Tuesday, September 29, 2009

“Follow debris mitigation rules”

Geoffrey Forden, orbital debris expert at MIT, tells Vikas Kumar about the need for greater debris monitoring How serious is the problem?

This collision has created a serious problem for the Iridium satellites, which by definition have a large overlap with the debris released in space. We’ll need to bear this in mind when we send out more satellites in the future.

There have been times when the satellites came close to colliding, but in the end did not. Do you have any observation or study on that?

My calculations show that some satellites (including non-operational satellites that have reached the end of their life) and a piece of space debris approach each other every three to four days within 800 metres – the distance that the orbital elements predicted for this collision. Near misses between two satellites are considerably rarer, but still happen every month or so.

Would the ISS face any threat?

The ISS does face an increased risk, but the increase from the debris created by this collision is rather small. This is because the ISS is at a considerably lower altitude.

What can be done to prevent future collisions?

First, all space-faring countries must follow the debris-mitigation rules that various international committees have agreed to. They should sign up with the Code of Conduct that the European Union is considering.

What could be the implications of frequent collisions?

Space is being used for a variety of purposes, most of which serve humanity. For instance, satellites are used to predict weather, and hence mitigate the danger from floods, drought and other disasters. It is quite possible that if too much of space debris is created, near Earth orbits will be rendered unusable. If that happens, people’s lives will be lost on Earth.
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown
IIPM

Thursday, September 17, 2009

To inspire confidence

More than 24,000 Christians had fled their homes after their houses were attacked by rampaging mobs following Saraswati's killing. Later, the administration set up 13 relief camps in the district for riot victims. Eleven of them have now been closed. Nearly 700 victims are, however, still in two relief camps – one in Mandakia and another in Tiangia village. Efforts are on to send the remaining people back to their villages. To inspire confidence, armed policemen have been stationed around churches.

From Tikabali, we headed towards Chakapada, a block headquarters famous as the karmabhumi of the late Laxmanananda Saraswati. Narrow hilly roads made the drive a tad difficult for the cab driver. It took us nearly one hour to cover a distance of 18 kilometers.

Surrounded by hills and a dense forest, Chakapada is a remote village, but the place is well developed. It has a school, a health centre and panchayat offices. We stopped in front of the Chakapada ashram, which was set up by Saraswati in 1966.This was one of the institutions that he established in Kandhamal to promote education among the poor, specifically the Dalits. Chakapada gurukul ashram is now home to around 300-plus students.

The ashram had planned no special event to commemorate the Swamiji’s death anniversary. But we spotted some students cleaning his samadhi with cowdung. Malay Charan Majhi, a tribal inmate, told us: “Swamiji was like our father and mother. He was a very caring man. We’ve been orphaned by his demise.”
For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008
An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Is the golden age of romance in Bollywood over?

I totally disagree! I do not buy the idea the environment in earlier times – Stars, movies, individuals – were more romantic than ours.” That is bollywood's new, blazing love-guru, director Imtiaz Ali, Who’s "Jab We Met" and "Love Aaj Kal" seemed to have zonked the masses. "The passion and intensity of love,iipm loss and longing that you speak about is still around – it could, for example, well be a man sitting in a cafĂ©, sipping coffee by himself, cheerful, bullish on life, doing his crossword. Suddenly, we see tears rolling down his cheeks. There could be a zillion reasons, only the manifestations are different. These are complex times and the trappings, idiom, style and manner of expressing love, feeling and emotion has changed to keep pace with it. The real thing, however remains intact.” The inimitable Gulzar comes next. “I don’t think it is all true, although (partially) it seems so. I feel it’s a completely time and place things. The long drawn romance born of rishtas that came from different cities, defining the distance-lends-enchantment factor in todays’ life belongs to the fiction category! The tremulous meeting of eyes, accidental brushing of hand leading to unspoken, inarticulated, romantic highs doesn’t happen any more. That was then … the fifties. In year 2009, it is a more pro-active, informal and direct interface between young men and women living in a world dominated by internet, Cell phones and ATMs. It is a generational thing, That is the way the young people conduct romance today… and I go along with it all the way!”

Ah well, but dear reader you might like to pause and reflect on this as well…

Once upon a time, love was romance. Dilip holding his Queen of Hearts protectively in his arms, while his eyes blazed defiance at his royal father; Raj embracing his woman passionately: Dev prancing around with his lady love. All that resides in the fluffy soft focus of a distant past. Today, love appears to be less of a sublime emotion, more of a consumer perishable along the FMCG line. To be clinical is to be in. Increasingly, the primacy of permissiveness has replaced love with sex, corrupting into an act, a behaviour, an ingredient so artificially (and seductively) relevant that film-makers have appointed themselves as lab-specialists. They have detailed, magnified and celebrated titillation in the mainline commercial – and in doing so, destroyed emotion, buried passion, corrupted intimacy, killed charm and de-mystified romance…forever. And the loss remains completely ours...


For Complete IIPM Article, Click on IIPM Article

Source :
IIPM Editorial, 2008

An IIPM and Professor Arindam Chaudhuri (Renowned Management Guru and Economist) Initiative
Read these article :-
Delhi/ NCR B- Schools get better
IIPM fights meltdown