mention about the Kalam friend and what was the value of friends in his life
Answers
Answer:
He had three close friends since his childhood. They are Ramanadha Sastry, Aravindan, and Sivaprakasan. All these boys were from orthodox Hindu Brahmin families. Ramanadha Sastry was the son of Pakshi Lakshmana Sastry, the high priest of the Rameswaram temple.
Explanation:
1). One best book is equal to hundred good friends but one good friend is equal to a library .Dr A.P.J.Abdul kalam
2). Old friends are Gold, New friends are Diamond, If you get a Diamond, Don't forget the Gold because only gold can hold a diamond.
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Answer:
> Dr. A.P.J. Kalam-was a friend of mine for over 40 years — from 1973. The first time I met him was about a year earlier, when he was working as a Junior Scientist at the Aeronautical Development Establishment in Bangalore, where its Director, Air Cmd. Krishnamurty had taken me to see a “hovercraft” being developed by ADE. With lot of enthusiasm, Dr. Kalam and his co-workers demonstrated the functioning of the hovercraft under development.
He said that it would be very useful to travel over the sea near his native place in Rameswaram over some distances after further development was done. From October 1973 for over six months, our interaction was quite intense as he had been nominated by Prof. Satish Dhawan as a member of the task force set up by the government on using artificial satellites for different purposes. I was the Chairman of the task force, which had members from the three services, Department of Space, Department of Telecommunications and a few others. Dr. Kalam’s contribution to preparing the report was substantial. Even atthat time he was talking about including “payload recovery” after re-entry of that module from space. He and his team prepared the sketches, and made presentations to the task force members. The task force report, which was declassified in 1981, indeed covered this aspect in a simple academic way. From that time onwards, due to some commonality of professional interests, we stayed in touch. I used to attend seminars and workshops conducted by the ISRO, where we met a few times.
In mid-1981, I invited Dr. Raja Ramanna who was at that time our Scientific Adviser to the Defence Minister, and Dr. Kalam, who was working as Director at the ISROheadquarters in Bangalore, to the Defence Electronics Application Laboratory (DEAL) in Dehradun to inaugurate and deliver a technical lecture there. In his speech, Dr. Kalam paid compliments to our laboratory saying that while everyone complained about our poor communications, DEAL was able to contact him two to three times a day during the past few days. After that function, Dr. Rajaramanna had a discussion in my office about thepossibility of Dr. Kalam joining as Director of the DRDL in Hyderabad to provide leadership to India’s missiles programme. Dr. Kalam replied that Prof. Satish Dhawan would have to decide on that. That was how Dr. Kalam joined the DRDO. This episode has been covered in Dr Kalam’s first book “Wings of Fire”.
In June 1982, he joined as Director of DRDL while I was Director of the Defence Electronics Research Laboratory from January 1982. By then DRDL and DLRL had been working closely for a few years on different aspects of DRDL’s missile programmes. This necessitated that these two laboratories interact quite closely. Inputs from many DRDO laboratories, apart from these two laboratories, resulted in the famous Integrated Guided Missiles Development programme (IGMDP) of India. Dr. Kalam’s superb personal qualities, and his proven capability of team building, hard work and utmost sincerity andhonesty were the important assets which were sorely needed to provide leadership to a complex, multi-disciplined, multi-organizational IGMDP. Dr. Kalam’s willingness to hear the viewpoint of any person engaged in the projects, capacity of convincing leaders of several industries to undertake development/production work, and giving importance to everyone in the team resulted in IGMDP giving the desired results, though with some time and cost overruns.
This gave the Armed Forces and the government enough confidence to undertake collaborative projects with Russia (Brahmos) Israel (BARAK-8SAM) and France (MAITRI) as well as withBharat Dynamics Limited( MBDA project) in Hyderabad. The visualisation, planning and establishment of Research Centre Imarat, a 2,000-acres facility a few kilometres away from DRDL, was principally intended to develop some of the technologies needed for the IGMDP and carry out evaluation and integration of missile hardware and software. This was successfully done by Dr. Kalam by pooling the knowledge and talents of large numbers of engineers, scientists, industrialists and administrators. This gigantic task could not have been doneby others. The legacy created and implemented by Dr. Kalam is used by all DRDO laboratories now. That is what DRDO and our country has gained from Dr. Kalam’s stint at the DRDO from June 1982 to June 1991. It significantly changed the way major laboratories in DRDO handled their projects as well as the human and financial resources placed under themDr. Kalam with the author and other colleagues having a casual moment at a kacheri in Kanchanbagh, the DRDO staff accommodation
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