Pranam
Today happens to be the day of" idipparai illa emara mannar" Vs
Hypocritical sophisticated attitudes as the best; and this Q1 of answer by
a nair is such; who wrote it as written by Ms Nair?; (sorry if Mr); the
bundle of contradictions writer; what I wrote in 2 other topics on how to
be strict, is now written as Task Vs Personal; and he somewhere else wrote
as,"PAUSE THINK AND CONFIRM AND DO ANYTHING"; and here it is seen as Task
rivalry is good; that is what also I did elsewhere in some other similar
topics; here in this group there are only personal rivalry with the
faceless people which the writer accepts as not good; but contradicts
whenever getting a chance to ignorantly , understanding, what is the real
meaning behind; also here confirms that but for the task rivalry we would
not have been flying; it is because, of the limited knowledge of hearsay
and not knowing, many more also took that HAZAAN DAZA ice cream, in many
other forms, but only the task rivalry could do it sustaining the flight
for some distance. So it is not the task conflicts but the trial and error
methods carried out faster. Anyway, the bundle of contradictions, as usual,
without thinking, ran it on the forum and so now will read back.
Ubiquity pottery again resounds a broken pot. The lack of health of
the economy today is only because, under the life of sophistications, we
evolved upto Platinum vessels, making the daily ordinary living, highly
complicated; science did it; pottery is mud; a child's beach castle; matter
becomes pot and the pot becomes back the matter; recyclable. Where is the
question of q& A?
Another fill up the space q&a; moon smell at midnight which is not
in India; Read NASA mood dust smell in space, not filling up the space.:
*January 30, 2006:* (NASA) Moondust. "I wish I could send you some," says
Apollo 17 astronaut Gene Cernan. Just a thimbleful scooped fresh off the
lunar surface. "It's amazing stuff."
Feel it—it's soft like snow, yet strangely abrasive.
Taste it—"not half bad," according to Apollo 16 astronaut John Young.
Sniff it—"it smells like spent gunpowder," says Cernan.
How do you *sniff* moondust?
Every Apollo astronaut did it. They couldn't touch their noses to the
lunar surface. But, after every moonwalk (or "EVA"), they would tramp the
stuff back inside the lander. Moondust was incredibly clingy, sticking to
boots, gloves and other exposed surfaces. No matter how hard they tried to
brush their suits before re-entering the cabin, some dust (and sometimes a
lot of dust) made its way inside.
Once their helmets and gloves were off, the astronauts could feel, smell
and even taste the moon.
*Right:* At the end of a long day on the moon, Apollo 17 astronaut Gene
cernan rests inside the lunar module Challenger. Note the smudges of dust
on his longjohns and forehead. Photo credit: Jack Schmitt.
The experience gave Apollo 17 astronaut Jack Schmitt history's first
recorded case of extraterrestrial hay fever. "It's come on pretty fast," he
radioed Houston with a congested voice. Years later he recalls, "When I
took my helmet off after the first EVA, I had a significant reaction to the
dust. My turbinates (cartilage plates in the walls of the nasal chambers)
became swollen."
Hours later, the sensation faded. "It was there again after the second and
third EVAs, but at much lower levels. I think I was developing some
immunity to it."
Other astronauts didn't get the hay fever. Or, at least, "they didn't admit
it," laughs Schmitt. "Pilots think if they confess their symptoms, they'll
be grounded." Unlike the other astronauts, Schmitt didn't have a test pilot
background. He was a geologist and readily admitted to sniffles.
Schmitt says he has sensitive turbinates: "The petrochemicals in Houston
used to drive me crazy, and I have to watch out for cigarette smoke."
That's why, he believes, other astronauts reacted much less than he did.
But they did react: "It is really a strong smell," radioed Apollo 16 pilot
Charlie Duke. "It has that taste -- to me, [of] gunpowder -- and the smell
of gunpowder, too." On the next mission, Apollo 17, Gene Cernan remarked,
"smells like someone just fired a carbine in here."
Schmitt says, "All of the Apollo astronauts were used to handling guns." So
when they said 'moondust smells like burnt gunpowder,' they knew what they
were talking about.
*Right:* Aren't spacesuits supposed to be white? This one, worn by Apollo
17 astronaut Jack Schmitt, is grayed by moondust. [More]
To be clear, moondust and gunpowder are not the same thing. Modern
smokeless gunpowder is a mixture of nitrocellulose (C6H8(NO2)2O5) and
nitroglycerin (C3H5N3O9). These are flammable organic molecules "not found
in lunar soil," says Gary Lofgren of the Lunar Sample Laboratory at NASA's
Johnson Space Center. Hold a match to moondust--nothing happens, at least,
nothing explosive.
What *is* moondust made of? Almost half is silicon dioxide glass created by
meteoroids hitting the moon. These impacts, which have been going on for
billions of years, fuse topsoil into glass and shatter the same into tiny
pieces. Moondust is also rich in iron, calcium and magnesium bound up in
minerals such as olivine and pyroxene. It's nothing like gunpowder.
So why the smell? No one knows.
ISS astronaut Don Pettit, who has never been to the moon but has an
interest in space smells, offers one possibility:
"Picture yourself in a desert on Earth," he says. "What do you smell?
Nothing, until it rains. The air is suddenly filled with sweet, peaty
odors." Water evaporating from the ground carries molecules to your nose
that have been trapped in dry soil for months.
Maybe something similar happens on the moon.
"The moon is like a 4-billion-year-old desert," he says. "It's incredibly
dry. When moondust comes in contact with moist air in a lunar module, you
get the 'desert rain' effect--and some lovely odors." (For the record, he
counts gunpowder as a lovely odor.)
Gary Lofgren has a related idea: "The gases 'evaporating' from the
moondust might come from the solar wind." Unlike Earth, he explains, the
moon is exposed to the hot wind of hydrogen, helium and other ions blowing
away from the sun. These ions hit the moon's surface and get caught in the
dust.
It's a fragile situation. "The ions are easily dislodged by footsteps or
dustbrushes, and they would be evaporated by contact with warm air inside
the lunar module. Solar wind ions mingling with the cabin's atmosphere
would produce who-knows-what odors."
Want to smell the solar wind? Go to the moon.
Schmitt offers yet another idea: The smell, and his reaction to it, could
be a sign that moondust is chemically active.
"Consider how moondust is formed," he says. "Meteoroids hit the moon,
reducing rocks to jagged dust. It's a process of hammering and smashing."
Broken molecules in the dust have "dangling bonds"--unsatisfied electrical
connections that need atomic partners.
*Right:* Moondust is formed by pounding; the "hammers" are meteoroids.
Image credit: Prof. Larry Taylor, University of Tennessee. [More]
Inhale some moondust and what happens? The dangling bonds seek partners in
the membranes of your nose. You get congested. You report strange odors.
Later, when the all the bonds are partnered-up, these sensations fade.
Another possibility is that moondust "burns" in the lunar lander's oxygen
atmosphere. "Oxygen is very reactive," notes Lofgren, "and would readily
combine with the dangling chemical bonds of the moondust." The process,
called oxidation, is akin to burning. Although it happens too slowly for
smoke or flames, the oxidation of moondust might produce an aroma like
burnt gunpowder. (Note: Burnt and unburnt gunpowder do not smell the same.
Apollo astronauts were specific. Moondust smells like *burnt* gunpowder.)
Curiously, back on Earth, moondust has no smell. There are hundreds of
pounds of moondust at the Lunar Sample Lab in Houston. There, Lofgren has
held dusty moon rocks with his own hands. He sniffed the rocks, sniffed the
air, sniffed his hands. "It does not smell like gunpowder," he says.
Were the Apollo crews imagining things? No. Lofgren and others have a
better explanation:
Moondust on Earth has been "pacified." All of the samples brought back by
Apollo astronauts have been in contact with moist, oxygen-rich air. Any
smelly chemical reactions (or evaporations) ended long ago.
This wasn't supposed to happen. Astronauts took special "thermos"
containers to the moon to hold the samples in vacuum. But the jagged edges
of the dust unexpectedly cut the seals of the containers, allowing oxygen
and water vapor to sneak in during the 3-day trip back to Earth. No one can
say how much the dust was altered by that exposure.
*Right:* Apollo 12 astronaut Alan Bean displays a "thermos" for
moondust--a.k.a. a Special Environmental Sample Container. [More]
Schmitt believes "we need to study the dust *in situ*--on the moon." Only
there can we fully discover its properties: Why does it smell? How does it
react with landers, rovers and habitats? What surprises await?
NASA plans to send people back to the moon in 2018, and they'll stay much
longer than Apollo astronauts did. The next generation will have more time
and better tools to tackle the mystery.
We've only just begun to smell the moondust.
Q4 & 5 repeated in haste to fill up.
Q6: Paypal and transfer of money; based outside India and has a
reputation of holding your funds without the services; Pal in word but
never a pally. Banks do of course but one has to do certain obligations of
the documents the banks need. Media magazines do it from Kerala to Delhi
-but they charge high commission and deliver them only a day later. The
best ever is WESTERN UNION MONEY TRANSFER.Sitting at home, many shops are
its agents near to ur places. A yellow board or play card you might have
seen even in front of your pharmacy. First time you need one address and
name proof signed by xerox; later it is over the telephone; they pick up
being close to you; and few banks including SBI IOB are in that panel;
rupee to dollars and vice versa or any currency in a second transfer. Only
the code you have to reveal which is known to you and the sender or vice
versa. Only things transact only in cash within a small amount and the
higher denominations by cheque or bank transfer. And as the data is sent to
all franchisees all over the places of a region or nation, you can take it
with the code, from anywhere. Had it been one , only once I'D establishment
or else each time one had to submit.
Q7 repeated 4th time
The rest is history KR IRS 14821
On Sat, 14 Aug 2021 at 09:18, 'gopala krishnan' via iyer123 <
[email protected]> wrote:
> *CULTURAL QA 08-2021-14*
>
> *Being a compilation there may be errors*
>
> *Q1 What is the basic knowledge that every individual should
> have?*
>
> *A1 Tiny Nair Cardiologist at PRS Hospital, TrivandrumJune 18*
>
> *As you slowly peel the cover of the cup of ‘Haagen-Dazs’ ice-cream at
> 35,000 Ft. above the ground, cruising at Mach 0.8, somewhere midway between
> Munich and Stuttgart, watching the clouds below from your window seat of
> the A380; don’t just thank the ‘Emirates’ flight attendant; thank the two
> persistently quarrelling brothers from Dayton, Ohio; known locally as the
> ‘Bishops Boys’.*
>
> *While the world salutes the Wright brothers, Oliver and Wilbur, for the
> first airplane in 1903, the locals knew them for the bitter fights that
> they, had all day long.*
>
> *Starting with a printing press in their garage, they shifted to cycle
> repair, then cycle manufacturing and gasoline motors; but the relentless
> quarrel between the brothers continued, as did their innovations. What
> people didn’t know, or care to know, was the fact that the brothers were
> extremely closely bonded at personal level; their quarrel only at a task
> level.*
>
> *At night they happily had their dinner and slept. No personal conflict;
> just task conflict.*
>
> * ‘Task’ conflict versus ‘personal’ conflict.*
>
> *Most teenage daughters believe that their moms are unnecessarily strict
> about everything, from a tidy room to a conservative dress; while all moms
> know that their daughters are undisciplined and lack safety concerns.*
>
> *The result is -*
>
> *‘I think my mom hates me, she criticises everything that I do’*
>
> *‘My daughter is concerned only about her friends; she hardly cares about
> me’*
>
> *While the ‘clean room’ or a ‘change-of-dress’ is a task conflict; it ends
> up in personal conflict; the transition is so seamless, that it is not
> noticeable to the opposing sides; but at the end, may result in an unhappy
> family.*
>
> *Home to Office*
>
> * ‘I am working so hard in my office; I am always on time; but my boss
> seems unhappy even with some small mistakes’ is often a situation where the
> boss is looking at the task and employee at the personal conflict.*
>
> *Task conflict is universal, since each one of us do things differently;
> our expectations, level of perfection and the end-product might be
> different. Accept it at that level. If you imbibe it as a personal
> conflict, not just the ‘task’ gets deranged, but the ‘personal’ bond is
> likely to fail.*
>
> *And this is one situation where ‘Fevicol’ seems not to work.*
>
> *If those two quarrelling brothers had not drawn a clear line between task
> conflict and personal conflict; you would have been taking the trip on a
> horseback, like Marco Polo.*
>
> *Don’t equate task conflict to personal conflict. Its not worth the Haagan
> Dazs.*
>
> *Q2 You hear about the ubiquity of pottery shards in
> archaeology, but how cheap or expensive was common pottery historically?
> Would a broken pot be a significant hardship for a medieval European
> peasant?*
>
> *A2 Matt Riggsby MA Archaeological Studies, Boston University
> 21h ago*
>
> *Common pottery was cheap. All manufactured items cost relatively more
> historically than they do now, and there were better and worse grades off
> pottery, but cheap goods are, to some extent, cheap goods. And pottery is
> one of those things which was sufficiently easy to make that Medieval
> peasants mostly produced their own. It tended to be rough and ugly but
> functional, and a broken bowl or cup represented a few hours of labor and
> the necessary fuel to fire it. Broken pottery vessels would be annoying to
> replace, but just that, not financially ruinous.*
>
> *Q3 What's that "moon smell" that you smell during midnight?
> It's a hard smell to explain. I can't find anything about it on the
> internet. What is it?*
>
> *A3 Peter Van Rhijn Owner, Researcher at naturephotos.com
> <http://naturephotos.com> (1998–present)Thu*
>
> *I can’t answer that question because I’ve never smelled what you think
> you smell. Are you positive you smell something you call moon smell only at
> midnight? Midnight doesn’t last that long. Is it gone at 10 past midnight?
> What you should start with is note whether the moon needs to be visible or
> perhaps full, for you to smell this. If so it could truly be due to
> moonlight. Until you figure it out (and everything is figureoutable) you’ll
> just have to keep Googling.*
>
> *Q4 I have a PPF account in SBI. It is more than 20 years
> old. Last year I renewed it for 5 more years. Can I withdraw my all amount
> now?*
>
> *A4 Rajendra Mhatre B.Com, CAIIB from University of Mumbai
> Tue*
>
> *As far as PPF withdrawal is concerned, there are three separate rules.*
>
> *Out of which, one rule is applicable during the first 15 years, hence we
> will not discuss it here.*
>
> *After the initial binding period of 15 years, one can extend the account
> for a period of five yers at a time.*
>
> *However, two options are available for renewal and withdrawal rules are
> different for both the options.*
>
> *Let us discuss them one by one : *
>
> *PPF Withdrawal after Extension..*
>
> * Without Contribution*
>
> *After you have extended the account for a block of five years, you can
> only withdraw an amount up to the balance in the account at the time of an
> extension.*
>
> *For example, your account was opened in the year 2005 and it had
> accumulated Rs 25 lakhs. You extended it from 2020 to 2025. You can make an
> overall withdrawal up to Rs 25 lakh in next five years.*
>
> *However, you can make only one withdrawal iper year.*
>
> * With Contribution*
>
> *After the extension of the account with contributions, you can only
> withdraw 60% of the balance accumulated at the time of extension over the
> fresh 5 year period.*
>
> *For example, your account was opened in the year 2005 and it had
> accumulated Rs 25 lakhs. You extended it from 2020 to 2025. You can only
> make an overall withdrawal up to Rs 15 lakh in next five years*
>
> *However, you can only make one withdrawal per year.*
>
> *Q5 I have a PPF account in SBI. It is more than 20 years
> old. Last year I renewed it for 5 more years. Can I withdraw my all amount
> now?*
>
> *A5 Rajendra Mhatre B.Com, CAIIB from University of MumbaiTue*
>
> *As far as PPF withdrawal is concerned, there are three separate rules.*
>
> *Out of which, one rule is applicable during the first 15 years, hence we
> will not discuss it here.*
>
> *After the initial binding period of 15 years, one can extend the account
> for a period of five yers at a time.*
>
> *However, two options are available for renewal and withdrawal rules are
> different for both the options.*
>
> *Let us discuss them one by one :*
>
> *PPF Withdrawal after Extension..*
>
> * Without Contribution*
>
> *After you have extended the account for a block of five years, you can
> only withdraw an amount up to the balance in the account at the time of an
> extension.*
>
> *For example, your account was opened in the year 2005 and it had
> accumulated Rs 25 lakhs. You extended it from 2020 to 2025. You can make an
> overall withdrawal up to Rs 25 lakh in next five years.*
>
> *However, you can make only one withdrawal iper year.*
>
> * With Contribution*
>
> *After the extension of the account with contributions, you can only
> withdraw 60% of the balance accumulated at the time of extension over the
> fresh 5 year period.*
>
> *For example, your account was opened in the year 2005 and it had
> accumulated Rs 25 lakhs. You extended it from 2020 to 2025. You can only
> make an overall withdrawal up to Rs 15 lakh in next five years*
>
> *However, you can only make one withdrawal per year.*
>
> *Q6 How do I send money from India to other countries?*
>
> *A6 Wise (formerly TransferWise) Lives in Tallinn, Estonia
> (2011–present)June 23*
>
> *With Wise, formerly known as TransferWise, you can send money from India
> to over 40 countries, for a lot less than with a bank. It's the smart new
> way to manage money internationally.*
>
> *Sending money from India with Wise is nearly 4x cheaper compared to
> leading banks. You can send INR to 44 countries, including the UK, US,
> Europe, Canada, Singapore, the UAE and Australia.*
>
> *See an example of how much rupees you could save with Wise:*
>
> *How Wiseworks:*
>
> * Transfers are fast, fair and low cost – the fee is typically below 2%
> of the total amount you're sending.*
>
> * You always get the real exchange rate - with no costly mark-up.*
>
> * You can make transfers straight from Wise.com*
>
> *, or from the iOSand Androidapps.*
>
> *You can send money with Wise directly to other bank accounts or to the
> Wise account , which lets you spend, send and receive money in multiple
> currencies.*
>
> *You can always try Wise’s calculator to see how much your transfer will
> cost, and compare prices with other options.*
>
> *10 million people around the world already save using Wise.*
>
> *Mahasweta is a Wise customer from Kolkata, India. She's one of the 10
> million people that switched to Wise from her bank, and she explains why:*
>
> *“I use Wise to send money from India to my bank account in Germany, and
> to send Euros back to India. I love the transparency about the transfer
> fees and the ease of use of Wise. The whole process is much more
> cost-efficient, faster and ultimately easier when compared to sending money
> through my bank.”*
>
> * My note- I have attached the list of other banks through which one can
> send the money to other countries *
>
> *Pay Pal, HDFC, ICICI, Axis and SBI. Rates are comparable. SBI lowest
> 1442-00 and Paypal maximum 2788-00*
>
> *Q7 What is the best option after MBBS?*
>
> *A7 Munish Khan Studies Medicine and Healthcare & Studying
> MBBS (Expected 2023)March 15 *
>
> *As a medical student I am always curious to know what after mbbs**🧐**So,
> after doing a lot research here’s the conclusion, I will divide this in two
> clinical work and non clinical work.*
>
> *CLINICAL WORK*
>
> *1 After MBBS you r licensed doctor so you can go for general practice(in
> evening) and a private hospital in morning shift.*
>
> *2 People also join as non academic junior residents in various
> institutions*
>
> *3 Armed forces(on interview basis) you can join short service program for
> 5yr with good prestigious position in army(captain) and after 5yr their is
> internal board that can extend your service.*
>
> *4 UPSC cms you can go for this exam in this you will be appointmented as
> a officer in railway health services, food ordinance, general duty medical
> officer in CGHS etc*
>
> *5 You can prepare for neet pg (Indian post graduation )*
>
> *6 People also try for USMLE and PLAB for residency in US and United
> Kingdom*
>
> *7 You can directly work in Singapore if your college satisfy the criteria
> of Singapore medical board, google this to know list of colleges coming
> under this.*
>
> *8 You can also join the online platform like med fine, practo as part
> time.*
>
> *9 Also join medical sans frontiers doctor without borders in this people
> provide health facilities to the areas without resources will make you
> better doctor.*
>
> *NON CLINICAL*
>
> *1 Join the research pharmaceutical companies being a doctor is a plus
> here they can give you 1 to 1.5 lakh package monthly.*
>
> *2 MMST 2021 a program made by collaboration of aiims Delhi and iit Delhi
> for doctor who are interested in technology for patients care.*
>
> *3 MBA in hospital management is also good.*
>
> *4 Insurance companies their are a lot of doctors in panel of insurance
> companies they heir doctor for making different schemes related to
> insurance.*
>
> *5 Fellowship for MBBS graduates who want to learn entrepreneurship and
> innovations.*
>
> *6 UPSC Civil services*
>
> *For more updates related to medicine follow Instagram munish102**😇*
>
> *Q8 How can I clean the weird marks off of my laptop screen
> if they don't come off with water or rubbing alcohol? How did the marks get
> there?*
>
> *A8 Greg Downing , Founder xRez Studio, a virtual reality
> content company.Answered March 5, 2018*
>
> *A picture might help in this case since we don’t know that the marks look
> like so it is hard to say what they are. Alcohol is probably a bad idea on
> your laptop screen many are treated with optical coatings that alcohol
> could remove. Most laptop screens have marks due to the screen touching the
> keyboard when closed. Skin oils from your fingers (and other gunk on you
> hands) get on your keyboard, dirt clings to it, then when you close your
> laptop it transfers from the keys to the screen. One way to mitigate this
> is to use a keyboard silicone barrier (sometimes called keyboard condoms)
> and wash it with soap and water occasionally.*
>
> *Q9 How do I make activated charcoal from wood?*
>
> *A9 Gopala Krishnan, former Assistant General Manager
> 1996-2004 at Department of Telecom (1966-2004)Answered 1h ago*
>
> *Activated charcoal is a fine, odorless, black powder often used in
> emergency rooms to treat overdoses. Its toxin-absorbing properties have a
> wide range of medicinal and cosmetic uses, though none are scientifically
> proven.*
>
> *Super heating natural sources of carbon, such as wood, produces activated
> charcoal. The black powder stops toxins from being absorbed in the stomach
> by binding to them. The body is unable to absorb charcoal, and so the
> toxins that bind to the charcoal leave the body in the feces.*
>
> *I have read medical uses and not added **http://here.It* <http://here.It>*
> has to be very carefully used.*
>
> *Q10 is bottled water a luxury?*
>
> *A10 Remy Dampil Timenia, Secretary to the Sanggunian
> (1998-present)Answered 10h ago*
>
> *Google said, “Bottled water is certainly lavish by this definition.
> Bottled water, which is no different than tap water in its necessary use,
> can be up to 10,000 times more expensive. That, by any measure, is
> excessively expensive. The most prevalent form of water scarcity is
> economic scarcity”.*
>
> *But in my own opinion, if every time you need water and you used bottled
> water it is a luxury. But if it is really needed and it satisfies you or
> quench your thirst and for your health and safety, well it’s not, for no
> amount of money can quench a thirst person and can meet what our body is
> needed, as far as health and sanitation is concerned.*
>
> *Thomas William Volinchak, www.wateristhenewgold.comAnswered 7h ago*
>
> *Boy, is that a loaded question, but a good one.*
>
> *For people facing contamination, drought, and catastrophe bottled water
> is a life-saving neccessity.*
>
> *For a financially comfortable couple ordering bottled water at dinner on
> a Cruise ship, I guess that would be a luxury.*
>
> *For people camping, hiking, or driving long distances, bottled water
> could be considered a required staple.*
>
> *I guess the answer is dependent on the person and circumstamce.*
>
> *Estanislao Deloserrata, MS from University of Southern CaliforniaAnswered
> 11h ago“Is bottled** water a luxury?”*
>
> *It depends. In a lot of places it means the difference between preserving
> your health and getting poisoned or otherwise sickened. At two of my
> properties the “tap water” is nonpotable and unhealthy to drink.*
>
> *In the US, when the National Guard is distributing bottled water, we can
> assume that it’s not any sort of “luxury.”*
>
> *Yes, there are some kids that just can’t get over this.*
>
> *Gopala Krishnan, former Assistant General Manager 1996-2004 at Department
> of Telecom** (1966-2004)Answered 1h ago*
>
> *Before a decade it was. Bottled water cost much more. Now in India, 95%
> use bottled water while going outside. Most cool drink shops, provision
> shops have bottled water in India, Railway station has made provision to
> provide bottled water in an economical manner.*
>
> *All the above QA are based on Quora digest on **13**-08- 2021/**Answered
> by me**. Quora answers need not be 100% correct answers *
>
> *Compiled and posted by R. Gopala krishnan on 14- 08-2021*
>
>
>
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