09.2021

Science has proved, yet another time that effective research, precaution and execution can prevent the spread of virus. This also allows normalcy to slowly resume, bringing back all sectors, including education, back on track.

As schools reopen after the vaccination drive, they must balance the educational, social and emotional needs of their students, as well as ensure the health and safety of students and staff. “The world that lies ahead of us may look different from the one we’re leaving behind. Slowly, and as the vaccine drive gains momentum, schools are beginning to get back to normal, with students getting back to the classroom, of course, with stringent protocols to ensure the safety of all. Teaching methodologies have changed, and while teachers and students have welcomed digital teaching, it will now be coupled with in-classroom activities and field visits too, ensuring the overall development and learning of a child. This is a welcome move, and the vaccine only ensures extra safety. The new model of learning focussed on classroom as well as digital learning is known as hybrid schooling and is the new normal teaching pedagogy not only in India, but across the globe,” says Siddhi Sankhla, a school principal.

The closure of schools had impacted the daily lives of students. The change was sudden, unexpected and there was no substitute system in place. While the collective efforts of parents, students and teachers did pay off, children do need to interact in person to develop and learn better.

One major benefit that students gain from the opening of schools is equal access to education for all. “In keeping with India’s vast student population, it was discouraging to see only a minority of students from privileged backgrounds access online classes. Students from tier-II and tier-III cities, as well as remote districts of India had little access, either due to the lack of gadgets, internet services or their inability to use them. This led to only a fraction of students receiving online education. Multiple surveys have shared data proving that most students have missed their virtual exams, and have wasted a year in the process. Hence, the move to reopen schools is encouraging for more than one reason,” says Kiran Bhatia, a school teacher and parent of an eight-year-old. “Meanwhile, schools should follow the government’s SOP guidelines and ensure a classroom size of not more than 50 per cent until the virus is eradicated. Classroom teaching, coupled with a vaccine jab and necessary precaution, will bring back normalcy to India’s disturbed education system,” concludes Kiran.

Don’t waste time dwelling on past events: Stalin to his MLAs

Intervenes As MLA Recalls ‘Humiliation’ Of Party Over 10yrs

Julie.Mariappan@timesgroup.com

Chennai:05.09.2021

Chief minister M K Stalin on Saturday sought to send a strong message to his legislators to stop recalling past events in the assembly as it amounted to wasting the time of the House.

More than once in recent days, he had also asked his MLAs not to indulge in sycophancy by showering compliments on him. On Saturday, participating in the debate on demand for grants for various departments, DMK (Kumbakonam) MLA G Anbalagan said his party had suffered humiliation in the assembly in the past one decade, with many AIADMK leaders making acerbic remarks against the DMK and its leadership. “A leader made an outrageous statement that there were no rivals for her to see in the assembly. Another leader said Stalin can never win and never become chief minister. Those faces are not to be found in the House. But others have come,” said Anbalagan pointing to Royapuram MLA Idream R Murthy, seated near him. Murthy, who defeated former AIADMK minister D Jayakumar, rose from his seat with folded hands, evoking laughter among the ruling party MLAs.

Stalin intervened at this stage to say the member had been given only 15 minutes by the speaker and hence, he should confine himself to the issues relating to the demand for grants for the department and should not waste time speaking about “unnecessary” things. Leader of the opposition, Edappadi K Palaniswami said the DMK MLA should also talk about the vote on the motion of confidence in 2017 (when the DMK legislators created ruckus). Responding to this, the chief minister said, “I have told my MLA to limit himself to relevant issues to avoid wastage of time. If the Leader of the opposition is ready for a discussion (on the trust vote), then the DMK is also ready.” Palaniswami said the DMK MLA was making unnecessary remarks in the House.

Anbalagan went on to say the DMK was not against any religion and the party remained a fortress for spiritual people. It was portrayed as an anti-Hindu party way back in 1967 elections and in 2021, but people reposed confidence in the Dravidian party. Former CM C N Annadurai deputed his PWD minister M Karunanidhi to oversee the arrangements of mahamagam festival in Kumbakonam, he said. “In 11 seats, known for their spiritual significance, including Kancheepuram, Tiruvannamalai and Mylapore, the DMK won in the last election,” he said.

Later, DMK (Tirupattur) MLA A Nallathambi said rivals (the BJP) took out Vel Yatra to defeat Dravidam and the DMK, but it was Karunanidhi who took out a yatra for tracing the missing diamond spear of Lord Muruga in Tiruchendur.

TN Covid-19 cases rise slightly for 3rd day in row


TN Covid-19 cases rise slightly for 3rd day in row

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai: 05.09.2021

Fresh cases of Covid-19 went up marginallyvfor the third consecutive day to 1,575 new cases on Saturday from 1,509 on Wednesday. At least 23 districts including Tiruvallur, Chengalpet, Sivaganga, Virudhunagar and Karur reported an increase in new cases in the past 24 hours.

Meanwhile, the 20 deaths took the toll to 35,000 and the state reported a cumulative case tally of 26.2 lakh. At the end of the day, after discharging 1,610 patients there were 16,315 people still undergoing treatment for the viral infection.

On Saturday, with 244 new cases, Coimbatore reported the highest number and was also the only district to report more than 200 new cases. The western district reported 239 cases on Friday and 215 cases on Thursday. The number of cases in Chennai increased to 167 from 162 on Friday. Besides Coimbatore and Chennai, the Erode (109) was the only district to report new cases in three digits.

The sharpest increase in new cases between Friday and Saturday came from Chennai’s neighbours Tiruvallur and Chengalpet. Cases in Tiruvallur increased to 79 from 65 on Friday while Chengalpet reported 99 compared to 88 on Friday. Districts such as Sivaganga, Virudhunagar, Karur and Tiruvallur reported six to nine cases more than their Friday tally.

However, 20 districts in the state reported less than 25 cases. Five districts – Thoothukudi (9), Theni (8), Perambalur (5), Ramanathapuram (4), Thirupathur (4) and Tenkasi

(3) — reported cases in single digits.

Of the 20 deaths reported on Saturday, four were in Coimbatore, three each in Chennai and Trichy and two each in Erode, Salem and Tiruvallur. While four districts (Chengalpet, Mayiladuthurai, Pudukottai and Ariyalur) reported one death each, 28 districts reported zero deaths.

The state vaccinated 6.2 lakh people on Saturday compared to 5.5 lakh on Friday and 5.4 lakh on Thursday, taking the dosage tally in the state centres to 3.2 crore. The average number of vaccinations in a day in the first four days of September is 5.6 lakh a day. In August it was around 2.9 lakh. Meanwhile, 22 lakh doses were given in private hospitals since May 1.

Pondy cases inch up to 900

The active Covid-19 cases crossed the 900-mark on Saturday in the Union territory of Puducherry. The territory reported 120 fresh cases even as 76 patients recovered in the past 24 hours ending at 10am on Saturday taking the active cases to 937. Of them, 765 cases are under home isolation and treatment.

Puducherry headquarters reported the maximum fresh cases with 70 followed by Mahe (25), Karaikal (17) and Yanam (8). Puducherry headquarters has the maximum active cases with 579 followed by Karaikal (201), Mahe (130) and Yanam (27). TNN

ALANDUR IS CITY’S ARAKKONAM


ALANDUR IS CITY’S ARAKKONAM

Madras By The Metro Is A Metaphor For What Chennai Is, An Intriguing Mix Of The Old And The New. We Hop On The City’s Newest Mode Of Transport And Hop Off At A Few Stations Along The Way To Wander Through Streets That Tell Us Stories Of What Went Before And How Life Goes On

Kamini.Mathai@timesgroup.com

05.09.2021

All roads may lead to Rome, but as far as the Chennai metro goes, all rails lead to Alandur. At a little over 35 metres, the elevated Arignar Anna Alandur Metro, the “interchange station” between the two metro lines in the city — the Blue Wimco Nagar-Airport line and the Green Chennai Central-St Thomas Mount — isn’t just the city’s first multi-level railway station, and its tallest, but is also the only station where passengers from the two corridors can swap routes.

You could say it’s the metro counterpart of Southern Railway’s Arakkonam junction, one of the oldest junctions in the country that links major cities. And like Arakkonam, which for most travellers is more a transit point than a destination, Alandur too gets missed in the dash of the daily commute.

Alandur was the chosen one, explains R Ramanathan, former director (projects), Chennai Metro Rail. How could it not be, when the nodal hub connects to north Madras, south Madras, GST Road, Koyambedu, and the airport. It also had enough space to spare, both horizontally and vertically.

But is there more to Alandur?

Just by looking out that metro train window, we can tell you there is. A battleground, for starters. We don’t just mean the constituency, from where M G Ramachandran made his electoral debut in 1967 (although it was called Parangimalai then), but an actual battlefield. History buffs, while on the metro, one of the spots you’re likely to pass near Alandur junction is the OTA golf course, which was once the spot where a battle unfolded in 1759. It was here that the French under Thomas Arthur, Count of Lally, lost to British troops commanded by Major-General Stringer Lawrence.

The battlefield now doubles up as a golf course as well as a tactical training field for budding army officers. It’s pretty much off-limits in terms of walking in, but hey, you can catch a glimpse on the metro, and that’s free.

Architect and artist Srishti Prabakar, who has done sketch walks in Alandur, calls the area a juxtaposition of worlds past and present. “On the one hand, you have the old world chaos of the market, the bustle of people bargaining over their fish, haggling over why their pomfret looked fleshier the previous week. On the other, you have the swanky metro, and then you notice all of it set against the backdrop of the majestic St Thomas Mount. It’s a junction of not just the metros but of the city’s culture and history.”

Every time the sketch-walk group ambles up to Alandur, says Srishti, they end up spending most of their time soaking in the marvel of the metro station. “Being so elevated it’s beautiful to see the train almost emerging out of thin air, hills, and trees in the background.”

Now, if you’re game for a wander, a little away from the metro station is the St Thomas Garrison Church, incidentally No.1 GST Road. Constructed for less than ₹50,000, the church was opened in 1830. The church with its bomb-proof roof is now a heritage monument under the Archaeological Survey of India.

This was also the spot that Lieutenant-Colonel William Lambton, British soldier and surveyor, began his Great Trigonometrical Survey of India in 1802, a study that ended near Everest.

Well, who would have thought… even the Everest tracks to Alandur!

The Teacher Who Inspired Me


The Teacher Who Inspired Me

This Teachers’ Day, Sunday Times shines a light on educationists who inspired some of the leading lights of our generation

Learning the value of common salt, and excellence

NR Narayana Murthy,

Founder, Infosys

My belief is that a nation is only as good as its culture. Its achievements in every field — science, arts, sports, economy and education — are dependent on the kind of culture its citizens have embraced. There are several factors that influence the formation of a desirable culture — societal leaders, family, teachers, bosses, co-workers and friends. Family elders and early teachers play a crucial role in forming the culture of a person. I believe that primary and secondary school teachers have the biggest influence on the impressionable minds of youngsters. My culture was very heavily influenced by my parents, a secondary school teacher, an engineering college professor, and, most importantly, my boss at the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad. I must confess that the actions of these people rather than their words were what left an indelible mark on my psyche.

Sri K V Narayan (KVN), my high school headmaster at Sharada Vilas High School, Mysore during 1959-1961, taught me the most important lesson which came in handy in founding and nurturing Infosys between 1981 and 2014. One day about sixty years ago, KVN was conducting a Chemistry experiment with common salt. KVN was extremely careful in minimising the amount of common salt he poured into the test tube. My friend, sitting next to me, burst out laughing. KVN asked my friend what made him laugh. Children are generally honest. My friend said he found it bizarre to watch KVN being so stingy with inexpensive common salt. KVN said that the common salt he used was a community property, it belonged to everybody in the school, and it was the duty of every member of the school to treat it with utmost care. KVN further offered to take my friend to KVN’s own home after the classes were over, and give my friend a jar full of common salt free since it was KVN’s personal property. By his action, KVN wrote indelibly, on a set of impressionable young minds, that a society would make progress only when its citizens treat community property more carefully than they treat their private property. The strong force for the successful Infosys journey from 1981 to 2014 was our conviction that putting the interest of Infosys in our decisions today would lead to the betterment of every Infoscion tomorrow. Alas, KVN is no more.

Dr N Krishna Murthy (NK) was my teacher at the National Institute of Engineering, Mysore, between 1962 and 1967. NK was excellence-personified in everything he did — his eloquence; his subject matter expertise; his passion to make the dullest student understand every bit of what he taught in the classroom; his beautiful handwriting on the blackboard; and how hard he prepared for his lecture. When I asked NK why he was obsessed with excellence, he said he had experienced several extraordinary teachers in the US when he was a doctoral student, and that he wanted to be the best teacher in the entire world and not just in India. The initial seeds of the quest for global excellence of Infosys were sown in me by him. My respects to him.

Prof. Krishnayya (JGK), my boss and a professor at the Indian Institute of Management-Ahmedabad (IIMA), imparted several lessons on leadership to me. The most important lesson JGK taught me was the importance of starting every transaction on a zero base. One morning in 1970, he and I had a strong and angry disagreement on an issue. That evening, at 5 pm, he came to my room in a happy mood and invited me for a dinner. His demeanor was as if nothing had happened in the morning. I was flabbergasted. I asked him sheepishly whether he was not angry with me. He said he had forgotten that incident. He explained why it was important to start every transaction on a zero base and not carry the hysteresis of prior transactions to the current transaction. His advice to me was to live and learn. “Live and learn” is how I have tried my best to live life since then. I have committed many mistakes, introspected on them, learnt lessons, and tried my best not to repeat the same mistakes. JGK also taught me to use data and facts, and not opinions and biases, to decide each transaction; to hire juniors smarter than myself; and to create a hierarchy of ideas rather than a hierarchy of age and seniority in every discussion. JGK did not hector me about these lessons but etched them on my mind by his quiet actions. A Princeton professor, on a visit to Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur, weaned me away from Control Theory to Computer Science. But, it was IIMA that added most to my development as a human being and as a professional. I thank teachers like JGK and Mohan Kaul, and colleagues like Subhash Bhatnagar, Late Rama Rao and Sharad Sharma for my development.

I have been lucky to know several respected leaders in many fields from all over the world. Many of these leaders have told me how their character was influenced by the actions of their teachers. No wonder, the 4,000-year-old Indian culture has immortalised the importance of teachers by the saying, ‘Acharya Devo Bhava’.

A heart surgeon should behave like a thief: Lesson from Mr Yates

Dr Devi Shetty, Chairman and Founder, Narayana Health

I owe my career to many teachers, but there is one person who made a huge difference in my life: my former boss Allen Yates, director of cardiac surgery at Guy’s Hospital, London, who trained me in 1980s, and under whom I worked as a registrar in cardio thoracic surgery.

When we do heart surgeries, it takes a minimum three hours, wherein, he would keep on talking about life. He once told me this as an important lesson for a heart surgeon: “When you open somebody’s chest, you should behave like a thief entering a house.” As I looked puzzled, he said, “The thief keeps the back door open, so that he can run away without getting caught, in case anyone finds him.”

Similarly in heart surgeries, the lesson is that one should keep the back door open. It’s better not to do the procedure and close the chest if the surgeon finds that the problem hasn’t been addressed, so that somebody more experienced can do the best thing for the patient. I am grateful to him for such insights.

When I told him that I was going back to India, he was disappointed. But he made it possible for me to get what I wanted in India. During my recruitment to a new Indian hospital, the owner of the hospital found me too young for heart surgery so Mr Yates even arranged for the owner to watch me doing a surgery at Guy’s Hospital. When I got an offer to head the cardiac unit in a Kolkata hospital, he even trained the entire operating staff for two months in Guy’s Hospital, London so that I could continue to work with the same team in India. He even sent five British nurses to manage the entire hospital for two years in Kolkata which made a huge difference.

When a prank gets thanks

Sadhguru, Founder, Isha Foundation

My most memorable teacher has been Miss Saraswati from Demonstration Multipurpose School in Mysore. I remember how I once pranked her. We were the first class that she handled and, being a new teacher, I am sure she was nervous. We wanted to do something to disrupt her life. She was talking to the class, facing the other side and leaning on my table. I felt inspired. I opened my pen and let out the ink on her starched white cotton saree, which very readily absorbed all of it. Of course, she did not notice. Probably someone in the staff room would have told her. After lunch hour, I was asked to come to the staff room. I went there, and she asked me for my pen. I gave it to her, thinking she was going to confiscate my empty pen as proof. She took out an ink bottle, filled my pen and gave it back to me. I said, ‘Thank you, ma’am,’ and went back to class. That one thing made me never forget that one teacher. There are many moments in school. Children should relish and enjoy all that because they don’t come back later.

Lillee: Legend with some life-changing advice

Javagal Srinath, Former cricketer

Since I was pursuing an engineering degree and cricket, there were many people who were instrumental in shaping my career and inspiring me. My club — Mysore Gymkhana had a huge impact on my life. My club secretary CS Subramanium was my real mentor. I could go to him for anything.

Australian legend Dennis Lillee was another great teacher. In the 1991-92 season, on my return from Australia, I took an eight-month break to go back to college. On my return, I played a domestic tournament. In a match, I went for 70 runs in 10 overs. It was a huge shock for me. After that, I went to the MRF Pace Foundation in Chennai to sort myself out. I couldn’t pitch in the right areas and the ball was all over the place. People started doubting my ability and even said the sting in my bowling was gone. Lillee said, ‘You bowl I’m watching you.’ After a few balls he told me, ‘You haven’t bowled for over six months and without practice for so long, nobody in this world can put the ball in the right areas.’ To grow, you need that kind of advice, and the mind to accept it.

Mother as well as chess guru

Viswanathan Anand, Five-time world chess champion

My first teacher (my mother) was also the one who had the greatest influence on me. She was the one who taught me the game and made sure I went to a chess club. The simple rules she told me at the beginning are still very important. One was to go and play as often as possible. That advice is golden and is still true till this day. The more you play, the more you practice and the better you get. The second was that she encouraged me to learn from my mistakes. The way she put it was: after a game write down your thoughts quickly and do this in a disciplined way. This is incredibly useful if you want to analyse and see where you can improve. It is difficult to separate out what my mother inspired me as a teacher and as a mother, but these are things I remember the most and I still think it’s the best advice I got.

Importance of admitting your mistakes

Soumya Swaminathan,

Chief Scientist, WHO

One of the lessons I learnt from my class teacher when I was in Class 11 was the importance of being truthful to yourself and to others. She taught us to believe in what we said, and to admit when we go wrong in our judgement. She told us to take the responsibility and have the willingness to correct our views if there was new evidence, data or if some confronted us with facts. She taught us to be humble enough to accept mistakes and graciously accept the right view. This is a life lesson I learnt from my teacher Rosline Wilson when I was in Springdales School in Delhi.

Sparking curiosity in learning

Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw,

Founder, Biocon

I consider myself lucky to have had Neville Gower as one of my lecturers at the Ballarat College of Advanced Education in Melbourne, Australia, from where I graduated as a Master Brewer in 1975. Mr Gower, who taught us brewing fermentation and bio-engineering, once said: “Science is about curiosity-driven learning, and unless you are curious, you will never find science exciting.”

Those words are etched in my mind even today and have been formative in guiding me through every step of my entrepreneurial journey and moulding me as an independent thinker both personally and professionally. His words are behind my firm belief that India needs an education system that facilitates curiosity-driven education, where students are encouraged to explore and experiment, to think differently, to develop their own perspective and personality. This Teacher’s Day, I hope curiositybased learning will drive the pedagogy in our schools.

The four teachers who spotted something that others didn’t

Amit Chaudhuri, Author

There are four teachers who have inspired me through different stages of my life as a student. First, Mr Elisha, my history teacher at Cathedral School (Mumbai) who also taught me English. I wasn’t a very serious student and disliked school intensely but Mr Elisha — an erudite and elegant man from Kerala with a wonderful sense of irony — was very kind towards me and my writing. Not in a charitable sense but in terms of affection and respect, something one doesn’t usually feel from teachers who either patronise or reward you. In the school leaving character certificate that teachers mandatorily write for students, Mr Elisha wrote a little essay about what he thought of me. He was the only person in school who found something valuable in the person I was and that makes me think of him with affection and gratitude.

Next is Dan Jacobson, South African novelist at University College, London who became my tutor in my final year there. I was leading a life of utter eccentricity, never attending classes but he was extremely kind about me and my writing abilities. Two weeks before I graduated, I found out that he had been passing my essays to Karl Miller, head of the department and editor of the London Review of Books. In a life of complete loneliness and not having any plans, this was extraordinary generosity.

Pt Govind Prasad Jaipurwale was a teacher from whom I received the idea of subtlety of style and taiyyari in Hindustani classical music and his brother-in-law Hazarilalji became a midwife in my process of learning the complexities. He even sat for hours to tape thekas for me on a cassette for my practice on the eve of my departure to England. What was important in the gestures of all four was their ability to spot certain qualities not visible to others but could mean a lot to the student.

Shaped by the screen

Manish Malhotra, Fashion designer

Growing up, my most prominent teacher has been the movies. Films have been my primary inspiration; between the age of 5-15, I made it a point to watch every single movie released in the theatres of Bandra, and multiple times if I liked them. From the colours, clothes, makeup, music to the story, everything about it amazed me. Eventually, I picked up a new perspective every time I exited a cinema hall, thereby unknowingly honing my skills in fashion. Add to it my love for painting and modelling in my college days that helped me evolve in the practical world and enter the industry, where I continue to share the same love and passion for the films and my craft where I learn something new everyday.


FROM THE ALBUM: Murthy mounting a magnetic tape at the IIMA computer center in 1970







கார்த்திகையில் அணைந்த தீபம்!

கார்த்திகையில் அணைந்த தீபம்!  பிறருக்கு சிறு நஷ்டம்கூட ஏற்படக் கூடாது என்று மின் விளக்கை அணைக்கச் சொன்ன பெரியவரின் புதல்வர் சரவணன் என்கிற வி...