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Tuesday, 13 June 2017

TOILET :BUILT IN 5 HOURS

TOILET :BUILT IN 5 HOURS
CSIR-Structural Engineering Research Centre (SERC), Chennai, has come up with a cost-effective toilet. The toilet is expected to be set up in those areas where toilet coverage is not available. Salient Highlights The cost-effective toilet will weigh less than 500kg and will have a life span of 25-30 years. It can be assembled in under five hours. The toilet has been built with the help of the textile reinforced concrete (TRC) panels. The TRC panels has been developed by CSIR-SERC using textile reinforced concrete prototyping technology (TRCPT). CSIR-SERC had applied patent for this innovative all-in-one technology in 2014. The same TRC panels can be used as doors, roofing, walls and even flooring. There is no need of any moulds to prepare these sheets.
These sheets vary in thickness from 15mm to 25mm. The reinforcement makes use of glass textile mesh with a grained cementious binder. This will be corrosion-free and is capable of withstanding winds. 
CSIR-SERC CSIR is an autonomous body and India’s premier research and development (R&D) organisation. It was established in 1942. It operates as an autonomous body registered under the Registration of Societies Act of 1860. It is mainly funded by the Union Ministry of Science and Technology. 
CSIR’s R&D activities include aerospace engineering, ocean sciences, structural engineering, metallurgy, life sciences, chemicals, mining, food, petroleum, leather, and environment. 
CSIR-SERC is one of the national laboratories under the Council of Scientific & Industrial Research (CSIR) situated at Chennai. The laboratory has built expertise in analysis, design and testing of structures and structural components. Its services are sought by the union, state as well as the public and private sector undertakings.



GUILT -MAKE TO HAPPEN UNUSUALLY

GUILT -MAKE TO HAPPEN UNUSUALLY
The very first thing you have to do to say goodbye to guilt is determine if you are actually guilty. Usually guilt is not guilt at all, but instead it’s sadness that you couldn’t do more to help, disappointment that you didn’t achieve something you set out to do, or anger because you said “yes” to something that deserved a “no”.
For example, as a parent, you might think you feel guilty because something didn’t happen the way you imagined for your children. That isn’t guilt unless you have really done something to prevent your child from living their own life.
Usually guilt comes from not doing something instead of doing something wrong.
When you do something because you feel guilty not doing that something, no one wins. You aren’t happy, which means you aren’t really present or giving your all. The project or action suffers, your partners suffer and you’ve completely overlooked the greater good.You may feel badly that you are not participating, but worse if you do.Instead of acting out of guilt and obligation …
  • do something that moves you
  • do something that calls you
  • do something that you want to do
  • do something that makes your heart sing
  • There will always be little tasks that you might not completely enjoy. I don’t love grocery shopping, but I need to eat and feed my family. I don’t love running errands, but sometimes I have to go the bank, or drop my daughter off somewhere.
While you may have responsibilities that must be attended to, there are plenty of things you do that could be avoided with this simple strategy:
Say no thank you.
No thank you requires no explanation, or further waste of your time. While some things may need further consideration, you usually know if you want to participate in something or not.Give in to guilt and say goodbye to:
Time. Give your time to someone that you don’t want to be with or to an organization that you don’t care about by stealing time from your favorite people and projects.
Energy. If you are low on energy, consider the fact that what you are doing is not feeding your heart and soul. If you are working on a project that you feel passionate about, you will feel passion. If you working on a project that you feel miserable about, you will feel miserable.
Money. Have you ever made a purchase out of guilt? She bought me that, so I should buy her that. We are going there for a party so we should by them this. I treated him poorly so I should buy him one of those. They might not know how much we love them, so let’s get them this. Stop it. Your presents don’t equal love. Your presence does.
Peace of Mind. Acting out of guilt might bring you temporary relief, but it will never deliver peace of mind.
Real joy. If you are spending your resources doing something out of guilt, you miss an opportunity to do something you love, something that makes your heart swell, something that will bring you and the world real joy. Do not miss out on real joy. It’s amazing.
Maybe you are guilty about something that’s already happened or something you could have done differently. I think we’ve all experienced that feeling before. When you start to think about that instance, please remember:
  • you cannot change what’s already happened
  • you aren’t perfect
  • you are loved anyway
  • you can give yourself a second chance
  • the energy you are spending on what happened yesterday is robbing the energy you have for today
  • you can still apologize
  • you can choose to change anytime

Guilt is a feeling that you’ve done something wrong or let someone down. When you devote your time to your most important work and the most important people in your life and the things that mean the most to you, then you can say goodbye to guilt.

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LAUNDRY -FOLDING ROBOT - NEW INNOVATION

LAUNDRY -FOLDING ROBOT - NEW INNOVATION

I once asked a 100-year-old woman to name the greatest innovation of her lifetime and without skipping a beat she said, "The electric washing machine."
If she were alive today, she might have said, "The laundry-folding robot."
If you've been preoccupied with thoughts of body-slamming politicians and Melania's travel wardrobe, you may have missed the more important news recently, which is that the laundry-folding robots are marching our way.
As reported in The New York Times, at least two companies plan to bring the laundry wizards to the international market by the end of this year.
One of the devices, invented in Japan, is called Laundroid. The other, developed in Israel by an American company, is FoldiMate, which bills itself as "your laundry-folding friend."
Ahoy, FoldiMate! Can you match my socks too? Thanks, pal.
Liberation from laundry is presumed to be a universal human goal, and in the hierarchy of laundry's purported torments — washing, drying, folding — the last is presumed to be the worst, the one that until the robot revolution of 2017 has eluded technology.
But before our new robot buddies cause our folding skills to atrophy, just like calculators have ruined our ability to do arithmetic, I'd like to take a moment to praise the ancient art of laundry folding.
For some people, laundry is therapy.
I have a relative who struggles with anxiety and depression and when things are going wrong, she knows what to do — laundry.
Laundry gives shape and purpose to her time, and it offers a beautiful reward at the end, a stack of clean clothes, sheets and towels, evidence that the world can be made fresh, that she can get things done.
The folding is her favorite part. The smoothing out, the lining up of edges, the stacking of underwear with underwear, shirts with shirts. When she's doing laundry, she's in charge of life.
Whenever I go to visit her, she demands to do my laundry and always returns it to me folded and stacked with military precision, which makes both of us very happy.
I know another woman who after her husband died found her greatest comfort down in the basement laundry room, washing and drying, ironing and folding. The warmth and the whirr made the little room a retreat. The familiar neat piles when she was done seemed to turn the upside-down world upright, if only for a while.
I'm not as ardent a laundry folder as those two are, and I'm grateful when someone does it for me. There are days when my washed clothes sit in the basket unfolded until the wrinkles have practically calcified.
But when I do get to folding, it calms me down. Like anything done consciously and carefully, it's meditative.
Wiping the creases out of a pair of shorts, tucking the sleeves of a T-shirt in just so, leaves the mind free to roam. Some people call that boring. I call it freeing.
The accomplishment, though short-lived, is tangible and visible. No fact-checking, no argument, no study required.
Some people feel the same way about washing dishes, a chore that rivals laundry for most despised. In fact, self-help articles have been written about the "Zen" of dishwashing.
Wash the dishes just to wash the dishes. Notice every plate and bowl. The work is the reward. There is no hurry.
But most of us are in a hurry, a reflexive, habitual, cultural hurry, which is why the laundry-folding robots will find a market.
The FoldiMate website brags that the robot, with a potential price of $700-$850, will take a mere 2.5 minutes to fold an average laundry load of 25 items, a task that would take a super-fast human four minutes.
That means we humans would have another minute and a half per laundry load to spend on Facebook.
One day we may look back on folding laundry the way we do on scrubbing clothes on rocks down by the river. Were we ever forced to do such primitive labor?
But I'm guessing that I'll keep on folding the laundry just to fold the laundry. Unless one of those machines can perform a feat I've never mastered, which is to fold a fitted sheet in a truly satisfying way.
Mary Schmich is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. Email, mschmich@tribune.com. You can follow her on twitter.com/maryschmich or contact her on facebook.com/maryschmich.
The views expressed here are the writer's and are not necessarily endorsed by Alaska Dispatch News, which welcomes a broad range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, email commentary@alaskadispatch.com. Send submissions shorter than 200 words to letters@alaskadispatch.com. 

Source:ADN