Saturday, July 24, 2010

TEN HABITS OF AJITH

1) Ajith personally comes to the main entrance to welcome the guests who come to meet him at his residence. When the guest takes leave of him he goes to the entrance to give them the send off.

2) Normally everybody holds the coffee cup in the right hand but Ajith has the habit of holding the cup in his left hand.

3) Ajith will personally supervise the dishes and decorations when he invites his friends or relatives for lunch of dinner.

4) Ajith’s long time is that he never misses the funerals. He will be there till the end and console the concerned people.

5) Ajith has the policy of not phoning his friends or his staffs after 7 pm. Ajith says that it is their personal time and they should not be disturbed.

6) At any point of time, Ajith is a strict follower of traffic rules. Even if it is urgent, he will wait for the signal. Whenever people come to meet him, his first question will be,” Where is the helmet.”

7) The things in his personal room should not be disturbed. He expects that those things should be in the place which he has placed. This will help him to get the material even if it is dark.

8) He will not speak about cinema problems with his family. He does not like cinema to enter when the time is allocated to family.

9) Ajith does not like recommendations. He will not recommend for himself neither he likes for recommending for others.

10) Ajith while phoning to others will ask the person at the other hand if he has time to speak to him. Only if that person can spare the time, than only Ajith will continue his conservation.

NEW INDIAN RUPEE SYMBOL

The Indian Rupee Symbol was finalized a few days ago by the Union Cabinet. The country didn’t have an international symbol until now. Previously the Indian currency was typed as INR which is an abbreviation of “Indian Rupees”. The new symbol for the Indian Rupee, which was designed by a postgraduate at  Indian Institute of Technology, looks like this:

Now the question on everyone’s mind is how to type it using the keyboard? The symbol doesn’t have a Unicode character and it can take from a few months to a year for the new symbol to get accepted by the Unicode Consortium's Unicode Technical Committee that is responsible for the development and maintenance of the Unicode Standard, including the Unicode Character Database.
Until that happens, you can use the Rupee font designed by Foradian Technologies. The symbol has been mapped to the (`) key of the keyboard as shown below.

Just download the Rupee.tff file and install it (How to install font? Windows XP users copy the file to C:\Windows\Fonts directory. Windows Vista/7 users right-click the file and choose “Install”)

It is advised not to use this font in your documents such as Word, as all computers are unlikely to have this font installed. This means that when such a document is opened on another computer the viewer will not be able to see the symbol. The Rupee font is strictly for designing purposes.