Tag: notes

  • Artistic Cheating! Spanish Law Student Carves Notes Around Entire Diameter Of 11 Pens for Cheating in Exam; Internet Gets Knocked Out By Viral Pics

    A viral tweet showing how much a student could cheat to pass an exam is making rounds on the web. A Spanish law student engraved his whole curriculum in tiny letters on a pack of blue pens for cheating during his examination. He carved notes around the diameter of 11 pens in extremely small fonts. Professor named Yolanda De Lucchi shared the pictures of the pens on Twitter with the text “Tidying up my office, I found this university relic that we confiscated from a student a few years ago: criminal procedural law in bic pens. What art.” SSC Exam Cheating Racket Busted; Scamsters Used Sharing Software Team Viewer to Cheat During Examination.

    Art Of Cheating! 

    (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter, Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user’s social media account and Morning Tidings Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of Morning Tidings, also Morning Tidings does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.)

  • Goddess Vasavi Kanyaka Parameswari Adorned with Gold, Walls and Floor Covered With Currency Notes Worth 8-Crore For Navratri 2022 Celebration At Andhra Temple (See Pics)

    A temple decorated with flowers is a common sight but recently as part of the ongoing Navratri celebrations in Andhra Pradesh, a 135-yr-old temple of Goddess Vasavi Kanyaka Parameswari has been decorated with currency notes and gold ornaments worth crores. Administrators of the temple decorated the goddess with Rs 2 crores and 16 lakh. Along with the goddess, the entire temple is decorated with currency notes. Bundles of notes can be seen hanging on trees and from the ceiling which grabs the eyeballs of the devotees. Navratri 2022 Bhog for 9 Days: From Ghee to Sesame Seeds, List of Prasad To Offer to 9 Forms of Goddess Durga During Sharad Navratri Festivities.

    The temple has been observing the tradition of decorating the goddess with gold and cash during Dussehra for a long time. Its administrators said that they started with Rs 11 lakh and have increased the amount every year.

    “It’s a public contribution and will be returned once the puja is over. It won’t go to temple trust,” said the temple committee.

    Check Out Pictures Of 135-Year-Old Andhra Temple:

    Vasavi Kanyaka Parameshvari is a Hindu goddess, recognized by her adherents as a form of Parvati, and sometimes also identified as a form of Lakshmi in Vaishnava tradition. There is no authentic version of Vasavi’s legend, and different versions exist amongst classes that are both Komati and non-Komati. The oral accounts sung by bards vary amongst regions, religious sects, castes, and sub-castes.

    (This is an unedited and auto-generated story from Syndicated News feed, Morning Tidings Staff may not have modified or edited the content body)

  • Instagram Notes Funny Memes, Jokes and Puns Go Viral on Twitter as IG’s New Feature Draws Hilarious Reviews from Netizens

    The American photo and video sharing application Instagram recently came up with a brand-new feature, “Notes,” that allows users to write a short note with a character limit of 60 words. Just like the pre-existing status feature, Notes will also disappear after a period of 24 hours. The new Instagram Notes will be visible to all your followers in their DMs; one can even revert to it. Following the unveiling of the latest option by Instagram, the microblogging platform Twitter has all sorts of hilarious opinions regarding what online junkies have to say about the new function. Here are some of the most amazing Instagram Notes funny memes, viral jokes and puns that have taken over Twitter.

    Are You One Of Them? 

    Everybody Is Trying To Become A Stand-Up Comedian 

    Very Apt! 

    True That! 

    Correctly Put 

    Instagram Notes Feature Exists, Everybody From Inside: 

    (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter, Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user’s social media account and Morning Tidings Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of Morning Tidings, also Morning Tidings does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.)

  • WhatsApp May Soon Let You Post Voice Notes As Your Status: Report

    San Francisco: Meta-owned messaging platform WhatsApp is working on a new feature that may allow users to post voice notes on their status updates. According to WABetaInfo, this feature is under development so it is not ready to be released to beta users. WhatsApp Introduces New Feature To Allow Users To Respond to Messages With Their Favourite Emoji.

    “WhatsApp is planning to extend the functionality of status updates by adding the support for voice notes,” as per the report.

    A voice note shared as a status update may be called “voice status”. The feature will only be shared with the people you choose within your status privacy settings, and the voice note will be end-to-end encrypted as other images and videos shared to your status.

    Recently, the platform announced that it is rolling out a new feature that will let users react to messages with any emoji of their choice. Currently, the platform gives several users the ability to react with a limited number of just six emojis. CEO Mark Zuckerberg mentioned some of the emojis like a robot, french fries, surfing in the sea, etc.

    Meanwhile, a recent report said that WhatsApp is also likely working on a feature that will give iOS users the ability to hide their online status from everyone. Currently, users can choose to display their “Last Seen” information to contacts, some people, or no one. For a future version of the app, WhatsApp will let users follow a similar approach to the online toggle.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on Jul 15, 2022 04:02 PM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Twitter Reportedly Testing Built-In Notes Feature

    San Francisco: Microblogging site Twitter has confirmed that the platform is working on a built-in Notes feature that will allow users to write longer posts. On its own platform, Twitter introduced Notes and said it is testing the new feature for its audience. Twitter Testing New Shopping Feature ‘Product Drops’.

    “A small group of writers is helping us test Notes. They can be read on and off Twitter, by people in most countries,” the platform wrote.

    According to The Verge, the feature is currently available to a select group of users in the US, UK, Canada, and Ghana. Twitter shared how the feature will work in two separate GIFs. Users can click into the “Write” tab to start writing a Note, and can then embed the Note into their tweet when finished.

    Several writers have already published Notes on the platform, which appear as long-form posts that can have tweets, videos, and images mixed in. At the moment, Twitter users have to write long-form content in the form of broken threads which may be jarring for people to read. Apart from writing Twitter threads, users also write long-form content on other apps, make a pdf or a jpg file, and then take a screenshot and post it on Twitter.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on Jun 23, 2022 09:56 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Twitter Working on ‘Twitter Notes’ Feature, Will Allow Users To Post Longer Tweets

    New Delhi: Twitter is finally working on a new feature that will allow users to post long-form content on the platform that currently allows posts with only 280 characters. With ‘Twitter Notes’, the users will be able to create articles using rich formatting and uploaded media, which can then be tweeted and shared with followers upon publishing, reports TechCrunch. Twitter Testing New Shopping Feature ‘Product Drops’.

    Currently, the feature is being tested with a select group of users and the company will launch it soon. App researchers like Jane Manchun Wong spotted the new feature in the development, and was earlier called “Twitter Article”.

    “Twitter’s new artwork for the “Notes” (Twitter Articles),” app researcher Nima Owji said in a recent tweet.

    At the moment, Twitter users have to write long-form content in the form of broken threads which may be jarring for people to read. Apart from writing Twitter threads, users also write long-form content on other apps, make a pdf or a jpg file, and then take a screenshot and post it on Twitter. Twitter Notes will save both the problems by allowing users to instead write long-form articles directly on the platform itself, the report said late on Tuesday.

    “Like tweets, the Notes would have their own link and could be tweeted, retweeted, sent in DM’s, liked and bookmarked,” it added.

    When publishing ‘Twitter Notes’, users could check or uncheck boxes to automatically tweet the article to their feed, Twitter Circle or Communities. They can also copy the article URL for sharing elsewhere, like on another website or in an email, according to app researchers. The tool will be accessible from users’ profiles directly to the right of the “Tweets & replies” link and before “Media”.

    (The above story first appeared on Morning Tidings on Jun 22, 2022 11:24 AM IST. For more news and updates on politics, world, sports, entertainment and lifestyle, log on to our website morningtidings.com).

  • Hyderabad: Police Look For Authenticity After Video Shows Man Throwing Rs 500 Notes in Air At Charminar; Watch Video

    After a video showing a man throwing currency notes in the air went viral, the Charminar police has started to verify the authenticity of the footage. The video showed a man who was part of a marriage procession, on two different occasions throwing currency notes of Rs 500 denominations. On one occasion, he stood on top of Gulzar Houz fountain, and threw the currency notes in the area.

    Watch Video:

    (SocialLY brings you all the latest breaking news, viral trends and information from social media world, including Twitter, Instagram and Youtube. The above post is embeded directly from the user’s social media account and Morning Tidings Staff may not have modified or edited the content body. The views and facts appearing in the social media post do not reflect the opinions of Morning Tidings, also Morning Tidings does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.)

  • ‘Vakeel Saab’ review: This masala-laced remake of ‘Pink’ starring Pawan Kalyan, Nivetha Thomas and Anjali hits the right notes in the courtroom proceedings

    ‘Vakeel Saab’ review: This masala-laced remake of ‘Pink’ starring Pawan Kalyan, Nivetha Thomas and Anjali hits the right notes in the courtroom proceedings

    The Telugu remake of ‘Pink’ headlined by Pawan Kalyan hits the right notes in the courtroom proceedings

    ‘Now the people need you’ (‘Ippudu janalaki nuvvu kaavali’), Satyadev (Pawan Kalyan) better known as ‘vakeel saab’ is told in the film. What he does next might make or break a case involving three women. But more than that, the statement acknowledges the star who is a politician in real life, and plays an on-screen saviour of the masses. Pawan Kalyan’s stardom and political aspirations dictate how director Sriram Venu adapts the critically-acclaimed Hindi film Pink (2016) into Telugu.

    Vakeel Saab

    • Cast: Pawan Kalyan, Nivetha Thomas, Anjali, Ananya
    • Direction: Sriram Venu
    • Music: S S Thaman

    Sriram Venu packs in mass elements — stunt sequences and episodes of the hero saving the downtrodden — but also stays true to the source material of Pink and gets the hero to deliver the much-needed ‘no means no’ messaging effectively. That’s a big win.

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    A woman’s line of defence in a sexual harassment case is often countered with questions about her clothes, why she was out late night, does she drink, does she have a boyfriend… the list goes on. Amitabh Bachchan in Pink and Ajith in the Tamil remake Nerkonda Paarvai (2019) were the star conduits to highlight these issues through a hard-hitting satirical ‘safety manual’ and emphasise that women using their freedom to work, navigate the city at night or do anything that challenges staid notions of patriarchy aren’t sitting ducks for sexual assault.

    The courtroom face off between Pawan Kalyan and Prakash Raj (as prosecution lawyer Nanda) are the best portions of Vakeel Saab. In fact, the film shines when it stays focussed on the stories of the three women and the predicament they are caught in.

    The ‘mass’y deviations and the flashback involving Shruti Haasan are deterrents, since the writing and narration have nothing innovative in these segments. The only takeaway lies in showing what made Satyadev study law, and his tendency for activism during his university days.

    We get a rooted, region spin on the three women. Pallavi (Nivetha Thomas) who chooses to live on her own, closer to her IT workplace, Zareena (Anjali) as the breadwinner of her family based in Rajahmundry and Divya (Ananya) who hails from a tribal region in Telangana and works as a mehndi artist in Hyderabad are representative of several thousands of women with dreams of a career, financial independence, and much more.

    They are stranded in the middle of nowhere at night after their cab driver suspiciously remarks of a breakdown. Hope comes in the form of a car passing by, in which one of them is known to the girls (the narrative underlining that perpetrators could be from known circles too). But soon, things go awry. If you’ve seen Pink, you know it. If you haven’t, Vakeel Saab does a good enough job of appropriating it to the regional context and showing why women caught in such situations need justice and not character assassination, which is inevitably followed by clipping of their wings.

    The women — Nivetha, Anjali and Ananya — are remarkable. Nivetha and Ananya in particular internalise and convey the mixed feelings of courage, fear and despair effectively. They are excellent in the court debates and even in the scenes where they are in the background without a dialogue, when their eyes well up, they make you tear up too.

    Pawan Kalyan saves his best for the courtroom proceedings and the manner in which he takes on a woman cop, addressing her as a ‘superwoman’, brings the hall down. Prakash Raj gets a role that requires him to be truly sinister and he aces it.

    A major grouse has to be with the pre-interval portions that try to establish ‘vakeel saab’ as the saviour of people, peppered with fights and slow-motion walks. It’s something we’ve seen in many star-driven films and quite boring. The director also incorporates a few things from Nerkonda Paarvai, but gives it a more masala spin.

    But thankfully, once these portions are done with, Sriram Venu steers Vakeel Saab in the right direction.

    It might be five years since Pink, but the issues of consent and ‘no means no’ remain relevant, and this starry remake is a good vehicle to make it reach far and wide.

    Vakeel Saab is currently running in theatres

  • Hitting the high notes with Samira Koppikar

    Hitting the high notes with Samira Koppikar

    The singer-composer talks about her latest hit single ‘Ishq Tumpe Aise’ and her Bollywood journey and philosophy

    Singer, composer, and performer Samira Koppikar is currently enjoying the success of her latest single Ishq Tumpe Aise, which was released recently on Zee Music Company’s official YouTube channel.

    The talented artiste, who made her debut as a Bollywood music director with the song Maati Ka Palang for the film NH10, has not looked back since, dabbling in composing and singing for several hit numbers. In a quick chat, Samira talks about her musical journey, rediscovering herself creatively and her life’s philospophy.

    How does the success of Ishq Tumpe Aise make you feel?

    It’s just a beautiful feeling when your music reaches out to people. That’s what we make music for, and it’s very heartening to know that it makes a difference. I’m feeling really good and inspired to make more music.

    What has your relationship with music been like since the early days? How has it has evolved over time?

    Music, for me, started fairly early. Both my grandmothers were into music; one of them was a Carnatic classical singer and sang for radio, while the other was trained in Hindustani classical. My dad too, used to play the sitar, even though he was a doctor! So music was always somewhere there in the family, it’s in my DNA. Even though I studied interior design, I formed a band in college because I knew music is what I needed to do at some point.

    How do you strike a balance as an artist — between music for yourself and music in the form of work?

    When one plays their own music, it’s an extension of their ideology, experiences, sensibilities and vision. I don’t overthink about the audience too much. I mean, I do at some point, but my focus is on creating, it’s more organic that way.

    However, when it comes to a web-series or feature film, it’s someone else’s vision then. One needs to be true to that, and find a balance to express the creativity in sync with it.

    When there are other strong personalities involved with their own opinions, we have to still maintain our uniqueness and calm, and work in alignment with what’s best for the project.

    With the whole pandemic transitioning us into the ‘new normal’, how different is your experience working these days?

    It was a very surreal and difficult time initially. I think over the year we’ve got used to it, but when it first happened, I had all the time in the world and just felt creatively barren. It took me a few months to find my feet. Then whether it was happiness, sadness or depression, I put all my energy into music, which was extremely spiritual and healing.

    I think things are also gradually opening up in terms of work, so that’s a good thing.

    What do you hope to accomplish in the coming years?

    I would love to continue doing my riyaaz, being regular and creating. Singing and composing is inseparable for me, and I hope to continue balancing both.

    Year from now, I want to be true to my work and just concentrate on doing good music. The definition of good music is very relative, but in my understanding, it is a balance of good lyrics, melody and identity to the sound. I’d like to keep reinventing my sound.

    Also, I have this philosophy of carrying people with me. I don’t like to work with people who are just famous; for me, it’s all about the right energy. I think it is crucial to carry along and nurture talent, and that is my vision.

     

  • High notes of Holi – The Hindu

    High notes of Holi – The Hindu

    In Hindi cinema, the tradition of ‘hori’, celebrating the love of Radha and Krishna, has always been big

    It is hard to imagine Indian festivals without music. As most festivals are associated with the change of seasons and the arrival of a new crop, song and dance provide an opportunity to cherish the old and embrace the new. Holi assumes a special place in music as an entire genre called Hori is dedicated to the festival. In the classical format, it is closer to Dhrupad, while in semi-classical it is decorated with elements of Thumri. Sung across the Gangetic belt, Horis, set to Dhamar taal, celebrate the divine romance between Radha and Krishna.

    Over the years, Hindi cinema has drawn extensively from semi-classical and folk music, and Holi songs provide a great opportunity not just to tease the beloved but also to make a statement.

    V. Shantaram not only captured the vibrant nature of the festival in ‘Arey ja re hat natkhat’ (Navrang, 1959) but also how the day encompasses gender equality. More than seven-minute long, lyricist Bharat Vyas imbues the song with interesting wordplay where the girl says, ‘Arey ja re natkhat, na chhoo mera ghoonghat, palat ke doongi tujhe aaj gaari re, mujhko na samjho tum bholi bhali re’ (don’t touch my veil, I will give back in the same language; don’t consider me docile) and the boy responds: ‘Meethi lage aaj teri gaari re’ (your abuses sound sweet today).

    Some of the best Holi songs reflect the composite culture of the Hindi film industry. Mehboob Khan, Naushad and Shakeel Budayuni had a knack for creating Holi songs to depict the flow of time. In Mehboob Khan’s Mother India (1957), Shamshad Begum sings ‘Holi aayi re kanhai rang chhalke’ as Naushad brings Western music-style orchestration into play.

    Naushad and Shakeel combined again to create ‘Tan rang lo ji aaj man rang lo’ for S.U. Sunny’s Kohinoor. But before that, the duo had already hit the right chord with ‘Khelo rang hamare sang aaj din rang rangeela aaya’ in Aan (1952). Picturised on Dilip Kumar, Nimmi, Nadira and Premnath, it is again used as a narrative device by director Mehboob Khan and brings out the egalitarian idea behind the festival with lines like ‘aaj koi raja na koi rani hai.’

    A Holi song that very easily comes to mind is “Rang barse bheege chunar wali’ from Yash Chopra’s Silsila. Sung by Amitabh Bachchan and composed by Shiv-Hari (Pt. Shiv Kumar Sharma and Pt. Hariprasad Chaurasia), the song has outlived the film.

    They wanted a Hori and it was Yash Chopra who came up with the idea that they should approach Harivansh Rai Bachchan, who was in Bombay those days, to write the song. He came up with the lyrics, based on a rural folk song.

    Holi songs have also been used to underline or mitigate social evils. In Kati Patang’s ‘Aaj na chhodenge… khelenge hum Holi,’ Shakti Samanta used the song to portray the sorrow of widows who are expected to stay away from colours. In a radical move, the song ends with the heroine’s (Asha Parekh) white sari doused in gulal.

    Anand Bakshi and R.D. Burman combined again in Sholay where the festival played a crucial part in the narrative to create ‘Holi ke din dil mil jaate hain, rangon main rang mil jaate hain’.

    As Hindi film music became less lyrical and the festival more physical, Holi songs have been increasingly reduced to poor versions of ‘Rang barse’ or became just an excuse to drench bodies. But recently, sanity was restored with Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s Bajirao Mastani, where Birju Maharaj and Shreya Ghoshal combined to create the lyricism of yore with ‘Mujhe rang do laal nand ke lal’.