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Churches of new India, DRDO new bio-toilets.

I encourage all Indians to reliving themselves at the local Church. Swatch bharat.
Nope.,thnx...But 96% of Keralities already have access to churches...Highest in India...may be because 1/3 rd of Indian Christians are from Keralam..

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Well, for me Temple has Nothing to do with Hindus. My usage was purely in line with Nehru's Book Title.

Don't buy it.

Maybe the first time you posted an article that said "temple of new India, ISRO", they may have been true. The article themselves gave that ludicrous title.

And I gave my opinion on that absurd title.

But then immediately after my opinion and subsequent debate, you again made a second post of yours that said "New Temple of India # 2, supercomputer", and invited a bunch of clowns, which was clearly designed to be provocative :tdown:

So sell your "secular" , "I am innocent" snake oil elsewhere. :sick:

Nope.,thnx...But 96% of Keralities already have access to churches...Highest in India...may be because 1/3 rd of Indian Christians are from Keralam..

Well I am glad 96% of Mallus take a dump in the local church. :D

I continue to invite other Indians to do the same in their local church.
 
A Church was recently burnt down. Don't know if it was disguised as a toilet.
 
1,00,000 Churches of new India to be constructed to commence Swachh Bharat. :enjoy:

Swachh Bharat: 1 lakh toilets in schools to be constructed by energy PSUs

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Can eToilets meet the swachh bharat challenge?

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Prime Minister Narendra Modi whipped out his broom on Thursday, signalling the start of the Swachh Bharat Abhiyaan across the country on the occasion of Mahatma Gandhi's birth anniversary. In his speech, Modi addressed the lack of urban sanitation here, saying that everyone should "trust Mahatma Gandhi's devotion and dedication to cleanliness and Swachh Bharat."

Modi said more than 60 per cent of the population here still defecate in the open. "It pains me to see mothers and daughters doing the same." Back in August, the prime minister pledged that he will make sure every household in India will have toilets in the next five years.

First public eToilet
There are several initiatives to create an urban sanitation infrastructure that have already started. Bindeshwar Pathak, known as the "toilet guru," has already constructed more than 1 million household toilets using his two-pit technology that is used in many rural villages.

This technology, however, is not enough to address the problem of public sanitation. But social enterprise Eram Scientific has an answer for that – electronic public toilets.

Touted as India's first, the eToilet is a modular, pre-fabricated toilet made of steel and integrated with user-friendly electronic interfaces to ensure cleanliness to every user. Unmanned and automated, each toilet has remote monitoring capabilities via GPRS to track its health status.

According to the company, eToilet incorporates full cycle approach in sustainable sanitation by integrating convergence of electronics, mechanical, web-mobile technologies to control the toilet's mechanisms, including entry, usage, cleaning, exit and remote monitoring.

After a user inserts a coin, the latrine will automatically open its door, switch on a light and then directs the person using audio commands. Eram Scientific said the toilets, which use a sensor-based conservation method, are programmed to flush 1.5l of water after 3 minutes of usage or 4.5l if usage is longer. It can also be programmed to clean the platform with a complete wash down after every five or 10 persons use the toilet.

The integral part of eToilet is the Connected eToilet Infrastructure (CeTI), a platform for monitoring the operations of each toilet. Owners and technology providers use CeTI to check the health status of the eToilets and see if any corrective action needs to be taken accordingly. A dedicated website is currently mapping more than 200 eToilets across the country.

The eToilet is equipped with an atmospheric water generator, which generates water from the atmospheric humidity. There's also a self-washing and cleaning system to ensure the cleanliness inside the toilets before and after each use.

To date, there are more than 500 eToilet units in 10 major states here, including Kerala, New Delhi, Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh and Haryana.
 
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