Friday, January 20, 2017

XPL Cream Creates A 24-Hour Layer Of Skin

XPL Cream Creates A 24-Hour Layer Of Skin To Cover Up Wrinkles And Blemishes

elastic-second-skin-1
There’s no shortage of beauty products that claim to reduce wrinkles. Whether any of them work, however, is highly disputed. While the XPL, short for cross-linked polymer layer, won’t magically erase the signs of aging like those suspicious beauty products swear to do, it can literally shave decades off your face by covering your wrinkles up.
Instead of turning back the clock on your skin like most anti-aging products claim to do, this new material is designed to merely mask the signs of aging. You know, just like makeup. Except, it’s made up of a skin-like material that can be applied to any part of your skin, covering up wrinkles, crow’s feet, and any other blemish for up to 24 hours at a time.
elastic-second-skin-2
Developed by researchers from MIT and Harvard, the XPL is applied in a two-step process. In the first step, polysiloxane components are applied to the skin, after which, a platinum catalyst is added to stiffen it up into a cross-linked film that looks and feels like regular skin. While that sounds technical, both layers are actually applied in the form of creams and ointments, so it should be no more complicated than your regular beauty routine. Aside from its cosmetic functions, the material can be used to protect damaged skin similar to bandages, as well as deliver topical skin medications while ensuring it doesn’t get wiped or washed off.
A startup called Olivo Laboratories has been formed to further refine and develop XPL, with plans to bring it to market in the near future. Learn more about the research from the link below.

Kobi Garden Robot

Kobi Garden Robot Trims Grass, Mulches Leaves, And Removes Snow

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We’ve already seen robotic lawnmowers that autonomously keep your garden in tip-top shape. Kobi, however, is much more than that. Billed as an “all-season garden robot,” it’s rigged to capably mow grass, mulch leaves, and remove snow, giving you a hands-free way to maintain lawns and gardens all year round.
Just like indoor cleaning robots, the automaton will need to make a digital map of the area it will maintain.  As such, you’ll need to show it the physical parameters of your property, define the boundaries, and let it know all the fixed obstacles. From there, it will simply rely on that digital map, along with its GPS and safety sensors, to find its way around your place.
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A proactive robot, Kobi can be programmed to perform daily maintenance in your property, so your grass will always be perfectly trimmed, with absolutely no leaves in sight. During snow season, it does the same thing, removing every small amount of snow it comes across, so there’s little chance you’ll wake up with a big pile of powder. It relies on real-time weather reports (it’s connected, after all) to know whether it’s snowing, too, so it can start removing powder all on its own.
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During operation, it runs at speeds of up to 2 mph, with fully autonomous recharging, so it will find its own way to the docking station when needed. Do note, the amount of area it can cover will depend on the activity. As in, while it can maintain lawns up to 7 acres, it can only pick up leaves within a 3 acre range as well as remove snow within 0.37 acres. While that might be a concern for multi-millionaires who live in giant properties, we’re guessing that’s enough for most homeowners.
Kobi is currently in the consumer testing phase. When released, it will be priced at $3,999

Preserving Bodies in a Deep Freeze: 50 Years Later

Preserving Bodies in a Deep Freeze: 50 Years Later


Preserving Bodies in a Deep Freeze: 50 Years Later
Credit: U.S. Department of Agriculture via Flickr/CC BY-SA 2.0
(Inside Science) -- Early in the 1960s, a group of enthusiasts advanced the concept of freezing humans as soon as they die, in hopes of reviving them after the arrival of medical advances able to cure the conditions that killed them. The idea went into practice for the first time 50 years ago.
On Jan. 12, 1967, James Bedford, an emeritus professor of psychology at the University of California, became the first person to be "cyropreserved." A small team of doctors and other enthusiasts froze him a few hours after he died from liver cancer that had spread to his lungs.
A few days later the team placed the body into an insulated container packed with dry ice. Later still, Bedford was immersed in liquid nitrogen in a large Dewar container. Fifteen years on, after a series of moves from one cryopreservation facility to another, his body found a home at the Alcor Life Extension Foundation in Scottsdale, Arizona, where it still resides.
By current standards of cryonics, the procedure was remarkably untidy and disorganized. Nevertheless, a visual evaluation of Bedford's condition in 1991 found that his body had remained frozen and suffered no obvious deterioration.
"There's no date set for another examination," said R. Michael Perry, care services manager at Alcor.
But as promoters of cryopreservation celebrate the 50th anniversary of Bedford's death and freezing -- known to some as "Bedford Day" -- they emphasize improvements to the freezing and preservation procedures that Bedford's experiences advanced.
The community is also undergoing a significant change in its expectations for reviving frozen patients. Rather than planning for a Lazarus-like resuscitation of the entire body, some proponents of the technology focus more on saving individuals' stored memories, and perhaps incorporating them into robots.
Beyond the cryopreservation community, however, an aura of scientific suspicion that surrounded Bedford's freezing remains.
"Reanimation or simulation is an abjectly false hope that is beyond the promise of technology and is certainly impossible with the frozen, dead tissue offered by the 'cryonics' industry," neuroscientist Michael Hendricks of McGill University in Montreal, Canada, wrote in Technology Review.
Scientists aren't the industry's only critics.
Families of individuals designated for freezing -- including Bedford's own family -- have gone to court to protest or defend loved ones' decisions to undergo freezing.
In a more recent case, in 2011, a Colorado probate judge upheld a contract that Mary Robbins had signed with Alcor over objections from Robbins' children. And last year the High Court of England upheld a mother's right to seek cryonic treatment of her terminally ill 14-year-old daughter after her death, despite the father's wishes.
Public reaction to the technology reached its nadir in New England in 2002, when court documents revealed that Boston Red Sox baseball icon Ted Williams was frozen in the Alcor facility, with his head severed from his body. Williams' son John Henry, who arranged the process, was himself frozen after he died of leukemia.
Politics has also impacted the technology's progress. In 2004, for example, Michigan's state government voted to license a facility called the Cryonics Institute, located in Clinton, as a cemetery. That move, reversed eight years later, prevented the institute from preparing bodies for cryopreservation on its own, because applying such procedures to a dead body required the services of a licensed funeral director.
The cryonics industry flatly disagrees with its critics.
Alcor asserts on its website that "[t]here are no known credible technical arguments that lead one to conclude that cryonics, carried out under good conditions today, would not work." The company adds: "Cryonics is a belief that no one is really dead until the information content of the brain is lost, and that low temperatures can prevent this loss."
Certainly the controversies have not discouraged candidates for cryopreservation.
Worldwide, more than 250 individuals are now housed in cryonic facilities, at a minimum per-person cost of about $28,000 in the U.S.
Russia's KrioRus company offers a cut-rate level starting at $12,000, with the condition that it stores several human bodies and assorted pets and other animals in communal Dewar containers. Individual contracts can specify the length of storage. At present, the U.S. and Russia are the only countries with facilities that offer human cryopreservation.
The first attempt at cryopreservation did not go particularly smoothly.
Bedford died before all preparations for his cryopreservation were complete. So instead of draining his blood and replacing it with a customized antifreeze solution to protect the body's tissues from freezing damage, the team simply injected the antifreeze into Bedford's arteries without removing the blood.
The team then surrounded the body in dry ice, and started it on a series of transfers from one container to another that ended up in a Dewar container in Alcor's facility.
Because of those difficulties, cryonics experts feared that the body had suffered serious damage. But the examination in 1991 quelled those concerns.
"We were really relieved that he was not discolored," Perry recalled. "And corners of the ice cubes [around him] were still sharp; he had stayed frozen all the time."
In recent years, cryonics promoters have borrowed from medical advances in such fields as cryobiology and nanobiology.
To prevent ice crystals from damaging cell walls in the frozen state, cryopreservationists replace the body's blood supply with mixtures of antifreeze compounds and organ preservatives -- a technique developed to preserve frozen eggs for fertility treatments.
Another emerging approach accounts for the separation of Ted Williams' head and body. Based on studies of roundworms, promoters of cryonics argue that freezing can preserve the contents of individuals' brains even if their bodies can't be revived. That opens the possibility of downloading cryopreserved personalities into a robotic future body.
Hendricks disagrees. "While it may be possible to preserve these features in dead tissue, that is certainly not happening now," he pointed out in Technology Review.
Scientists such as Barry Fuller, a professor of surgical science and low temperature medicine at England's University College, London, emphasize that even preserving body parts in such a way that they remain viable on thawing remains a distant dream.
"There is ongoing research into these scientific challenges, and a potential future demonstration of the ability to cryopreserve human organs for transplantation would be a major first step into proving the concept," he told The Guardian. "But at the moment we cannot achieve that."
Nevertheless, Perry expresses optimism about a timeline for the revival of frozen humans.
"We think in terms of decades," he said. "Sometimes we say fifty to a hundred years."
David Gorski, a surgeon at Wayne State University Medical Center in Michigan, takes a darker view.
"Fifty years from now," he said, "it's likely that all that will remain of my existence will be some scientific papers and a faint memory held by my nieces and nephews and maybe, if I'm lucky, a few of my youngest readers."
This article is provided by Inside Science News Service, which is supported by the American Institute of Physics.

Ultrafast Camera Captures 'Sonic Booms' of Light for First Time

Ultrafast Camera Captures 'Sonic Booms' of Light for First Time

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Ultrafast Camera Captures 'Sonic Booms' of Light for First Time
This graphic shows a so-called photonic Mach cone, which is sort of like a sonic boom; but in this instance, you can see the cone-shaped wake of light pulses.
Credit: Jinyang Liang and Lihong V. Wang
Just as aircraft flying at supersonic speeds create cone-shaped sonic booms, pulses of light can leave behind cone-shaped wakes of light. Now, a superfast camera has captured the first-ever video of these events.
The new technology used to make this discovery could one day allow scientists to help watch neurons fire and image live activity in the brain, researchers say. [Spooky! Top 10 Unexplained Phenomena]
When an object moves through air, it propels the air in front of it away, creating pressure waves that move at the speed of sound in all directions. If the object is moving at speeds equal to or greater than sound, it outruns those pressure waves. As a result, the pressure waves from these speeding objects pile up on top of each other to create shock waves known as sonic booms, which are akin to claps of thunder.
Sonic booms are confined to conical regions known as "Mach cones" that extend primarily to the rear of supersonic objects. Similar events include the V-shaped bow waves that a boat can generate when traveling faster than the waves it pushes out of its way move across the water.
Previous research suggested that light can generate conical wakes similar to sonic booms. Now, for the first time, scientists have imaged these elusive "photonic Mach cones."
Light travels at a speed of about 186,000 miles per second (300,000 kilometers per second) when moving through vacuum. According to Einstein's theory of relativity, nothing can travel faster than the speed of light in a vacuum. However, light can travel more slowly than its top speed — for instance, light moves through glass at speeds of about 60 percent of its maximum. Indeed, prior experiments have slowed light down more than a million-fold.
The fact that light can travel faster in one material than in another helped scientists to generate photonic Mach cones. First,study lead author Jinyang Liang, an optical engineer at Washington University in St. Louis, and his colleagues designed a narrow tunnel filled with dry ice fog. This tunnel was sandwiched between plates made of a mixture of silicone rubber and aluminum oxide powder.
Then, the researchers fired pulses of green laser light — each lasting only 7 picoseconds (trillionths of a second) — down the tunnel. These pulses could scatter off the specks of dry ice within the tunnel, generating light waves that could enter the surrounding plates.
The green light that the scientists used traveled faster inside the tunnel than it did in the plates. As such, as a laser pulse moved down the tunnel, it left a cone of slower-moving overlapping light waves behind it within the plates.
Using a "streak camera," scientists have imaged a cone-shaped wake of light called a photonic Mach cone for the first time.
Using a "streak camera," scientists have imaged a cone-shaped wake of light called a photonic Mach cone for the first time.
Credit: Liang et al. Sci. Adv.2017;3:e1601814
To capture video of these elusive light-scattering events, the researchers developed a "streak camera" that could capture images at speeds of 100 billion frames per second in a single exposure. This new camera captured three different views of the phenomenon: one that acquired a direct image of the scene, and two that recorded temporal information of the events so that the scientists could reconstruct what happened frame by frame. Essentially, they "put different bar codes on each individual image, so that even if during the data acquisition they are all mixed together, we can sort them out," Liang said in an interview.
There are other imaging systems that can capture ultrafast events, but these systems usually need to record hundreds or thousands of exposures of such phenomena before they can see them. In contrast, the new system can record ultrafast events with just a single exposure. This lends itself to recording complex, unpredictable events that may not repeat themselves in precisely the same manner each time they happen, as was the case with the photonic Mach cones that Liang and his colleagues recorded. In that case, the tiny specks that scattered light moved around randomly.
The researchers said their new technique could prove useful in recording ultrafast events in complex biomedical contexts such as living tissues or flowing blood. "Our camera is fast enough to watch neurons fire and image live traffic in the brain," Liang told Live Science. "We hope we can use our system to study neural networks to understand how the brain works."
The scientists detailed their findings online Jan. 20 in the journal Science Advances.
Original article on Live Science.

Virtual reality

Virtual reality

Virtual reality (VR) typically refers to computer technologies that use software to generate realistic images, sounds and other sensations that replicate a real environment (or create an imaginary setting), and simulate a user's physical presence in this environment. VR has been defined as "...a realistic and immersive simulation of a three-dimensional environment, created using interactive software and hardware, and experienced or controlled by movement of the body"[1] or as an "immersive, interactive experience generated by a computer".[2]
A person using virtual reality equipment is typically able to "look around" the artificial world, move about in it and interact with features or items that are depicted on a screen or in goggles. Most 2016-era virtual realities are displayed either on a computer monitor, a projector screen, or with a virtual reality headset (also called head-mounted display or HMD). HMDs typically take the form of head-mounted goggles with a screen in front of the eyes. Programs may include audio and sounds through speakers or headphones.
Advanced haptic systems in the 2010s may include tactile information, generally known as force feedback in medical, video gaming and military training applications. Some VR systems used in video games can transmit vibrations and other sensations to the user via the game controller. Virtual reality also refers to remote communication environments which provide a virtual presence of users with through telepresence and telexistence or the use of a virtual artifact (VA). The immersive environment can be similar to the real world in order to create a lifelike experience or it can differ significantly from reality where gamers can use fictional powers.

Etymology and terminology

Paramount for the sensation of immersion into virtual reality are a high frame rate (at least 95 fps), as well as a low latency. Furthermore, a pixel persistence lower than 3 ms is required, because if not, users will feel sick when moving their head around.
In 1938, Antonin Artaud described the illusory nature of characters and objects in the theatre as "la rÊalitÊ virtuelle" in a collection of essays, Le ThÊÃĸtre et son double. The English translation of this book, published in 1958 as The Theater and its Double,[3] is the earliest published use of the term "virtual reality". The term "artificial reality", coined by Myron Krueger, has been in use since the 1970s. The term "virtual reality" was used in The Judas Mandala, a 1982 science fiction novel by Damien Broderick. "Virtual" has had the meaning "being something in essence or effect, though not actually or in fact" since the mid-1400s, "...probably via sense of "capable of producing a certain effect" (early 1400s)".[4] The term "virtual" has been used in the computer sense of "not physically existing but made to appear by software" since 1959.[4]
Virtual reality is also called "virtual realities", "immersive multimedia", "artificial reality"[5] or "computer-simulated reality". A dictionary definition for "cyberspace" states that this word is a synonym for "virtual reality", but the two terms are fundamentally different (something that is "virtual" does not necessarily need to rely on a network, for instance).[6]
Virtual reality shares some elements with "augmented reality" (or AR). AR is a type of virtual reality technology that blends what the user sees in their real surroundings with digital content generated by computer software. The additional software-generated images with the virtual scene typically enhance way the real surroundings look in some way. Some AR systems use a camera to capture the user's surroundings or some type of display screen which the user looks at (e.g., Microsoft's HoloLens, Magic Leap).

 

Everything to know about Nokia 6

Everything to know about Nokia 6

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āļļāļŊāļą්āļą āˇ„āļ¯ුāļą්āˇ€ාāļ¯ෙāļą āļąිāļŊ āˇ€ීāļŠිāļēෝāˇ€.

 

Amazon starts Prime Air drone delivery

Amazon starts Prime Air drone delivery

āļ‡āļĢāˇ€ුāļ¸් āļšāˇ… āļˇාāļĢ්āļŠ āļŠ්‍āļģෝāļąා āļ¸āļŸිāļą් āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§āļ¸ āļœෙāļą්āˇ€ා āļœāļą්āļą āļ¯ැāļą් āļ´ුāˇ…ුāˇ€āļą්.
āļ…āļ´ āļ¸ීāļ§ āļ´ෙāļģ āļŠ්‍āļģෝāļąා āļœැāļą āļ…āˇƒා āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ āļœුāˇ€āļąිāļą් āļœොāˇƒ් āˇ„āļ¸ුāļ¯ා āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා
āļ‡āˇ†්āļœāļąිāˇƒ්āļŽාāļąāļēේ, āļ‰āļģාāļšāļēේ, āˇƒිāļģිāļēාāˇ€ේ āļąැāļ­āˇ„ොāļ­් āļēුāļ¯ āļœිāļąි āļ‡āˇ€ිāˇ…ුāļĢු āļģāļ§āļš āˇƒāļ­ුāļģු āˇ„āļ¸ුāļ¯ාāˇ€āļą්āļ§ āļļෝāļ¸්āļļ āˇ„ෙāˇ…ීāļ¸ āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļļāļŗ āļ´්‍āļģāˇ€ෘāļ­්āļ­ිāˇ€āļŊāļēි. āļ‰āļą් āļ´āˇƒුāˇ€ āļ‘āļ¸ āļŠ්‍āļģෝāļąා āˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļšැāļ¸āļģා āˇƒāˇ€ිāļšāļģāļœෙāļą āļœොāˇƒ් āļļāļŊ āˇƒීāļ¸ාāˇ€ේ āļĄාāļēාāļģූāļ´ āļœුāˇ€āļąිāļą් āļœොāˇƒ් āļœැāļąීāļ¸āļ§āļ­් āļ‰āļą්āļ´āˇƒුāˇ€ āˇƒිāļąāļ¸ාāˇ€āļ§ āļģූāļ´āˇ€ාāˇ„ිāļąිāļēāļ§ āļ¸ෙāļą්āļ¸ āļ¸ිāļēුāˇƒිāļš් āˇ€ීāļŠිāļēෝāˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļ…āˇ€āˇ්‍āļē āļ¯āļģ්āˇāļą āļģූāļœāļ­ āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ§āļ­් āļēොāļ¯ා āļœෙāļą, āļ¸ෑāļ­ āļšාāļŊāļēේ āļ¯ී āļŊංāļšාāˇ€ේ āļ´්‍āļģāˇƒිāļ¯්āļ° āļ¸āļ°්‍āļē āļ…ාāļēāļ­āļąāļēāļš් āļ¸āļ°්‍āļē āļąීāļ­ි āļšāļŠāļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āļąීāļ­ිāˇ€ිāļģෝāļ°ී āļŊෙāˇƒ āļ­āļ¸ āļļāļŊāļē āļ´ෙāļą්āˇ€ීāļ¸āļ§āļ­් āļēොāļ¯ාāļœෙāļą āļ­ිāļļුāļĢි. āļŊෝāļšāļēේ āļ…ංāļš āļ‘āļšේ E-Commerce āˇ€ෙāˇ…ෙāļą්āļ¯ා āˇ€āļą Amazon.com āˇ€ෙāļļ් āļ…āļŠāˇ€ිāļē āˇ„āļģāˇ„ා āļ´ාāļģිāļˇෝāļœිāļšāļēāļą්āļ§ āļˇාāļĢ්āļŠ āˇ€ිāļšිāļĢීāļ¸ේ āļ¯ී āļ”āˇ€ුāļą්āļ§ āļ…āˇ€āˇ්‍āļē āļ­ැāļąāļ§āļ¸ āļ’āˇ€ා āļģැāļœෙāļąāˇ€ිāļ­් āļ¯ීāļ¸ේāļ¯ීāļ­් āļŊොāˇ€ āļ…āļą් āˇƒිāļēāļŊ්āļŊāļ§āļ¸ āˇ€āļŠා āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģිāļēෙāļą් āˇƒිāļ§ිāļą āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ”āˇ€ුāļą් āļ­āļ¸ āļŠිāļŊිāˇ€āļģි āˇƒේāˇ€ාāˇ€ āļ¯ිāļœිāļą් āļ¯ිāļœāļ§āļ¸ āļšාāļģ්āļēāļš්‍āˇ‚āļ¸ āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āˇ€āļģ්āļ­āļ¸ාāļąāļēේ āļ‡āļ¸āˇƒāļą් āļ´්‍āļģāļēිāļ¸් āļ‘āļēාāļģ් (Amazon Prime Air) āˇ„āļŗුāļą්āˇ€ා āļ¯ෙāļ¸ිāļą්, āļ¯ැāļą් āļ´ාāļģිāļˇෝāļœිāļšāļēāļą්āļ§ āļ­āļ¸ āļˇාāļĢ්āļŠ āļœුāˇ€āļąිāļą් āļœෙāļ¯āļģāļ§ āļœෙāļą්āˇ€ා āļœැāļąීāļ¸ේ āˇƒේāˇ€ාāˇ€āļš් āļš්‍āļģිāļēාāļ­්āļ¸āļš āļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļෙāļąāˇ€ා.

āļ‡āļ¸āˇƒāļą් āļ´්‍āļģāļēිāļ¸් āļ‘āļēාāļģ් āļ´්‍āļģāļŽāļ¸ āļŠිāļŊිāˇ€āļģි āļ‘āļš āļ´āˇƒුāļœිāļē āļ¯ිāļąෙāļš āļ‘ංāļœāļŊāļą්āļ­āļēේ āļ¯ී āˇƒිāļ¯ුāˇ€ු āļ…āļ­āļģ, āļ‡āļĢāˇ€ුāļ¸් āļąැāļ­āˇ„ොāļ­් āļ•āļŠāļģāļē āļš්āļŊිāļš් āļšිāļģීāļ¸ෙāļą් āˇ€ිāļąාāļŠිāļēāļšāļ§ āļ´āˇƒුāˇ€ āļ‡āļĢāˇ€ුāļ¸් āļˇාāļĢ්āļŠ āļ´ාāļģිāļˇෝāļœිāļšāļēාāļœේ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒේ āļ¸ිāļ¯ුāļŊāļ§āļ¸ āļœුāˇ€āļąිāļą් āļœොāˇƒ් āļŊāļļා āļ¯ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ‡āļ¸āˇƒāļą් āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšāˇ…ේ āļŠිāļŊිāˇ€āļģි āˇƒේāˇ€āļēේ āļ¯ැāˇ€ැāļą්āļ­ āļ‰āļ¯ිāļģි āļ´ිāļ¸්āļ¸āļš් āļ­āļļāļ¸ිāļą්. āļ‘āļ¸ āˇƒිāļ¯ුāˇ€ීāļ¸ āļ´āˇ„āļ­ිāļą් āļļāļŊāļą්āļą.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vNySOrI2Ny8

 āļ‡āļ¸āˇƒāļą් āˇƒāļ¸ාāļœāļ¸ේ āˇƒීāļœ්‍āļģ āļ­ාāļš්‍āˇ‚āļĢිāļš āļ¯ිāļēුāļĢුāˇ€āļš් āļąāˇ€ෝāļ­්āļ´ාāļ¯āļą āļš්‍āļģāļ¸āˇ€ේāļ¯āļēāļą්āļœෙāļą් āļ‡āļ­ි āļšāļģāļœෙāļą āļ‡āļ­ි āļšාāļģ්āļēāļš්‍āˇ‚āļ¸āļ­ාāˇ€ āļŊොāˇ€ āļ´ුāļģා āļ´ාāļģිāļˇෝāļœිāļšāļēāļą් āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ…āˇƒීāļ¸ිāļ­ āļĸāļąāļ´්‍āļģිāļēāļ­්āˇ€āļēāļš් āļŊāļš්āļšāļģ āļœෙāļą āļ‡āļ­ි āļļāˇ€āļ§ āˇ„ොāļŗāļ¸ āˇƒාāļ°āļšāļē āļ‡āļ¸āˇƒāļą් āļ´්‍āļģාāļģāļ¸්āļˇāļšāļēා (Founder) āˇƒāˇ„ āļ´්‍āļģāļ°ාāļąිāļēා āˇ€āļą āļĸෙāˇ†් āļļෙāˇƒෝāˇƒ් 2016āļ¯ී āļšāˇ… āˇƒංāļœāļĢāļąāļē āļ…āļąුāˇ€ āļŊොāˇ€ 04 āˇ€ැāļąි āļ°āļąāˇ€āļ­්āļ¸ āļ´ුāļ¯්āļœāļŊāļēා āļŊෙāˇƒ āˇ්‍āļģේāļĢීāļœāļ­ āˇ€ීāļ¸āļēි.

760mph trains

760mph trains

This could seriously speed up your commute (Hyperloop)
This could seriously speed up your commute (Hyperloop)
Hate commuting? Imagine, instead, your train carriage hurtling down a tunnel at the same speed as a commercial jet airliner. That’s the dream of PayPal, Tesla and SpaceX founder Elon Musk. His Hyperloop system would see ‘train’ passengers travel at up to 760mph through a vacuum tube, propelled by compressed air and induction motors. A site has been chosen with the goal of starting test runs in two years. Once built, the loop will ferry passengers between San Francisco and LA in 35 minutes, compared to 7.5 hours by train.

Google Glass

Google Glass

Augmented Reality has already gotten into our life in the forms of simulated experiment and education app, but Google is taking it several steps higher with Google Glass. Theoretically, with Google Glass, you are able to view social media feeds, text, Google Maps, as well as navigate with GPS and take photos. You will also get the latest updates while you are on the ground.
(Image Source: YouTube)
It’s truly what we called vision, and it’s absolutely possible given the fact that the Google’s co-founder, Sergey Brin has demo’ed the glass with skydivers and creatives. Currently the device is only available to some developers with the price tag of $1500, but expect other tech companies trying it out and building an affordable consumer version.

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

            āļœීāļ­āļē āļēāļąු..........

                    āˇƒිංāˇ„āļŊ āļˇාāˇ‚ා āˇ€්‍āļēāˇ€āˇ„ාāļģāļē āļ­ුāˇ… āļœී, āļœීāļ­,āļœීāļ­ිāļšා āļ†āļ¯ි āˇ€āļ āļą āļ¯āļš්āļąāļ§ āļŊැāļļුāļĢ āļ¯ āˇ€āļ­්āļ¸āļą් āļˇාāˇ€ිāļ­āļē āļ­ුāˇ… āļ´්‍āļģāļ āļŊිāļ­ āˇ€ී āļ‡āļ­්āļ­ේ āļœීāļ­āļē āļēāļą්āļąāļēි.āļœීāļ­āļē āļēāļą āˇ€āļ āļąāļē āļ‰ංāļœ්‍āļģීāˇƒි āļļāˇƒිāļą් āļœීāļ­āļē āļąāļ¸් āˇ€āļą āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ¯āļ¸ිāˇ… āļļāˇƒිāļą් 'āļ´ාāļ§්āļ§ු 'āļąāļ¸් āˇ€ේ. 
                        āļœීāļ­āļē āļēāļąු āļšුāļ¸āļš් āļ¯ āļēāļą්āļą āˇ€ිāˇ€ිāļ° āļ…āļģ්āļŽāļšāļŽāļą āļģාāˇිāļēāļš් āļ¯āļš්āļąāļ§ āļ‡āļ­.

                           "āļœාāļēāļąāļē āļšāˇ… āˇ„ැāļšි āļ´āļ¯්‍āļē āļąිāļļāļą්āļ°āļē .āˇ€ාāļ¯āļąāļē āļģāˇ„ිāļ­āˇ€ āˇ„ෝ āļģāˇ„ිāļ­āˇ€  āļœාāļēāļąා āļšිāļģීāļ¸ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා 
                              āļģāļ ිāļ­ āļ´āļ¯්‍āļē āļąිāļļāļą්āļ°āļē"  
                                                                                             - āˇƒිංāˇ„āļŊ āˇƒාāˇ„ිāļ­්‍āļē āˇāļļ්āļ¯ āļšෝāˇ‚āļē-

                           "āļąූāļ­āļą āˇ€්‍āļēāˇ€āˇ„ාāļģāļēේ āļœීāļ­ āļēāļą්āļąෙāļą් āļ…āļ¯āˇ„āˇƒ් āˇ€āļąුāļēේ āˇ€ාāļ¯āļąāļēāļ­් āˇƒāļ¸āļŸ āļœාāļēāļąāļē āļšිāļģීāļ¸ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා 
                               āļąිāļļāļą්āļ°ිāļ­ āļ•āļąෑāļ¸ āļšāļŊා āļąිāļģ්āļ¸ාāļĢāļēāļšි"
                                                                                            -āļ’.āˇ€ී.āˇƒුāļģāˇ€ිāļģ(āˇƒාāˇ„ිāļ­්‍āļē āˇ€ිāļ ාāļģ āļ´්‍āļģāļ¯ීāļ´ිāļšාāˇ€)

                                 āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āļ…āļģ්āļŽāļšāļŽāļą āˇ€ූ āļœීāļ­āļē āļ…āļą් āļšāļŊා āļ¸ාāļ°්‍āļēāļēāļą් āļ…āļ­ුāļģිāļą් āļĨාāļ­ීāļ­්āˇ€āļēāļš් āļ¯āļš්āˇ€āļąු āļŊāļļāļą්āļąේ āļšāˇ€ිāļēāļ§āļēි.āļ‘āļēāļ§ āˇ„ේāļ­ුāˇ€ āˇ€āļą්āļąේ āļœීāļ­āļēāļš් āļąිāļģ්āļ¸ාāļĢāļē āˇ€ීāļ¸ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා āˇƒෑāļ¸āˇ€ිāļ§āļ¸ āļšාāˇ€්‍āļēාāļ­්āļ¸āļš āļģāļ āļąāļēāļš් āļēොāļ¯ා āļœැāļąීāļ¸āļēි.āļœීāļ­āļē āˇ„ා āļšාāˇ€්‍āļē āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ´āˇ€āļ­ිāļą āˇ€ෙāļąāˇƒ්āļšāļ¸් āļģැāˇƒāļšි.
                                     āļšāˇ€ිāļē āļēāļąු āļ’āļš āļ´ුāļ¯්āļœāļŊ āļšāļŊා āļ¸ාāļ°්‍āļēāļēāļšි.āļ¸ෙāļē āļ‡āˇƒāļ§ āˇ„ා āļļුāļ¯්āļ°ිāļēāļ§ āļœොāļ āļģ āˇ€āļą āļ…āļ­āļģ āļˇාāˇ‚ා āļˇාāˇ€ිāļ­āļēāļ§ āˇƒීāļ¸ා āļąැāļ­.āļšāˇ€ිāļēෙāˇ„ි āļ†āļšෘāļ­ි āˇ„ා āˇ€ිāļģිāļ­් āˇƒැāˇƒāļŗ‍ෙāļąුāļēේ āˇ€āļ āļą āļ´ාāļ¯āļš āļšොāļ§ āļœෙāļąāļē. āļąāļ¸ුāļ¯ු āļœීāļ­āļē āļēāļąු āˇƒාāļ¸ූāˇ„ිāļš āļšāļŊා āļ¸ාāļ°්‍āļēāļēāļšි.āļšāļąāļ§ āˇ„ා āļļුāļ¯්āļ°ිāļēāļ§ āļœෝāļ āļģ āˇ€āļą āļ…āļ­āļģ āļœීāļ­āļēෙāˇ„ි āļˇාāˇ‚ාāˇ€ āˇƒුāļœේāļē āˇ€ිāļē āļēුāļ­ුāļē.āļ¸ෙāˇ„ි āļ†āļšෘāļ­ි āˇ„ා āˇ€ිāļģිāļ­් āˇƒැāˇƒāļŗෙāļąුāļēේ āˇ€āļ āļą āˇ„ා āˇƒංāļœීāļ­āļē āļ´ාāļ¯āļšāļšොāļ§ āļœāļąිāļ¸ිāļąි.
                                    āļ¯ේāˇිāļē āˇƒාāˇ„ිāļ­්‍āļē āˇ€ිāˇ‚āļēෙāˇ„ි āļąාāļŠāļœāļ¸් āļēුāļœāļē āļ‡āļģāļšීāļ¸āļ­් āˇƒāļ¸āļŸāļ¸ āˇƒංāļœීāļ­ āļąිāļģ්āļ¸ාāļĢāļēāļą්āˇ„ි āļ¯ාāļēāļšāļ­්āˇ€āļē āļœීāļ­āļē āˇƒāļ¸āļŸ āļ“āļą්āļ¯්‍āļģිāļē āˇ€ āļļāļ¯්āļ° āˇ€āļą්āļąāļ§ āˇ€ිāļē.āļ´ෙāļģāļ´āļģ āļ¯ෙāļ¯ිāļœ āˇƒංāļœීāļ­āļēāļą්āˇ„ි āˇƒāļ¸්āļ¸ිāˇ්‍āļģāļĢāļē āˇ€ීāļ¸āļ­් āˇƒāļ¸āļŸāļ¸ āļœීāļ­ āļšāļŊාāˇ€āļšāļ§ āļ¸ං āˇƒෑāļ¯ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āˇ€ිāļē.āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āļ¯āˇ„ āļ…āļ§āˇ€āļą āˇƒිāļēāˇ€āˇƒේ āļąාāļŠāļœāļ¸ āļļිāˇ„ිāˇ€ිāļ¸ේ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļ…āļ¯ āļ¯āļš්āˇ€ා āˇ€ිāˇ€ිāļ° āļ…āļ¯ිāļēāļģ āļœāļĢāļąාāˇ€āļš් āˇƒāļ¸āļ­ිāļš්‍āļģāļ¸āļĢāļē āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āļœීāļ­āļē āļļොāˇ„ෝ āļ¯ුāļģāļš් āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢ āļ­ිāļļේ.

                              āļąාāļŠāļœāļ¸් āļœී āļēුāļœāļē,āļąූāļģ්āļ­ි āļœී āļēුāļœāļē,āļ§ීāļ§āļģ් āļēුāļœāļē,āļļāļēිāļŊා,āļšැāļģොāļŊ්,āļ´āˇƒāļą්,āļšāļą්āļ­ාāļģු,āļœ්‍āļģැāļ¸āˇ†ෝāļą් āļœි āļēුāļœāļē,āļœුāˇ€āļą් āˇ€ිāļ¯ුāļŊි āļœී,āļ ිāļ­්‍āļģāļ´āļ§ āļœි,āˇ€ේāļ¯ිāļšා āļąාāļ§්‍āļē āļœී,āļšැāˇƒāļ§්āļ´āļ§ āļœී,āļ´්‍āļģāˇƒංāļœ āļœී,āˇƒංāļēුāļš්āļ­ āļ­ැāļ§ි āļœී āļ¯āļš්āˇ€ා āļēුāļœ āļœāļĢāļąාāˇ€āļš් āļ´āˇƒු āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą් āļ´ැāļ¸ීāļĢ āļ­ිāļļේ. 
                            āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āˇ€ිāˇ€ිāļ° āˇෛāļŊීāļą් āļ…āļąුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļœීāļ­āļēේ āļ´ිāļēāˇ€āļģ āļ´ෘāļŽුāļŊ āˇ€ී āļ‡āļ­.āˇƒāļģāļŊ āļœීāļ­,āļšāļ´ිāļģිāļ¤්āļ¤ා āļļāļēිāļŊා āļœීāļ­,āļˇාāˇ‚ා āļ¸ිāˇ්‍āļģිāļ­ āļœීāļ­,āļ­āļąුāˇ€āļ§ āļŊිāļēූ āļœීāļ­,āļģැāļ´් āļœීāļ­ āˇ€ැāļąි āļąāˇ€්‍āļē āļœීāļ­āļēāļą් āļ¯āļ‡āˇƒුāļģිāļą් āļœීāļ­āļēේ āˇ€ිāļšාāˇāļąāļē āˇƒිāļ¯ු āˇ€ූ āļ…āļēුāļģු āļ´ැāˇ„ැāļ¯ිāļŊි āˇ€ේ.
                                āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āļ†āļģāļ¸්āļˇ āˇ€ූ āļœීāļ­ āļšāļŊාāˇ€ āļ‡āˇƒුāļģෙāļą් āļ­ෝāļģාāļœāļą්āļąා āļŊāļ¯ āļœීāļ­ āļ´āˇ„āļš් āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļļāļŗ āļģāˇƒāˇ€ිāļą්āļ¯āļąāļēāļ§ āļēොāļ¸ු āļšāļģ āļļāļŊāļ¸ු.



Sunday, January 15, 2017


                                  āļ¯āˇ„āˇ€āļŊ් āļ†āˇ„ාāļģāļē āˇƒāļ¯āˇ„ා āˇƒāļšāˇƒ් āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ§ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒ āļ­ුāˇ… āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ āˇ€āļ§්āļ§āļš්āļšා āļšෑāļŊ්āļŊāļš් āļ´āļ¸āļĢි.āļ‡āļē āˇ€āˇ„ා āļļāļ­āļš් āˇ„ා āˇ€āļ§්āļ§āļš්āļšා āˇ€ෑංāļĸāļąāļēāļš් āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļēෙāļŊ āļšāļģ āļ­āļ¸ āļ‡‍āļœෙāˇ„ි āļ¯ැāˇ€āļ§ෙāļ¸ිāļą් āˇƒිāļ§ි āļŊොāļšු āļ´ුāļ­ා āˇƒāļŗāļģුāļ§ āļļāļ­් āļ´āļ­āļš් āļļෙāļ¯ා āļ¯ී āļ´ුāļ§ුāˇ€āļš āˇ€ාāļŠිāļšāļģāˇ€ා āļ­ැāļļීāļē.āļ­āļ¸ āļ…āļ­ āļ¯āļģුāˇ€ා āļ­āˇ€āļ¸āļ­් āˇƒුāˇ€ āļąිāļą්āļ¯ේ āļ´āˇƒුāˇ€āļą āļļැāˇ€ිāļą් āļ‡āļē āļģාāļ­්‍āļģී āļ†āˇ„ාāļģāļē āļ´ිāˇƒූ āˇ€āˇ…ං āļ´ිāļŸāļą් āˇƒෝāļ¯āļą්āļąāļ§ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļ‘āļ´ිāļ§ිāļą් āļ­ිāļļූ āļšāļģාāļ¸āļē āļ…āˇƒāļŊāļ§ āļœිāļēා āļē.

                                    āˇƒූāļģ්āļēāļēා āˇ€ිāļŊිāˇƒ්āˇƒāļ¸ිāļą් āļ­ිāļļූ āˇƒිāļē āļ¯āļ­් āļ´ෙāˇ… āļ‘āļšෙāļąෙāˇ„ිāļ¸ āˇƒāļŸāˇ€ා āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ āļē.āļ…āļŗුāļģු āˇ€āļŊාāˇ€āļą් āļģුāļ¯ුāļģු āˇ€ූ āˇƒූāļģ්āļēāļēා āˇ€āˇƒා āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļ§ āˇƒෙāˇ€āļąāļš් āļŊāļļා āļ¯ීāļ¸āļ§ āļē.āˇ€ැāˇ„ි āļļිāļŗු āļ‘āļšිāļąෙāļš āļļිāļ¸ āļ´āļ­ිāļ­ āˇ€ූāļēේ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āļœāļ­āļ§ āˇƒිāˇƒිāļŊāļš් āļŊāļļා āļ¯ීāļ¸āļ§ āļē.āļ´ැāļē āļ­ුāļą āˇ„āļ­āļģāļš් āļ¸ුāˇ…ුāļŊ්āļŊේ āļ‡āļ¯ āˇ„ැāļŊෙāļą āļ¸ුāļģුāļœāˇƒāļą් āˇ€āļģුāˇƒාāˇ€ āļ¯ෙāˇƒ āˇƒāļŗāļģු āļļāļŊා āˇƒිāļ§ිāļēේ āļšිāˇƒිāļ¯ු āˇ„ැāļŸීāļ¸āļšිāļą් āļ­ොāļģāˇ€ āļē.āļ”āˇ„ුāļœේ āļļāļ­්āļ´āļ­ āļ¯ āˇƒීāļ­āļŊ āˇ€ී āļ­ිāļļූ āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ´ැāļē āļ­ුāļą āˇ„āļ­āļģ āļ´ුāļģාāˇ€āļ§ āļ‘āļšāļ¯ු āļļāļ­් āļšāļ§āļš් āˇ„ෝ āļšෑ āļļāˇ€āļ§ āļšිāˇƒිāļ¯ු āˇƒāļŊāļšුāļĢāļš් āļąොāˇ€ී āļē.

                   "āˇƒāļģāļĢāļ´ාāļŊ āļ¸ාāļ¸ේ........āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ…āļš්āļšා āļ§ැāļ´් āļ‘āļš āˇ…āļŸ āˇ€ැāļ§ිāļŊා āļ‰āļą්āļąāˇ€ා.āˇƒිāˇ„ිāļēāļ­් āļąෑ.
                       āļ¸ං āˇ„ිāļ­āļą්āļąේ         āˇ€ැāˇƒ්āˇƒ āˇ€āˇ„ිāļą්āļąāļ­් āļšāļŊිāļą් āˇ€ැāļ§ිāļŊා āļ­ිāļēෙāļą්āļąේ..."

                      āļģāļĸිāļ­ āļšෑāļœāˇƒāļ¸ිāļą් āˇƒāļģāļĢāļ´ාāļŊāļœේ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢිāļēේ āļē.āˇƒāļģāļĢāļ´ාāļŊāļ­්, āļģāļĸිāļ­āļ­්,āļšුāˇƒුāļ¸āļŊāļ­ාāļ­් āļ‰āļš්āļ¸āļąිāļą් āļ¸ āļ‡āļē āˇ€ āļģෝāˇ„āļŊ āˇ€ෙāļ­ āļģැāļœෙāļą āļœිāļēāˇ„.āļ’ āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ¯ āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āļ´ුāˇ€āļ­ āļ†āļģංāļ ි āˇ€ී āļģෝāˇ„āļŊ āˇ€ෙāļ­ āļ¯ිāˇ€ āļœිāļēේ āļ‹āļą්āļ¸āļ­්āļ­āļšāļēāļšු āļ´āļģිāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļąි.

             āˇ€ෛāļ¯්‍āļēāˇ€āļģāļēා āļ‡āļēāˇ€ āļ´āļģීāļš්āˇ‚ාāļšāļģ āļļāļŊා āˇƒිāļē āˇ„ිāˇƒ āļ´āˇ„āļ­් āļšāļģ āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ āļē.

                         "āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āļēා āļ¯ැāļą් āļļොāļģුāˇ€āļ§ āˇ„ැāļ´ි āˇ„ැāļ´ී āļ…āļŦāļąāˇ€ා.āļ•āļšා āļœāˇ„āļ´ු āļ´ාāļģāļš් āˇ€ැāļģāļ¯ිāļŊා āļ­āļ¸āļēි
                              āļ¸ේ āļ…āˇ„ිංāˇƒāļšී āļ¸ැāļģුāļĢේ."

             āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļœේ āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļą් āˇ„ුāˇƒ්āļ¸ āļ´ොāļ¯ āˇ€ාāļ­āļŊāļēāļ§ āļ¸ුāˇƒුāˇ€ෙāļ¯්āļ¯ී āļģැāˇƒ්āˇ€ āˇƒිāļ§ි āļ´ිāļģිāˇƒāļœේ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļ­් āļšāļŗුāļිāļą් āļļāļģāˇ€ිāļē.

Monday, January 2, 2017

       "  āļ…āļģ āˇ…āļŸāļ¯ි āˇ„āļ¸්āļļāˇ€ුāļĢ āˇ…āļ¸āļēා āļšāļ§්āļ§āļŠිāļēāļœෙ āļšිāļēāļŊāļąේ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ’āļšිāļ§ āļœāˇ„āļąāˇ€ා āļšිāļēāļą්āļąේ."

             āļ¸ෙāˇƒේ āˇ€ිāˇ€ිāļ°ාāļšාāļģāļēෙāļą් āļšāļ§āļšāļ­ා āļœāļ¸āļ´ුāļģා āļ´ැāļ­ිāļģ āļēāļ¯්āļ¯ී āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļœේ āļ…āˇƒāļąීāļ´ āļ­āļ­්āļ­්āˇ€āļē āˇ€āļŠ  āˇ€āļŠාāļ­් āļ‹āļœ්‍āļģ āˇ€āļą්āļąāļ§ āˇ€ිāļē.āļšāļŊ් āļœāļ­ āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āˇƒිāˇ„ිāļē āˇ€ිāļšāļŊ් āˇ€āļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ āļē.

                 " āļ¯āļą්āļąāˇ€āļ¯ āļ…āļš්āļšේ,āļ…āļģ āļ‘āˇ„ා āļœෙāļ¯āļģ āļšāļšිāļ­ා āļ­āļģāļ¸් āļœිāļąි āļļෝāļ¸්āļļāļēāļš් āļ­āˇ€āļ­් āļ¸ේ āļœāļ¸ේ āļąෑ."

                  "āˇƒāļģāļĢāļ´ාāļŊāļēා āļ¸āļœේ āļ¸ිāļąිāˇ„āļ§ āļļොāļą්āļą āļ¯ීāļŊා āļ’ āļ¸ිāļąිāˇ„āˇ€ āļąැāļ­ි āļšāļģāļŊා āļ¯ැāļ¸්āļ¸ා.āļ•āļšාāļ§ āˇ„ොāļŗāļš් āļąāļ¸්                           āˇ€ෙāļą්āļą āļ‘āļ´ා āļ¯ෙāˇ€ිāļēāļąේ."
                     āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āˇ„ිāļ§ි āˇ„ැāļ§ිāļēෙāļ¸ āˇƒිāˇ„ිāļē āˇ€ිāļšāļŊ් āˇ€ීāļ¸ āˇ„ේāļ­ුāˇ€āļą් āļąිāļģāļąිāļ­āļģ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āļ‹āļ¯āˇ€් āļ´āļ¯āˇ€්āˇ€āļ§ āˇƒිāļ§ි āļ…āļēāļ§ āļļැāļą āˇ€ැāļ¯ීāļ¸āļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ාāļē.

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                      "āļŠෙāļą්āļą...............āļŠෙāļąා ..................āļŠෙāļąෝ......."

                                     āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļŊāˇ„ි āļŊāˇ„ිāļēේ āļ¸ āļ­ොāˇ€ිāļŊāļēāļš් āˇƒූāļ¯ාāļąāļ¸් āļšāˇ…ේ āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāļģිāļŗāļ§ āļēāļš්āˇ‚āļēāļšු āļ†āˇ€ේāˇ āˇ€ී āļ‡āļ­ැāļēි āˇƒිāļ­āļ¸ිāļąි.āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āˇƒිāļ¸ෙāļą්āļ­ි āļ´ොāˇ…āˇ€ āļ¸āļ­ āļ‘āˇ…āļą āļŊāļ¯ āļ´ැāļ¯ුāļģෙāˇ„ි āˇ€ැāļ­ිāļģී āˇƒිāļ§ි āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ…āˇƒāļŊ්āˇ€ාāˇƒීāˇ„ු āļ‡āļēāˇ€ āˇ€āļ§āļšāļģāļœෙāļą āˇƒිāļ§ිāļēāˇ„.

                         " āļ…āļąේ āļ¸ාāļ¸ේ āļ•āˇ€ා āļšāļģāļŊා āˇ€ැāļŠāļš් āļąෑ.āļ¸āļ¸ āļ¸ැāļģෙāļą්āļą āļēāļą්āļąේ."

                         āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļœුāļģුāļą්āļąාāļą්āˇƒේ āļ¸ාāļ¸ාāļ§ āļ´ැāˇ€āˇƒුāˇ€ේ āˇƒිāˇ„āļ‘ිāļą් āļšෙāļŗිāļģිāļŊිāļŊāļš් āļ¯ āˇƒāļ¸āļœිāļąි.

                            "āļ…āļąේ āļĸāļēේ....āļ¸āļœෙ āļ¯āļģු āļ´ැāļ§āˇ€් āļ¯ෙāļą්āļąා āˇ„ොāļŗāļ§ āļļāļŊාāļœāļą්āļą."

                         āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ¯ෙāˇƒ āļļāļŊා āļ´ැāˇ€āˇƒුāˇ€ාāļē.āļ¸ේ āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āļœේ āļ‰āˇ„ āļ¸ොāˇ… āļģāļ­් āˇ€ෙāļ¸ිāļą් āļ­ිāļļුāļĢි.

                          āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āˇ€ිāļ§ෙāļš āļ…āˇƒāļŊ්āˇ€ාāˇƒීāļą්āļ§ āļļැāļą āļ…āļŦāļœāˇ„āļą්āļąāļ§āļ­් āˇ€ිāļ§ෙāļš āļ”āˇ€ුāļą්āļœේ āˇ„ොāļŗ āļ´ැāˇ€āˇƒීāļ¸āļ§āļ­් āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා āļē.āˇƒිāļēāļŊ්āļŊāļą්āļœේāļ¸ āļ¯ෑāˇƒ් āļēොāļ¸ු āˇ€ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢේ āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āˇ€ෙāļ­āļ§ āļē.āļ‡āļ­ැāļ¸්āˇ„ු āļ¸ුāˇ€ āļ…āļēාāļœෙāļą āˇƒිāļ¯ුāˇ€āļą āˇƒිāļēāļŊ්āļŊ āļ¯ෙāˇƒ āļ…āˇ€āļ°ාāļąāļēෙāļą් āļ´āˇƒු āˇ€ූāˇ„.

                              āļ­ොāˇ€ිāļŊāļēෙāļą් āļ´āˇƒු āˇƒāļ¸්āļ´ූāļģ්āļĢ āˇƒුāˇ€āļē āļąොāļŊāļ¯ āˇ€ුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļ­āļ¸ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒේ āˇ„ා āļ¯āļģු āļ¯ෙāļ¯ෙāļąාāļœේ āˇƒිāļēāļŊු āļšāļ§āļēුāļ­ු āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ§ āļ­āļģāļ¸් āļ‡āļēāļ§ āˇƒුāˇ€āļēāļš් āļ­ිāļļිāļĢි

                                āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āˇƒāļ­් āļ¯ිāļąāļš් āļ‰āļš්āļ¸āˇ€āļą āļ¯ිāļą āļ‰āļģිāļ¯ා āļ¯ිāļąāļš් āˇ€ිāļē.āļ‡āļē āˇƒුāļ´ුāļģුāļ¯ු āļ´āļģිāļ¯ි āļąිāˇ€āˇƒ āļ´ිāļģිāˇƒිāļ¯ු āļšāļģ āļ¯āļ¸ා āļŊāˇ„ි āļŊāˇ„ිāļēේ āļ­āļ¸ āļ¯āļģුāˇ€āļą්āļœේ āļ¯āˇ„āˇ€āļŊ් āļ†āˇ„ාāļģāļē āˇƒූāļ¯ාāļąāļ¸් āļšāˇ…ාāļē.

                   āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļœේ āļ¸āˇ€්āļ´ිāļēāļą් āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āˇƒāļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ°āļēāļ§ āļ¯ැāļŠි āļŊෙāˇƒ āˇ€ිāļģුāļ¯්āļ° āˇ€ුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āļļāļŊāˇ€āļ­් āļ†āļēාāļ āļąāļē āļ¸āļ­ āļ…āļšāļ¸ැāļ­්āļ­ෙāļą් āˇ€ුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļ‘āļēāļ§ āļ…āˇ€āˇƒāļģ āļ¯ීāļ¸āļ§ āļ”āˇ€ුāļą්āļ§ āˇƒිāļ¯ුāˇ€ිāļē.āļ¯ෙāļ´ාāļģ්āˇāˇ€āļēේāļ¸ āļ†āˇිāļģ්āˇ€ාāļ¯āļē āļ¸ැāļ¯ āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āˇƒāļ¸āļœ āļ‘āļš āˇ€āˇ„āļŊāļš් āļēāļ§āļ§ āˇ€ූāļēේ āļ¯āˇ„āˇƒāļšුāļ­් āļļāļŊාāļ´ොāļģොāļ­්āļ­ු āˇ„āļ¯āˇ€āļ­ෙāˇ„ි āļ´ුāļģāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļē. āˇ€āˇƒāļģāļš් āļ´āļ¸āļĢ āˇƒāļ­ුāļ§ිāļą් āļĸීāˇ€āļ­් āˇ€ූ āļ¸ේ āļšැāļ¯ැāļŊ්āļŊāļ§ āļšāļą āļšොāļšා āˇ„ැāļŦුāˇ€ේ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ´ාāļ´ āļ¸ිāļ­්‍āļģ āļ‡āˇƒුāļģāļ§ āˇ€ැāļ§ීāļ¸āļ­් āˇƒāļ¸āļœ āļē.

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                         " āļšāˇ€ා....āļŊා.......āˇ€ිāˇ…āļŗ āļĸා...āļ­ී......
                            āļ‡āļ­ි āļšāˇ…ා..........āļģāļą් āļšූ....āļŠුāˇ€ේ   āļœිāļģāˇ€ා...."

                 āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒāļ­් āļ¸āˇƒ් āˇ€ූ āļ¯āļģු āļœැāļļ āļ”āˇƒāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą  āļ´ැāļ¸ීāļĢ  āļ¯ොāļģ āˇ€ිāˇ€āļģ āļšāˇ…ේ  āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒැāļ¸ිāļēාāļœේ āˇ„āļŦ āļ‡āˇƒූ  āļąිāˇƒාāˇ€ෙāļąි. āļąොāˇƒිāļ­ූ  āļ´āļģිāļ¯ි āļšāļŠා āˇ€ැāļ§ුāļĢු āļ…āļšුāļĢු āļ´āˇ„āļģāļš āļ†āļŊෝāļšāļēෙāļą් āˇƒāļŸāļēāļą් āļšීāļ´ āļ¯ෙāļąෙāļšු āˇƒāļ¸āļœ āˇ€ැāļąි āˇ€ැāļąී āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢෙāļą āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒැāļ¸ිāļēා āļ¯ුāļ§ු āļ‡āļē āļ­්‍āļģāˇƒ්āļ­ āˇ€ිāļē.

                        "āļ¯ෙāļēි āˇ„ාāļ¸ුāļ¯ුāļģුāˇ€āļąේ.............āļĸāļēේ..āļ”āļēා āļļීāļŊා āļąේāļ¯?"

         āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļšෑ āļœāˇƒāļ¸ිāļą් āļœොāˇƒ් āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒැāļ¸ිāļēා āļ…āļŊ්āļŊා āļœāļ­්āļ­ා āļē.

                            " āļ…āˇ„āļšāļ§ āˇ€ෙāļēං āļœෑāļąිāļēේ"

                           āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāļģිāļŗ āļ´āˇƒෙāļšāļ§ āļ­āļŊ්āļŊුāļšāļģ āļ¯ැāļ¸ුāˇ€ේ āļ­āˇ€ āļ¯ෙāļ¸āˇƒāļšිāļą් āļ¯āļģැāˇ€āļšු āļ¸ෙāļŊොāˇ€āļ§ āļļිāˇ„ි āļšිāļģීāļ¸āļ§  āˇƒිāļ§ිāļą āļ¸āˇ€āļš් āļŊෙāˇƒāˇ€āļ­් āļąොāˇƒāļŊāļšāļ¸ිāļąි.āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ‘āļ¸ āļ´āˇ„āļģ āļ¯āļģාāļœāļ­ āļąොāˇ„ැāļšි āˇ€ āˇ€ිāˇƒිāˇ€ී āļœොāˇƒ් āļļිāļ¸ āļ‡āļ¯ āˇ€ැāļ§ුāļĢි.āˇ„ිāˇƒ āļ¯ āļ…āˇƒāˇ… āˇ€ූ āļ¸ේāˇƒ āļšāļšුāļŊāļš  āˇ€ැāļ¯ී āļŊේ āļļිāļŗු āļšීāļ´āļēāļš් āļąāˇ…āļŊ āļ¯ිāļœේ āļģූāļģා āˇ€ැāļ§ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āˇ€ිāļē.

                             āļ…āļą්āļ°āļšාāļģāļēෙāļą් āˇ€ෙāļŊාāļœāļ­් āļ¸ුāˇ…ු āļ´āļģිāˇƒāļģāļēāļ¸ āļąොāļąāˇ€āļ­්āˇ€ා āļąāļœāļą āļ…āļšුāļĢු āļ´āˇ„āļģිāļą් āļœිāļœුāļģුāļ¸් āļ¯ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āˇ€ිāļē.āļ…āļ­āļģිāļą් āļ´āļ­āļģ āˇ€ැāļ§ුāļĢු āˇ€ැāˇƒි āļ´ොāļ¯ āļ¸ොāļģ āˇƒූāļģāļą āˇ€āļģ්āˇ‚ාāˇ€āļš් āļļāˇ€āļ§ āļ´āļģිāˇ€āļģ්āļ­āļąāļē āˇ€ූāļēෙāļą් āļ’ āˇ€āļąāˇ€ිāļ§āļ­් āļ‹āˇ…ු āˇ€āˇ„āļŊāļēෙāļą් āļąැāļœුāļĢු āļ´ිāļąි āļļිāļŗු āļ¯ිāļē āļ´āˇ„āļģāļš් āˇ€ී āˇƒිāļ¸ෙāļą්āļ­ි āļ´ොāˇ…āˇ€ āļ¸āļ­ිāļą් āļœāļŊා āļœිāļēේ āļšāļŠිāļ¸ුāļŠිāļēේ āļœුāļŊ āˇ€ෙāļ­ āļ‡āļ¯ෙāļą āļšුāˇ„ුāļšු āļģැāˇ…āļš් āļ¸ෙāļąි.

                              āˇƒෑāļ¸ āļ¯ිāļąāļšāļ¸ āļ¸āļ­්āļ´ැāļą් āļ­ොāļŊ āļœාāļ¸ිāļą් āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢීāļ¸ āļ”āˇ„ුāļœේ āļ¯ෛāļąිāļš āļģාāļĸāļšාāļģිāļē āˇ€ිāļē.āˇ„ිāļ­්āļ´ිāļ­් āļąැāļ­ි āˇ€ූāˇ€āļšු āļ¸ෙāļą් āļ­āļ¸ āļ…āˇ„ිංāˇƒāļš āļļිāļģිāļŗāļ§āļ­් āˇ„āļēāļš් āˇ„āļ­āļģāļš් āļąොāļ¯āļ­් āļ¯āļģුāˇ€ාāļ§āļ­් āļ­āļŊා āļ´ෙāˇ…āļą්āļąāļ§ āļ­āļģāļ¸් āļ”āˇ„ු āļ…āļ¸āļąුāˇ‚්‍āļēāļēāļšු āˇ€ිāļē.āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āļœේ āļ¸ āļšāļ´ාāļ´ු āļ´āļŊුāˇ€āļš් āˇ€ූ āļšොāļŊු āļ´ැāļ§ිāļēා āˇƒිāļē āļ´ිāļēාāļœේ āˇ„āļŦ āļ‡āˇƒුāļĢු āˇ€ිāļœāˇƒāļ¸ āļ¯ිāˇ€āļœොāˇƒ් āļ¸ේāˇƒāļē āļēāļ§ āļœුāļŊි āˇ€ී āˇƒිāļ§ිāļēි.āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāļģිāļŗāļœේ āļšෙāˇƒ් āˇ€ැāļ§ිāļēෙāļą් āļ…āļŊ්āļŊා āļ´āˇ„āļģ āļ¯ෙāļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļ‡āļē āļąāļœāļą āˇ€ිāļŊාāļ´āļē āļ‡āˇƒී āļ…āˇƒāˇ… āļąිāˇ€ැāˇƒිāļēෝ āļ‡āļēāˇ€ āļļේāļģා āļœැāļąීāļ¸āļ§ āļ¸ැāļ¯ිāˇ„āļ­් āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ‘āˇ€ුāļą් āļ´āļą්āļąා āļ¯ැāļ¸ුāˇ€ේ āļ…āļ¸ු āļ­ිāļ­්āļ­ āļšුāļĢුāˇ„āļģāļ´ āļ¯ āļ´āˇ€āˇƒāļ¸ිāļąි.

                    "āļąොāļ¯āļšිං āļąොāˇƒāļĢ්āļŠාāļŊāļēා.....āļœිāļąි āˇ€āļ­ුāļģ āļœිāļŊāļŊා āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ­් āļ…āļģ āļ…āˇ„ිංāˇƒāļš āļœෑāļąිāˇ€ āļ¸āļģා āļœāļą්āļą āˇ„āļ¯āļąāˇ€ා"

                    āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļœේ āˇƒāˇ„ාāļēāļ§ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢි āļšුāˇƒුāļ¸āļŊāļ­ාāļ­්, āļŊāļŊිāļ­ාāļ­්,āˇƒāļģāļĢāļ´ාāļŊāļ­් āļ†āļ´āˇƒු āļ­āļ¸ āļąිāˇ€ෙāˇƒ්āˇ€āļŊāļ§ āļ‡āļ¯ුāļĢේ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āļ§ āļ¯ෙāˇƒ් āļ¯ෙāˇ€ොāļŊ් āļšිāļēāļ¸ිāļąි.

                       "āļ…āļąේ  āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸ේ.......... āļ¸āļœේ āļ”āˇ…ුāˇ€ āļ´ුāļ´ුāļģāļą්āļą āļģිāļ¯ෙāļąāˇ€ා"

                      āļ¯ිāļąāļš් āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ­āļ¸ āˇ„ිāˇƒ āļ­āļ¯ිāļą් āļļāļ¯ා āļœāļąිāļ¸ිāļą් āļ‡āļŗෙāˇ„ිāļ¸ āˇ€ාāļŠි āˇ€ිāļē.āļ‡āļŗෙāˇ„ි āļ‹āļŠුāļšුāļģුāˇ€ āˇ€ැāļ­ිāļģ āˇƒිāļ§ි āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ…āˇ€āļ¯ි āˇ€ූāļēේ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āˇ€ිāļŊාāļ´āļē āļ‡āˇƒීāļē.āļ”āˇ„ු āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒ āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāļģිāļŗ āˇ„ැāˇƒිāļģෙāļąāˇ€ා āļ¯ුāļ§ු āļ´්‍āļģāļŽāļ¸ āļ…āˇ€āˇƒ්āļ­ාāˇ€ āļąොāˇ€ේ.āļ¸ීāļ§ āļ´ෙāļģ āļ¯ āļ¯ෙāˇ€āļģāļš් āļ¸ෙāļŊෙāˇƒāļ¸ āļ‡āļē āˇ„ැāˇƒිāļģැāļĢු āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ‡āļ­ැāļ¸් āļ…āˇ€āˇƒ්āļŽාāˇ€āļš āˇƒිāˇ„ිāˇƒුāļą්āˇ€ āļ¯ āļ‡āļ¯ āˇ€ැāļ§ුāļĢි.āļļිāļēāļ§ āļ´āļ­් āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ‡āļēāˇ€ āˇ€ෛāļ¯āļēāˇ€āļģāļēāļšු āˇ€ෙāļ­ āļšැāļŗāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļœිāļē āļ…āļ­āļģ āļ‡āļē āļąැāˇ€āļ­āļ­් āļœැāļļāļ… āļœෙāļą āļ‡āļ­ි āļļāˇ€ āļ‘āˇ„ිāļ¯ී āˇƒāļąාāļŽ āˇ€ිāļē.āļ‘āļē āļ‡āˇƒූ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ‡āļē āļšැāļŗāˇ€ාāļœෙāļą āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢිāļēේ āļ¯āļ­්āļ¸ිāļ§ි āļšāļ¸ිāļą් āļœොāļģāˇ€āļ¸ිāļą් āļē.

                 " āļ¯ෙāˇ„ āļšāļ´āļą්āļą āļšිāļē āļšිāļēා āļšāļ§්āļ§āļŠිāļēා āˇ…āļŸāļ§ āļœිāˇ„ිං āļ­ෝ āļ•āļš āļ¯ āļšāļģ āļœāļ­්āļ­ේ? "

                    āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āˇƒිāļē āˇāļš්āļ­ිāļ¸āļ­් āļ¯āļšුāļĢāļ­ āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļœේ āļ¸ුāˇ„ුāļĢ āˇ„āļģāˇ„ා āļēැāˇ€ූāļēේ āļ‡āļē āļ´ොāˇ…āˇ€ āļ¸āļ­āļ§āļ¸ āļ´āļ­ිāļ­ āˇ€āļą āļ­āļģāļ¸් āˇ€ේāļœāļēෙāļąි.

                      "āļ¯ෙāļēිāļēāļąේ........āļ¸ොāļąāˇ€āļ¯ āļ¸ේ āļšිāļēāļą āļ´ොāˇ…āˇ€ āļąුāˇ„ුāļŊāļą āļšāļ­ා.āļ’ āļ¸āļąුāˇƒ්āˇƒāļēා āļģāļ­්āļ­āļģං āˇ€āļ§ිāļą                                      āļ¸āļąුāˇƒ්āˇƒāļēෙāļš්."

                        āļ‰āļąිāļ¯ි āļ­āļ¸ āļ¯ෑāˇƒිāļą් āļąැāļœුāļĢු āļšāļŗුāˇ…ු āļšැāļ§ āļ´ිāˇƒ āļ¯ැāļ¸ුāˇ€ේ āļ­āļ¸ා āˇ„ා āļšāļ§්āļ§āļŠිāļēා āˇƒāļ¸්āļļāļą්āļ° āļšොāļ§ āļąāļœāļą āļļොāļģු āļ ෝāļ¯āļąාāˇ€āļą්āļ§ āˇƒාāļ´ āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļąි. āļ‡āļē āˇƒිāļē āļ´āˇ€ුāļŊේ āˇ€āˇƒ් āļ¯ොāˇƒ් āļēāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ¯ෙāˇ„ි āļšāļ´්āļ´āˇ€ා āļœැāļąීāļ¸ āˇƒāļŗāˇ„ා āˇ€āļģāļš් āļšāļ§්āļ§āļŠිāļēා āˇ„āļ¸ුāˇ€āļ§ āļēාāļ¸   āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļļāļŗ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ´āˇƒු āˇ€ූāļēේ āļ¯්āˇ€ේāˇ‚āļēෙāļąි.āļ‡āˇ€ිāļŊෙāļą āļœිāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´ිāļ¯ුāļģු āļ¯āļ¸āļą්āļąāļ§ āļ•āļąෑ āļ­āļģāļ¸් āˇƒāļŸāļēāļą් āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āļ§ āˇƒිāļ§ිāļēි.āļ¸āˇ„ āˇ„āļŦ āļ­āļŊāļ¸ිāļą් āˇƒිāļąාāˇƒෙāļ¸ිāļą් ,āļ¯āļ­් āˇ€ිāļŊිāˇƒ්āˇƒāļ¸ිāļą් āļ­āļ¸ āļļේāļļāļ¯ු āˇƒāļŸāļēāļą් āļ´āˇ€āˇƒāļą āļ¸ුāˇƒා āļļāˇƒ් āļ”āˇ„ු āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļœāļ­්āļ­ේ āˇƒාāļ¯ු āˇƒිāļ­ිāļąි. āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļœොāˇƒ් āļ´ිāļģිāļŗāļ§ āļ´āˇ„āļģ āļ¯ෙāļ¸ිāļą් āļēāļšා āļąāļ§āļą āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ¯ෙāˇƒ āļļāļŊāļ¸ිāļą් āˇƒිāļąාāˇƒෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ­āļģāļ¸් āļ”āˇ„ුāļœේ āļšාāļŊāļšāļĢ්āļĢි āļļේāļļāļ¯ු āļēāˇ„āˇ…ුāˇ€ෝ āļ´āˇ„āļ­් āļ†āˇාāˇ€āļą්āļœෙāļą් āļēුāļ­ු āˇ€ූāˇ„.

                              " āļ…āļąේ..........āļ…āļģ āļ¸ිāļąිāˇ„ා āļ¸āļœේ āļąංāļœිāˇ€ āļ¸āļģාāļœෙāļą āļšāļą්āļą āˇ„āļ¯āļą්āļąේ...."

                          āļ‰āļąිāļ¯ිāļœේ āˇƒොāļēුāļģිāļē āļ…āˇƒීāļ¸ිāļ­ āˇ€ූ āˇƒāˇ„ෝāļ¯āļģ āļ´්‍āļģේāļ¸āļēෙāļą් āļ‡āļēāˇ€ āļļේāļģා āļœැāļąිāļ¸āļ§ āļ­ැāļ­් āļšāˇ… āļ¯ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ”āˇ€ුāļą් āˇ„āļ§ āļ­āļ¸ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļąොāļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢෙāļą āļŊෙāˇƒ āļ­āļģ්āļĸāļąāļē āļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢි.

                                 "āļ…āļąේ āļ…āļ¸්āļ¸ේ.........āļ¸āļœේ āļ”āˇ…ුāˇ€"

                             āļ¯ෙāˇ€āļąි āļ¯āļģුāˇ€ා āļ¯ āļļිāˇ„ි āļšāļģ āˇ€āˇƒāļģāļšāļ§ āļ†āˇƒāļą්āļą āˇ€ුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āˇ„ිāˇƒේ āļģුāļ¯ාāˇ€ āˇƒāˇ„ āˇƒිāˇ„ිāˇƒුāļą් āˇ€ීāļ¸ āļ…āļŠු āˇ€ූāļēේ āļąැāļ­.āļ‡āļē āļąිāļ­āļģ āļąිāļ­āļģ āˇƒිāˇ„ිāˇƒුāļą් āˇ€ී āļ‡āļ¯ āˇ€ැāļ§ෙāļą්āļąāļ§ āļ´āļ§āļą් āļœāļ­්āļ­ා āļē.āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļļේāļļāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļšු āˇ€ී āˇƒිāļ§ිāļēා āļ¸ිāˇƒ āļ­āļ¸ āļąිāˇ€ැāˇƒිāļēāļą් āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļļāļŗ āˇƒොāļēා āļļැāļŊුāˇ€ේ āļ¸ āļąැāļ­.āļœāļ¸ āļ´ුāļģාāļ¸ āļ‡āļēāļœේ āļ…āˇƒāļąිāļ´ āˇ€ීāļ¸ āļ´ිāˇ…ිāļļāļŗ āļąොāļēෙāļš් āļ…āļą්āļ¯āļ¸ිāļą් āļšāļ§ āļšāļ­ා āļ´ැāļ­ිāļģ āļœිāļēේ āļ…āˇƒුāļģු āˇƒැāļĢිāļąි.

                        " āļ…āļąේ āļ…āˇ„ංāˇƒāļš āļšෙāļŊ්āļŊ.āˇ€ැāļŠි āˇ€āļēāˇƒāļšුāļ­් āļąෑ āļąෙāˇ€."

                        "āļ…āļąේ āļ¸ෙāˇ„ෙāļ¸āļ­් āļšāļģුāļ¸āļēāļš්.āļ…āļģ āļ¸ිāļąිāˇ„ා āļļීāļŊා āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ­් āļœෑāļąිāļ§ āļ­āļŠිāļļාāļą āˇ€ිāļ¯ිāˇ„āļ§ āļ¸ෙāˇ„ෙāļ¸ āˇ„āļģි                                   āļ‰āļą්āļąāˇ€ා āļ´ුāļ¯ුāļ¸āļēāļš්."                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        



















                      "āˇƒāļŊා..........ං  "

                  āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāˇ…ිāļŗා āļ…āļ­āļ§ āļœāļą්āļąāˇ€ාāļ­් āˇƒāļ¸āļœāļ¸ āļļāļ­් āļ´ිāļŸාāļą āļļිāļ¸ āļ´āļ­ිāļ­ āˇ€āļą āˇ„āļŦ āļ‡āļœේ āļ¯ෙāˇƒāˇ€āļąāļ§ āļēොāļ¸ු āˇ€ුāˇ€ āļ¯ āļ‘āļ¸ āˇ„āļŦ āļ‡āļēāļ§ āļ¯ැāļą් āļąුāˇ„ුāļģු āļąුāļ´ුāļģුāļ¯ු āļąොāˇ€ූāˇ€āļšි.āļ­āļ¸ āļļිāˇ…ිāļŗා āļ‡āļšāļēෙāˇ„ි āˇ„ොāˇ€ා āļœāļąිāļ¸ිāļą් āļŊෑāļŊි āļ‡āļŗ āļ¸āļ­ āˇƒුāˇ€ āļąිāļą්āļ¯āļš āˇƒිāļ§ිāļą āļ­āļ¸ āļ­ෙāˇ„ැāˇ€ිāļģිāļ¯ි āˇ€ැāļŠිāļ¸āˇ„āļŊ් āļ´ුāļ­ු āļ¯ෙāˇƒ āˇƒෙāļąෙāˇ„ෙāļļāļģ āļļැāļŊ්āļ¸āļš් āˇ„ෙāˇ…ුāˇ€ා āļē.

                   āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āˇ„ා āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āˇ€ිāˇ€ාāˇ„ āˇ€ූāļēේ āļ¸ීāļ§ āˇƒිāˇ€් āļ…āˇ€ුāļģැāļ¯්āļ¯āļšāļ§ āļ´ෙāļģ āļ¯ී āļē.āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļ§ āˇ€āļŠා āļ¯āˇƒ āļ…āˇ€ුāļģුāļ¯්āļ¯āļš් āˇ€ැāļŠිāļ¸āˇ„āļŊ් āˇ€ිāļē. āļąāļ¸ුāļ­් āļ‘āļ¸ āˇ€āļēāˇƒ් āļ´āļģāļ­āļģāļē āļ”āˇ€ුāļą් āļ¯ෙāļ¯ෙāļąාāļœේ āļ†āļ¯āļģāļēāļ§ āļļාāļ°ාāˇ€āļš් āļąොāˇ€ීāļē.āļ¯ෙāļ¯ෙāļąා āˇ„āļ¸ුāˇ€ූāļēේ āļ¸ීāļ§ āˇ€āˇƒāļģ āļ…āļ§āļšāļ§ āļ‰āˇ„āļ­ āļ¯ී āļē. āļ­āļ¸ āˇ€ැāļŠිāļ¸āˇ„āļŊ් āˇƒොāļēුāļģිāļēāļœේ āļąිāˇ€āˇƒāļ§ āļ´ැāļ¸ිāļĢි āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ිāļ§ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­āˇ€ āļ¸ුāļŊ්āļ¸ āˇ€āļ­ාāˇ€āļ§ āˇ„āļ¸ු āˇ€ිāļē.

                  āļ¯āļģුāˇ€āļą් āļ­ිāļ¯ෙāļąෙāļšුāļœෙāļą් āˇƒāļ¸āļą්āˇ€ිāļ­ āļ´āˇ€ුāļŊේ āļļāļŠāļ´ිāˇƒ්āˇƒා āˇ€ූ āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ‹āˇƒāļ§ āˇƒāļģිāļŊāļą āļ¯ේāˇ„āļēāļš් āˇ„ිāļ¸ි  āļšāļŠāˇ€āˇƒāļ¸් āļ­āļģුāļĢāļēෙāļšි.- āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ¯ āļšාāļą්āļ­ාāˇ€āļšāļ§ āļ­ිāļļිāļē āļēුāļ­ු āļ¸āļąා āļ…āļŸāļ´āˇƒāļŸāļšිāļą් āļēුāļ­් āļ¯ුāļ§ුāˇ€āļą්āļœේ āļ†āļšāļģ්āˇ‚āļĢāļē āˇ„ිāļ¸ි āˇ€āļą āļ´ැāļŸිāļģි āˇ€ිāļēේ āļ´āˇƒු āˇ€ූ āļēුāˇ€āļ­ිāļēāļšි.āļ‡āļēāļœේ āļ¯ෙāļ¸āˇ€්āļ´ිāļēāļą් āļ‡āļēāļ§ āļ´ෞāļ¯්āļœāļŊිāļš āļ†āļēāļ­āļąāļēāļš āļģැāļšිāļēාāˇ€āļš āļąිāļģāļ­ āˇ€āļą āļ­āļģුāļĢāļēāļšු āļēෝāļĸāļąා āļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢ āļ¯ āļ‡āļē āļ‘āļ¸ āļēෝāļĸāļąාāˇ€ āļ´්‍āļģāļ­ිāļš්āˇ‚ේāļ´ āļšāˇ…ේ āļ’ āˇ€āļąāˇ€ිāļ§āļ­් āļ‡āļēāļœේ āˇƒිāļ­්āļœāļ­් āļšුāļ¸āļģාāļ§  āļ­āļ¸ āļšුāˇ…ුāļŗුāļŊ් āļ´්‍āļģේāļ¸āļē āļ´ූāļĸාāļšāļģ āļ­ිāļļූ āļļැāˇ€ිāļąි.āļąිāˇ€ැāˇƒිāļēāļą්āļ§ āˇ„ොāļģා āļ¯āˇ…ුāļŊා āˇ€ැāļŠෙāļ¸ිāļą් āļ­ිāļļූ āļ¸ෙāļ¸ āļ´්‍āļģේāļ¸ āˇƒāļļāļŗāļ­ාāˇ€ āļšāļŊ්āļœāļ­ āˇ€āļą āˇ€ිāļ§ āļšාāļ§āļ­් āļģāˇ„āˇƒāļš් āļąොāˇ€ීāļē.

                       "āļ…āļąේ āļ´ුāļ­ේ.... āļ‹āļšāļ§ āļ’ āļ¸āļąුāˇƒ්āˇƒāļēා āļœැāˇ…āļ´ෙāļą්āļąේ āļąෑ.āļŒ āļ¸āˇ„ āļąාāˇ„ෙāļ§ āļ…āˇ„āļą්āļąැāļ­ි āļ‘āļšා."

           
                  " āļ­āļąිāˇ€āļēි āļ‹āļ´āļą්āļąේ ..............   āļ­āļąිāˇ€āļēි āļ¸ැāļģෙāļą්āļąේ ..................
                    āļ¸ේ āļŠිංāļœෙāļ¯ී āļ‡āļēි āļšෝāˇ…ං āļąāļ§āļą්āļąේ.............  āļšෝāˇ…ං āļąāļ§āļą්āļąේ........"

                  āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒැāļ¸ිāļēා āļąොāļąāˇ€āļ­්āˇ€ාāļ¸ āļ´āˇ€āˇƒāļą āļœීāļ­āļēāļ§ āˇƒāˇ€āļą් āļēොāļ¸ු āļšāļģāļ¸ිāļą්āļ¸ āļģොāˇƒ් āˇ€ූ āˇ€ෑංāļĸāļąāļē āˇƒāˇ„ිāļ­ āļļāļ­් āļ´ිāļŸාāļąāļš්  āļļෙāļ¯ාāļœෙāļą āļœොāˇƒ් āļ´ුāļ§ුāˇ€ āļ¸āļ­ āˇ€ැāļ§ී āˇƒිāļ§ි āļ­āļ¸ āˇƒැāļ¸ිāļēාāļ§ āļ´ෑāˇ€ාāļē.

                 " āļ­ුāˇ„් ... āļąොāļ¯āļšිං.āļ¸ේāˇ€ා āļ¸āļąුāˇƒ්āˇƒāļēāļšුāļ§ āļ­ිāļēා āļļāļŊ්āļŊෙāļšුāļ§āˇ€āļ­් āļšāļ§ේ āļ­ිāļēāļą්āļą āļ´ුāˇ…ුāˇ€āļą් āļ¯?
                     āļˆ...āļļං āļœෑāļąිāļēෙ.āļ‹āļšāļ§ āļļැāļģිāļ¯ āļšāļ§āļ§ āļģāˇ„āļ§ āļšāļą්āļą āļšāļ§āļš් āļ‹āļēāļŊ āļ­ිāļēāļą්āļą "

                        āļĸāļēāļą්āļ­ āļ´ැāˇ€āˇƒුāˇ€ේ āļ¯āļ­් āˇ€ිāļŊිāˇƒ්āˇƒා āļēāļš්āˇ‚āļēāļšු āļ´āļģිāļ¯්āļ¯ෙāļąි.

                  "āˇ„්āļ¸්.....āļšāļ§āļ§  āļģāˇ„āļ§ ....āļšāļ§āļ§ āļģāˇ„āļ§  āļ‹āļēāļŊා āļ¯ෙāļą්āļą āļ­ිāļļුāļĢා
                      āļšāļģāļ´ිංāļ ා āļąāļ§්āļ§āļš්āˇ€āļ­්   āļœෙāļ¯āļģ āļ­ිāļļුāļĢා āļąāļ¸්"

                  "āļ‡āļēි  āļ¯ෙāļēිāļēāļąේ āļ¸ං āļšිāļēāļŊා āļ¸ොāļąāˇ€ා āļšāļģāļą්āļą āļ¯?.....
                     āļģෑ āˇ€ෙāļąāļšොāļ§ āļšāļ§ āļœොāļą්āļąāļš් āļļීāļœෙāļą āļ‡āˇ€ිāļ­් āļ¸ෙāļ­āļą āˇ€āļŊි āļšāļąāˇ€ා."

                     āļ‰āļą්āļ¯ි āļ­āļ¸ āļ¯ෑāˇƒිāļą් āˇ€ැāļ§ෙāļą āļšāļŗුāˇ…ු āļšැāļ§ āļ­āļ¸ āļ¯ුāļģ්āˇ€āļģ්āļĢ āˇ€ී āļœිāļē āļœāˇ€ුāļ¸ෙāˇ„ි āļ…āļ­ිāļą් āļ´ිāˇƒ āļ¯āļ¸āļ¸ිāļą් āļšාāļ¸āļģāļē āˇ€ෙāļ­ āļ¯ිāˇ€ āļœිāļēේ āļ­āļ¸ āˇ€āˇƒāļģāļš් āļ´ිāļģි āļļිāˇ…ිāļŗාāļœේ āļąොāļąැāˇ€ැāļ­්āˇ€ූ āˇ„ැāļŦීāļ¸ āļąිāˇƒා āļē.