Monthly Archives: November 2015

Vijayapura cyclists bring home laurels

The cyclists, who won 25 medals at the national-level championship, being honoured by Deputy Commissioner D. Randeep in Vijayapura on Tuesday.— PHOTO : RAJENDRA SING HAJERI
The cyclists, who won 25 medals at the national-level championship, being honoured by Deputy Commissioner D. Randeep in Vijayapura on Tuesday.— PHOTO : RAJENDRA SING HAJERI

Cyclists of the district have brought glory to the district by winning 25 medals and emerging as all-round winners in the recently concluded national-level mountain cycling championship in Pune, Maharashtra. Some 28 cyclists from the district participated in the three-day championship that concluded on Monday at Pune.

Speaking to presspersons, R.B. Upase, District Sports Officer, said that of the 25 medals, they clinched nine gold, ten silver and six bronze medals.

He said that all the cyclists had secured the position in national-level championship after winning the State-level competition held last month in Vijayapura.

“This is certainly a matter of great pride for all of us that the cyclists of the district have been continuing their winning streak at the State and national level championships,” Mr. Upase said.

Sandesh Uppar and Sahana Kodignur, who won medals in the tournament, said they were elated to win medals for the district.

“Our next aim is to participate in international championships and bring glory for the district and the nation by winning medals,” Ms. Kudignur said.

She thanked their coach for preparing them in the best manner for winning the medals.

Velodrome project

Deputy Commissioner D. Randeep has expressed unhappiness over the slow pace of work of the Velodrome project for cyclists here.

Addressing presspersons after honouring district cyclists who won medals in national championship, he said that despite calling the agency twice for a review meeting of the project, no representative turned up.

“Soon, we will call the third meeting. If still nobody represents the agency, then we will take a decision to cancel the contract,” he said.

Deputy Commissioner D. Randeep has expressed unhappiness over the slow pace of work of the Velodrome project for cyclists here.

Addressing presspersons after honouring the district cyclists who have won medals in national championship, he said that despite calling the agency twice for a review meeting of the project, no representative turned up.

“Soon, we will call the third meeting. If still nobody represents the agency, then we will take a decision to cancel the contract,” he said and added that it was an ambitious and long-pending project, which should be completed within the stipulated time of 18 months.

source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> National> Karnataka / by Firoz Rozindar / Vijayapura – November 04th, 2015

Services at the doorstep

Owning a home always comes with the huge responsibility of managing it. This involves fixing different problems that occur and at times, these issues seem never-ending. But with technological evolution, all these secondary services can be availed with just a click of a button.

There are a number of start-ups mushrooming in the City that provide Bengalureans the necessary secondary services online.

Electrical repairs, plumbing, carpentry, laundry…the anguish of not getting a serviceman at the required time can be put to rest now, as they are all just a click away.

‘Handy Fix’, an online venture that started in 2014, has become a trusted name in home repairs and offers electrical, plumbing and carpentry solutions.

The founder of the firm, Arvind Kumar, says, “I am from a hotel management background and have seen how hotels are maintained. Any complaints from the guest, a technician is called for and the problem is fixed within minutes. This gave me the idea to provide fast services at one’s doorstep.”

‘Handy Fix’ now has a team of professional and committed servicemen who are available at one’s convenience. “They are all trained professionals and the customers are happy with their services,” he explains. However, the service is provided within 10 km radius of Indiranagar as he points out, “We need more investors and once we get the funds, we will cover all parts of the City.”

The ever-piling laundry is yet another painful task. Providing a solution to this is ‘MyWash’. Launched in 2014, the firm picks up the laundry from one’s doorstep, dry cleans and irons it and drops it back to the customer’s house.

Says Raghu Bharat, the CEO and founder of the firm, “‘MyWash’ is a result of my personal experience. I could not get my dry cleaned clothes on time for a wedding. The laundry sector was inefficiently run and unorganised. I analysed the market and conceptualised the plan to help all those who face laundry troubles.”

One can download the Android app on their phone and with a large industrial set-up in the outskirts of the City, one can get their clean laundry within four days of time at an affordable price.

And it is not just these household services that are taking the online route. The parlours too are going mobile and offering the best of home services.

‘Bangalore Mobile Spa’, started in 2008, has many satisfied customers who are enjoying the services at home.

RubinaBF04nov2015

The proprietor of the firm Rubina Guleria moved from London and found it hard to enjoy the after-effects of a spa due to the chaotic commute back home.

“The commute to and from the spa salons took away the pleasure of a spa. I wanted to change this and the result is a mobile spa,” she says.

It offers speciality treatment massages at the comfort of the client’s house without dirtying their furniture.

She explains, “Initially, the clients had a problem with our service as we had to use their beds for a massage. They would worry that their beds would get dirty and we had to fight this out. So now, we carry our own cots and beds. We are on par with all the good spas here and we cover all the areas in Bengaluru.”  With chaotic traffic in the City, these start-ups are a boon and provide efficient services at the comfort your cosy home.

source: http://www.deccanherald.com / Deccan Herald / Home> Supplements> MetroLife / by Prajna GR / DHNS – November 04th, 2015

Inventor With Eyes on the Sky

Dayananda Sirigere, a hobbyist inventor who fashions camera lenses and telescopes made from PVC pipes and discarded electronic equipment, has been getting inquiries from unlikely corners. “In September, a businessman called from California,” says the 53-year-old. “He said he will be coming to Bengaluru to meet me as he was fascinated by what I do.”

While most of his equipment costs Rs 5,000 to Rs 10,000 to make, his talents have remained largely undiscovered by shutterbugs. “Until a neighbour came and admired his work, I kept telling him to throw all this rubbish out,” says his wife Ratna Rao.

Dayananda Sirigere and the telescopes/JITHENDRA M
Dayananda Sirigere and the telescopes/JITHENDRA M

The “rubbish” is about 35 cartons of telescope lenses stacked up in their house in Bengaluru’s Chandra Layout. Sirigere seems completely uninterested in the possibilities of using his skills to pursue a commercial end. He is fired by passion for the “practical” aspect of science.

“In school, I used to wonder what the planets we drew looked like,” he says. “Much later, when I was going through some bad times in the 90s, people attributed it to an unfavourable influence of Saturn.”

This rekindled his curiosity in astral bodies, and he got to work on trying to make a telescope. Years of trial and error followed till 2003 when his efforts came to fruition and his first telescope was ready. “I assembled an optical lens, a mirror lens and a PVC pipe using calculations based on the focal length of the lenses,” Sirigere explains.

When he looked through it, he was overjoyed. He then began working on how to attach a powerful lens to a camera to photograph planets. For this, he used a teleconvertor to enlarge the image.

He finished his first telephoto lens in 2005. “I made a wide-angle lens that covers 180 degrees and another that covers 230 degrees,” he says. The macro lens in his collection has enabled him to photograph the pores in the eye of an ant and air bubbles and droplets of water in a leaf against light. “If you attach it to a video camera, you can see the water movement in leaves,” he says.

His lenses and telescopes have kept him up nights in the open, gazing at the galaxy. “Some parts of the moon reflect more light due to its undulated surface,” he says. “The craters are best visible on the fourth day after the new moon because that side is facing Earth.”

As novel as his hobby is, he is also aware of its amateur nature. “The lenses are too bulky for some people, unlike the professional ones. There’s no way I can build in auto-focus,” he says. Procuring a camera and xerox lenses collecting dust in homes or shops takes time. “Whenever I’m visiting someone or passing by someplace and I notice parts I could use, I ask the owners if I could buy them,” he says.

Once when Sirigere wanted to photograph cricketers in Chinnaswamy Stadium, the security stopped him and asked what he was carrying in his bag. They refused to believe they were lenses. They said, “These look more like AK-47s,” he says with a hearty laugh.

Before he moved to Bengaluru eight years ago, he often let children look at the stars through his telescopes in his native Sirigere, a village in Chitradurga district. “In rural areas, children don’t have any exposure to the practical aspect of science,” he says. With them, he has observed eclipses, the rings of Saturn and four of Jupiter’s moons.

The people and the clear skies of the pastoral countryside beckon, but it might take him a couple of years to shift base. “Ideally, I would like a village not yet penetrated by electricity,” he says.

source: http://www.newindianexpress.com / The New Indian Express / Home> Magazine / by Chetana Divya Vasudev / October 31st, 2015