Thursday, June 10, 2021

Google Maps and Bing Maps

Google Maps and Bing Maps


You may search for nearby vendors for things / services to buy using maps. For instance if you want to hire housemaids, Ayahs, semi qualified nurses, bedside assistants and the like you get info about hiring agencies while searching maps. Both Bing and Google are good at trapping neighbourhood service providers.


When you see the list of vendors you may like to print out a list with or without locations in the map. Bing gives an option to print only the text (no map) but Google always insists on printing with map included. By 'printing' you may  save the results as a pdf, not necessarily output on paper in a printer. 

Once you have chosen a vendor you can find out the path to reach him from your house, using various means like walking, biking, cab / car, public bus etc - knowing approx time it may take.

In fact I have walked my way to meeting locations using the map on my mobile as a guide, during pre-covid days. How many of you are comfortable using maps?

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TO CC BCC - What is your Choice?

 TO CC BCC - What is your Choice?


When you send an email to many people and many groups, where do you mention all the recipients? You have a choice of putting them in TO, CC, BCC fields. 

You may put all email Ids in the TO field. When the receiver replies' all', then all your friends get the reply. This may not be desirable. You are also exposing all your friends to spammers. Some recipient may, without thinking,  reply all - this may include a group to which he is not a subscriber - then the message will bounce.

If you put some in bcc, those mentioned in TO or CC fields won't know others who are included. There is a possibility of the message being forwarded again, due to this ignorance.
If a person in BCC replies to all, then the secrecy is gone.

I have been experimenting with different options but have not come to any conclusions.

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Showering of seeds and fruits

Showering of seeds and fruits


We have trees like Neem, Coconut, Ashoka and Mango. When fruits ripen they fall down. It is fun to watch the rain / shower of fruits during winds / rains. Coconut trees let go ripened fruits with a great thud. This happens mostly at night. Next morning we search and take the fallen ones. My neighbor's son is mighty afraid of coming near the tree lest a coconut falls on his head. I read that chances of a coconut falling on your head are almost nil - 1 in 270,000,000 !

Neem tree flushes out lots of flowers, raw and ripened fruits at the slightest disturbance. They are so plentiful that once my terrace was paved with a green carpet, soft and smooth.  With Ashoka, (we have two of these) it is really raining flowers and fruits. 

Let me come to Mango, my favorite. This season we have been more than blessed. Everyday, just the fallen ones' count averages to 15. Unfortunately nearly half of them break when reaching the ground. They fall on the terrace, sunshades, plastic roof over water tank, on to metal drainage cover and of course on plain earth. The sound they produce on hitting the floor is different each time and varies with the time - day or night. During the night, I keep waking up due to this fruit-falling phenomenon, keeping a mental count as to how many I should expect to collect the next morning. The actual will be more than my count, of course.

After such a bountiful collection, disposal is a problem. We give them away to friends. We have covered every household nearby, every person we can think of, in this task. Raddhi fellow, paper boy, milk supplier, servants around - no one is spared. And they thank us for thinking of them. Still our kitchen table / dining hall smells like a fruit shop for most of the time. That's why we should remove the rotten ones quickly.

What is your experience of fruit falling? Pleasant or fearsome? WHY?

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Sunday, June 6, 2021

How did I pursue my MLibSc?

How did I pursue my MLibSc?


One day in early 1984, one young librarian from APSRTC Library called Ramachandran, came to my house for a chat. He inquired about myself, my qualifications etc. When he knew I was ‘only’ a BLibSc, he was shocked. He said that Prof Tikekar, Librarian, Bombay University is in the city, he is going back to Bombay today by flight and if I meet him, he may help get a seat in MLibSc in Bombay University. He urged that I should do it as it is part time – minimal attendance – and highly suited for working librarians. Quickly, I set off to meet Prof Tikekar at the Airport, which was in Begumpet those days. I caught him for hardly five minutes before he moved in for a security check but then he asked me to apply.

 Some weeks later I had to attend a personal interview in Bombay for selection for MLibSc admission. There was some problem with Railways – strike, I don’t remember – and had to go by bus. The bus reached late and I hurried into the interview hall, informed that I had arrived, I was ushered in hurriedly – it was 2:00 pm and they were closing the interview! Seeing me, Prof Tikekar said: We were wondering why you did not come! You look so tired out of Bus travel, you must be hungry too. Go and refresh yourself, we will meet at 3:00 pm. At 3:00 when I went again, they said, as if in Chorus: “If you have not come, we could have done nothing for you, glad that you could make it. Go and collect details from the office, pay the fee and join.”

 After the interview, I went to IDL guest house for an overnight stay. I had not booked my return journey – no trains, only bus again. There, I met Sri CS Hariharan, Finance Controller in IDL. When he enquired about my visit, I narrated all the story. He said: Don’t worry – you can fly back to Hyderabad.  He asked our Bombay office to book my flight ticket and reach it to me in the guest house! I was not a senior person then and the entire office was agog over special concessions shown to me!

 Then I joined the course, visited Bombay a couple of times, wrote the exam and completed the course. However, here is the equally interesting second part:

I had to do a project and submit a thesis for 400 marks. (300 for thesis and 100 for Viva). During the initial months when I submitted interim reports on my project work, the guide (the same Prof Tikekar) made a number of adverse / critical comments on my output that I was terribly put off. I even contemplated pulling out of the course. While my friend Sivaram was responsible for pushing me and coaxing me to do MLibSc, it was Thomas (now Dr Thomas) who kept nudging me to overlook Guide's comments and continue. For my project work I had done a survey of library automation activities in Hyderabad. In those days, next only to ICRISAT, IDL Library had a great reputation for using computers for library work.

IDL treated me with very special kindness. Apart from the Interview episode narrated above, I was given leave with pay for two and half months for attending contact classes in Bombay, stay & travel expenses reimbursed, all fees reimbursed etc. As I was so pampered (no one else got this privilege) failing in the exams or pulling out was next to impossible as the damage to my image would be irreparable.  I had learnt (from one lecturer called Rekha) on my first day of contact classes in Bombay that no one had passed the course in preceding several years. I took the advice of Thomas and continued. With jitters I prepared for the exams, after a gap of 19 years of leaving College!

After writing four theory papers, there were two clear days with nothing to do before Viva. I went through my dissertation completely. I had meticulously noted down all points of probable attack by the jury and how I would answer them. During the Viva Dr Prof Kamath (Ex of BARC) who was the IT expert among examiners, simplified the whole show by saying: "Your thesis might have fetched you a PhD. Unfortunately, you have submitted it for MLibSc". I was mighty happy.

A month later I got a greeting card from a fellow MLibSc student which said: "Congratulations for topping the MLibSc Class". Only then I knew I got first class first rank! That evening when I went home, my wife hugged me with such warmth that hadn't seen anything like that before! My happiness knew no bounds.

                          

          

Saturday, June 5, 2021

Lifegoeson - New Website for the elderly

                                LIFE GOES ON - a new website for senior citizens

Capt KP Haridasan, retired from the Navy, has started an outfit based in Thane to help senior citizens to age usefully and productively. His organisation offers various types of therapies like dance therapy, organises picnics to bird watching sites, helps in second career if they want to be gainfully employed and a host of other facilities and services.  

To serve this end a website http://lifegoeson.in has been started recently. I find lot of useful information of relevance and use to retirees here: hobbies, helplines, old age homes, details of 150 newspapers, articles on writing will etc. The content, for the present, is Thane focused and Defence retirees in particular. NRI parents also get preference, for example they will help with identifying travel companions for elderly single women travelers. 

There are articles inspiring elders to take up hobbies, how to spend time usefully etc. RTI is another topic that seniors may find useful as they have many things to complain with govt departments.

I wish they add content on financial matters including advice on investments, property purchase, safety and security, associations, learning opportunities,  discussion groups, volunteering etc. Plenty of websites talk of health and medicine, so this may  be skipped initially.

Please visit the website to check for yourself what interests you.

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Wednesday, June 2, 2021

Seenage Life

 

Seenage.life


Seenage Life provides a platform for senior citizens to engage with each other, the community and businesses and enables them to lead productive and fulfilled lives.

Senior Citizens may sign up and read articles of interest, become a member of interest groups, join the free online sessions held periodically or ask doubts to be clarified by experts. For instance, there are articles on home safety, breathing properly, having fun, sources for free online books, all about passwords, audio podcasts etc.

 

If you are a writer, you can upload your articles here to reach a wider audience. You can make your profile detailed so that persons with similar interests may reach out to you. You may avail any of the several tailor-made services meant for the lonely elderly offered by Seenage for a fee. Availing all the info on the website is free. Even their online sessions are free. Expert advice is free. Only personalised home care services are priced.

 

If you want to spend a couple of hours leisurely but usefully, here is their website: https://seenage.life

 


Tuesday, June 1, 2021

How to avoid getting unnecessary email messages?

How to avoid getting unnecessary email messages?

Sometimes we do not want to entertain messages from a few people. How to ensure that we do not even spend time in deleting the messages that we do not want to read? Here are a few tips.

If the messages are regular in the form of a 'list' or 'forum' you can unsubscribe using the unsubscribe link at the bottom of such messages. Generally it serves well. You won't be bothered with further mail.

If you open an undesirable message, click three vertical dots at the top near the Reply button. You will find options like Block the sender, Report Spam, Report Phishing, Filter such messages etc They work well.  If you block a sender, please also take care to delete his address from your contacts, if it is there.

Spam is unsolicited bulk mail meant for nobody in particular. Just sent in expectation of a few gullible guys out of thousands of recipients responding. When you mark a message as SPAM, be careful. Make sure you are removing the actual sender and not the group / list. 

You may even set up a clever filter to catch messages sneaking into your inbox by sending them to bin  or trash automatically. You can identify phishing, if you are patient, by clicking 'see original' and pouring over those from / to entries. 

If you are owner or Manager or Administrator of a list or a group you can ban or remove a member. You can say that all messages must be routed through you for a specified time to 'moderate' his messages. If you are just a member you may request the admin to do the needful.

If you have some tips, please share.