Is Not IT to be Proudy for Indians after Successfull vision of Chandrayan1 ?? :)
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Dalek Dave wrote:
We hand out £250 million a year to India for aid and relief, so I think we should spend it here in Britain next year.
That gets my 5 then. Why should we be handing out cash to them to help get to the moon when we've never even done it ourselves.
Simon
Simon Stevens wrote:
get to the moon when we've never even done it ourselves.
Outsourced.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Would you not be prouder if you had done it with your own money? Or maybe the UK will not give you £250 Million next year, as you do not seem to need the aid now, since you are rich enough to go to the moon.
------------------------------------ We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office. - Aesop
Ah no, Dalek, I don't think that is fair. Awfully nice of you chaps to give India aid and India should never begrudge that but part of aid is meant to uplift a country, not just buy practical water purifiers and blankets. Reaching the Moon is hugely inspirational and should help inspire kids to better themselves. It also takes schools, universities, research labs and factories to reach the Moon, stuff the aid money hopefully helped plan and build. All of that employs people and provides infrastructure. Blankets and water purifiers are investments too but we can't expect to give them those and then they somehow make the leap to crash landing TVs on the Moon. (I do object to them crashing stuff into the Moon when they are still getting aid. I'll bet that probe cost a lot of money.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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No matter how advanced we think we are, we still can't write proper English. -Saurabh
If you think that's bad, you should hear many of your compatriots try to speak it. :-D I recently spent a few days with a tech support engineer from one of the companies I purchase equipment from and it was horrendous. I could understand about 20% of what he said, but that was a vast improvement over trying to communicate with him over the telephone. Of course, he's only been here two years; I've known others equally difficult to understand who have lived and worked here 20 years or more. A brilliant young man, by the way, and I look forward to working with him for many years. But it may be less painful if I learn a bit of Indian first. :-D
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Why is advancement linked to being able to communicate in English??
It isn't, except by the ignorant. But we all sometimes make unreasonable assumptions based on irrelevant observations; it's part of the common instinct we all have of fearing what is different. Fortunately, first impressions can be overcome if we choose to do so. Congratulations, India!
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Simon Stevens wrote:
get to the moon when we've never even done it ourselves.
Outsourced.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
:laugh:
Simon
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Simon Stevens wrote:
get to the moon when we've never even done it ourselves.
Outsourced.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
Just wait until you have to call them for tech support...
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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If you think that's bad, you should hear many of your compatriots try to speak it. :-D I recently spent a few days with a tech support engineer from one of the companies I purchase equipment from and it was horrendous. I could understand about 20% of what he said, but that was a vast improvement over trying to communicate with him over the telephone. Of course, he's only been here two years; I've known others equally difficult to understand who have lived and worked here 20 years or more. A brilliant young man, by the way, and I look forward to working with him for many years. But it may be less painful if I learn a bit of Indian first. :-D
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
Roger Wright wrote:
But it may be less painful if I learn a bit of Indian first.
That would mean learning about 20 different languages, not to mention dialects... :)
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Of course You All Guys who are belong to India. after all facing a lots of economical & social problem in India. We have done this . even in Global crisis... :-O what r u all thinking ?
Ranjeet Bhargava Trigyn Technologies Ltd 27A,SDF-1 SEEPZ-SEZ Andheri ( E ) Mumbai - 400 096 Tel: +91 (22) 28290909 Fax: +91 (22) 28291418
Bhargava Consultant wrote:
what r u all thinking ?
I'm thinking it was a clever way to test a nuclear warhead delivery system without the media catching on, but the moon was a bit of overkill. :-D
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Simon Stevens wrote:
get to the moon when we've never even done it ourselves.
Outsourced.
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
:laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh::laugh:
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Daniel Turini wrote:
according to Wikipedia
You shouldn't take everything you read on wikipedia as fact...
Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL
you.suck = (you.Passion != Programming & you.Occupation == jobTitles.Programmer)
1000100 1101111 1100101 1110011 100000 1110100 1101000 1101001 1110011 100000 1101101 1100101 1100001 1101110 100000 1101001 1101101 100000 1100001 100000 1100111 1100101 1100101 1101011 111111Harvey Saayman wrote:
You shouldn't take everything you read on wikipedia as fact...
But should I dismiss everything on Wikipedia based on that?
I see dead pixels Yes, even I am blogging now!
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Roger Wright wrote:
But it may be less painful if I learn a bit of Indian first.
That would mean learning about 20 different languages, not to mention dialects... :)
Ouch! I'm having enough trouble with C#, and it doesn't require an accent.
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"