Monday, November 14, 2011

YatriCab.com coming soon in Banglore



YatriCab.com is coming soon in Bangalore, Get Ready to Experience the new era of Travelling.

"Brief introduction about the Garden city of India"

Bengaluru(Kannada: ಬೆಂಗಳೂರು), formerly known as Bangalore, is the capital of the Indian state of Karnataka.
Once called the "Garden City of India" and the "Pensioner's Paradise", these epithets no longer apply to Bengaluru, which is today a large cosmopolitan city with diminishing green spaces and a large working population. Bengaluru is the major centre of India's IT industry, popularly known as the Silicon Valley of India.




“You know you’re in Bangalore, you know you’re in the Silicon Valley of India, when you go to play golf and the caddy on the first tee says you can either aim at the Microsoft building or the IBM building. You know you’re in Bangalore when you see the Pizza Hut advertisement says ‘gigabytes of taste’,” famously said the US journalist Thomas Friedman in 2004. Ever since, reams have been written on outsourcing, the software boom and the rise of the uber-smart, uber-rich new technogeeks of Bangalore.



But whatever happened to the other Bangalores, the ones that shun the arc lights that the outsourcing world shines upon the city? What happened to the Bangalore that lives in its crowded markets, or the one that lives in the shaded avenues of its genteel old suburbs?

Bangalore is unique among all major Indian cities for its very special history. For almost 150 years, the city was actually two cities, each with its own administration, and following entirely separate growth trajectories. The cantonment, established in 1809, was administered by the British; while the western part of the city, including the Fort and later, suburbs such as Basavanagudi and Malleswaram, were under the rule of the Mysore maharajas.

Naturally, the different histories of the two parts of the city left distinct impressions on the populations in these two areas. With the setting up of the cantonment during the first decade of the 19th century, the area experienced in-migration from neighbouring regions, especially of Tamil-speakers, who came in both as soldiers in the Madras regiments, and as suppliers and contractors to the British Indian Army. It was only in 1949 that the city was united under a common municipal corporation.


But being located at the junction of three areas, each of which spoke a different language – present-day Tamilnadu, Karnataka and Telugu-speaking Andhra Pradesh – and situated not too far from Malayalam-speaking Kerala, Bangalore has always been a city of multiple languages. During their reign during the late 1700s, Tipu Sultan and Hyder Ali invited the Tamil-speaking Tigala community to tend to the many gardens of the city, and also invited Persian toymakers to the neighbouring settlement of Channapatna.

Going further back, Bangalore has been ruled by multiple dynasties, including the Gangas, Hoysalas, Nolambas, Cholas, the Vijayanagar kings and the Marathas, many of whom patronised languages other than Kannada, and who no doubt left their stamps on the local populations of yore. Later, the Wodeyars of Mysore encouraged migration through a tradition of appointing administrators from outside Mysore state, and by recruiting eminent personalities from other parts of India, especially in the field of education. During the 1950s, following Independence and later, with the reorganisation of states, inter-state migration to Bangalore was gradually replaced by intra-state migration into the city.


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"Travelling in Bangalore "

Most taxi and auto-rickshaw drivers will be more than happy to offer you either a daily rate or an hourly rate, and take you around wherever you need to go. Alternately, your hotel or a travel company can arrange a private car.
If you find a good taxi or auto driver, this can be a great way to go for a foreigner. You'll certainly pay a lot more than if you bought individual rides, but you'll always have a driver waiting for you, and he can help with recommending local tourist sites, finding a good restaurant to eat at, and otherwise coping with day-to-day life. This can take a lot of the stress out of traveling.
Rates are generally something like Rs 50 to 100 per hour for an auto-rickshaw, and Rs 150 to 250 per hour for a taxi. Rates for a private car booked via the hotel will probably be more. Like everything else in India, rates are very fluid.

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

YatriCab- Delhi Tourism

Delhi - The capital city of India also called New Delhi and locally Dilli is the main arrival point for overseas tourists.

Delhi Tourism can be done by cars or tourist coaches. Delhi travel is also possible by hoho (hop-in and hop-out coaches). Delhi travel packages normally consists of a tour of Red Fort and Jama Masjid in (Old Delhi tour) and Humayun's Tomb and Qutub Minar (New Delhi tour). More imporant places like Lotus Temple and Akshardham Temple can be added in the Delhi holiday tour package.

A shopping tour can make your Delhi tour package complete. Markets like Karol bagh, Connaught Place, Chandni Chowk, Gaffar market, Sarojini nagar Market, Lajpat Nagar Market, Palika Bazzar, are worth visiting. A visit to the Delhi Haats is a must during the sightseeing of Delhi. Presently there are two Delhi Haats.


Remember Delhi is Beautiful, Experience it by Road. Choose Cabs Login to www.YatriCab.com or call us 011-64647779.
We will help you in making your journey memorable.