Saturday, December 30, 2006

Vaikuntha Ekadashi

Today is "Vaikuntha Ekadashi", a holy day for most Hindus. It is believed that one must visit a temple of Lord Vishnu/Venkateshwara today because doing so will fetch a lot of 'punya'. It is also believed that the doors of Vaikuntha are open for everyone today, so if a believer dies today, he/she will get a free entry there. So it is common to find long queues at all Venkateshwara temples, from early morning all the way till late night. Luckily people don't commit suicide on this day to get their free pass into the Lord's kingdom!

People seem to believe that the God, who is most willing to grant you your wishes on this particular day, won't be so forthcoming for the rest of the year. Is the God going to hibernate for the other 364 days, or what? My beliefs in religion are a bit different from the mainstream. I don't usually get sucked into standing in those long queues at temples on this day.

Today was an exception to this rule. I accompanied my parents to the Venkateshwara temple in J.P.Nagar at six in the morning, mainly because I had to drive them there. To my dismay, I found that the queue for general entry (dharma darshan) was already winding past a few cross roads! We were in a 'special' queue, having paid a fees in advance. However, the special queue was not too short either, reassuring me that J.P.Nagar had no shortage of rich people. What disappointed me was the way people were behaving.
People just did not follow the queue. Everyone felt he/she was special enough to break the queue and walk straight to the entrance. Even when we were moving in the queue, there were people who tried to overtake me - as if I was not moving fast enough! Many did not think twice before throwing garbage on the road. Petty quarrels were breaking out between the devotees as they waited in the queue. I was thinking - these are some of the best-educated, rich people of this city. If these people don't possess basic civic sense, what can we say about the rest of the juntaa?

I think Hinduism should have included a couple of rules about civic sense. Like, "if you jump a queue, you go to hell" or "if you throw filth on road, the doors of Vaikuntha will be closed for you, even on Vaikuntha Ekadashi". Sheesh!

Thursday, December 28, 2006

Power of procrastination

My inherent ability to procrastinate has reached an all-time high this December. I can't seem to be able to do anything without putting it off for weeks. I must find out why it turned out to be this way. But I will do it tomorrow. or day after ;-)

I seriously hope things improve starting with the new year.

Tuesday, December 19, 2006

Bad boys of cricket

Indian cricket team has finally won a match in South Africa. Going by the way they played the one-day series, everyone thought they would have to buy lottery tickets if they were to hope to win anything at all in the tour. However, miracles do happen.

One of the positives of the first test, in my view, was the attitude shown by Sreesanth. I have read somewhere that some of his team-mates don't like his extravagant mannerism and "I don't care shit" attitude. However, ever since Saurav Ganguly was sidelined, there was nobody with such a colorful personality in the team. I really liked the way he responded in kind to Nel, when he hit Nel for a six on the very next ball after being taunted by him. Contrast this with the way Dravid had responded to Allan Donald a few years back in a similar situation. What a difference!

We really need some bad guys in the team to keep it vibrant and colorful.

Thursday, November 30, 2006

There is a girl...

who brings a smile on my face in the morning. I see her almost every day on Bannerghatta Road. When I start from home to office, I am always anxious, wondering whether I am going to see her or not. If I don't see her, I know that I am going to be less happy throughout the day. She never smiles at me, hardly even notices me, but I feel reassured the moment I see her.

Well, she is a traffic warden. She stands at the junction of Bannerghatta Road and N.S Palya main road where I take a right turn towards BTM Layout. Without her being there, our moronic drivers create a traffic jam at that junction within a few seconds. A messy trafficjam there affects my commute time to office and puts me in a bad mood. She is very diligent in her work and ensures smooth flow of traffic at that junction. Unfortunately on some days she does not show up, so all hell breaks loose.

Wednesday, November 22, 2006

Hard disks vs flash memories

A few years back, when the dot-com craze was at it's peak, when the need for storing large amount of data was growing by the minute, everyone thought the hard disk and storage manufacturers were going to have a wonderful time ahead. Nobody could think of any other technology that could pose serious threat to hard disks. Today, less than a decade since then, hard disk manufacturers are alarmed by the advances in flash memory technology. Fuelled by robust growth in digital cameras and other hand-held devices, flash memory manufacturersare seeing unimaginable growth. With every passing year, flash memory cards are almost doubling in size and prices are dropping. Today I saw that Toshiba is coming up with an 8GB SD card. It is now believed that very soon, 40GB SD cards will be common. Hard disks have traditionally provided larger sizes, faster data rates and cheaper storage in comparison to other technologies. But how long will they remain ahead in this race? It is clear that flash memory sizes will eventually catch up with hard disks in size. Will disks continue to have faster data rate and cheap storage advantage?

I predict that notebook computers will be the first to adopt flash memory. Since these memory cards don't have any moving parts, they will be best fit in notebook computers. If flash memory cards improve their data rates, operating systems could use them instead of a disk partition for hibernating. If they improve the reliability, they could replace the ROMs in computers. It could make it much easier to re-flash the BIOS and other such non-volatile storages both in computers and embedded devices. Whatever it is, I think flash memories have much better future compared to hard disks. Sandisk, Kingston, etc will do much better than Seagate, Hitachi, etc!

Saturday, November 18, 2006

The Financial Expert

I just finished reading "The financial expert" by R.K.Narayan. I don't read all that much in English; I prefer to read in Kannada instead. Whatever little I have read in English was all written by western authors. Hence reading a story in English by an Indian author, with the story set in India was refreshingly different. I cannot say I liked the story all that much, but the people in the story, the way they talk, the way their surroundings are, everything is so very different and nice. I think I should read more stories of this type.

Tuesday, November 14, 2006

Planning my day

My employer allows me to work from home (WFH). I am proud of that, because not many companies in Bangalore give such a facility to employees. It greatly enhances flexibility of planning my day. For example, I can leave office at a fixed time in the evening, irrespective of how much work is still pending, because I can always work a few hours after reaching home and get the work done.

Unfortunately all good things come with strings attached. I have recently realized that WFH facility is slowly making me inefficient in planning my day. I no more have the pressure to finish off all my work by the end of the office day! Invariably I push some of the work to later in the night. So now-a-days I _plan_ to work the entire day - the hours I spend in office as well as the hours I spend at home. I am working from home later in the night on pretty much all days, irrespective of whether there is a requirement for that or not.That is definitely bad. I must get back to planning my work only for the office hours and work from home at night only if it is inevitable. I wonder how successful I will be in doing that.

Saturday, November 11, 2006

Helmet rule

After postponing it roughly 200 times, the state Government has finally made it compulsory for all two-wheeler riders in Karnataka to wear helmets. Err... except if you are in Bellary. This concession for Bellary is apparently because the weather is too hot there. I would have accepted that argument a couple of months back when the CD politics was at it's peak in Bellary and it was generating a lot of political 'heat'. But now, I don't see how Bellary is any more hot than Raichur, Gulbarga or even Mangalore. Bangaloreans can't claim any such concession unless Mallika Sheravat visits the city. (No, in fact I don't find her hot.)

There are obviously many advantages of wearing a helmet. I have at least 3 friends who are alive today only because they wore a helmeton a particular day in their lives. However, I am seeing that helmets are now helping not just the rider, but everyone else on the road. It is normal now-a-days to see youngsters talking on cell phones as if their life depends on it. In a few years, if Darwin's theory is any true, we should start seeing kids being able to use cell phones the moment they are born. Now, you don't expect people to stop talking on their phone just because they are performing, in parallel, another activity like riding a bike or doing a brain surgery. So they hold the phone between their ear and shoulder, bending their head completely to one side and continue riding. Obviously, we can't expect such people to ride attentively. Heck, I have seen pedestrians hitting poles and parked vehicles on the road because they were engrossed in talking on cell phone. I am always scared to see such people riding a bike in front of my car. You never know when they are going to do something very stupid and end up under your car. Now, with their helmets on, they cannot talk this way while riding the bike. So it is a simple solution to this problem. Of course, people can still hands-free, but that is better than before.

We need helmets to come with built-in head phones. Then we could use hands-free and FM radio on our cell phones while riding, without having to carefully wear the earphones. Hey, this could be a patentable idea right here!

Friday, October 20, 2006

Harangi dam

I had been on a tour of Coorg last weekend. On my way back I visited the Harangi dam. It is a relatively big dam near Kushalanagar with hardly any villages nearby, so it is a nice, isolated place. Approach roads are quite good, so it is all nice and good till you reach there. Admission tickets are only Rs.2 per head. Then come the restrictions : Photography not permitted. Public are not allowed on the dam proper. Reason? Security. I was told that these measures started last year.

I find some of these restrictions pretty ridiculous. Especially the no photography one. We are living in an age where you can see an aerial photo of your home in Bangalore using Google Earth. Within a few years it may be possible to tell the brand of the ice cream sold at Harangi sitting at your desk in front of your computer. The other restriction about not lettting people on top of the dam was also quite meaningless. Especially considering the fact that they allow people at the base of the dam, right next to the wall of the dam. We could also go into the water on the other side of the dam, right upto the wall of the dam. You just don't get on the dam wall and you are fine :-)

When will the authorities realize the futility of such measures? The only purpose these measures are serving is to discourage tourists from visiting the place. That shows in the state of the garden around the dam, which appears to have been quite good once upon a time. The wisest thing to do would have been to develop the dam into a nice tourist place (garden, restaurant, water boats, the works) and provide basic security measures to ensure people don't walk in carrying any bombs/rocket launchers/artillery tanks! They could then bump up the entry fees to Rs.10 or 20 and people would be happy to pay that.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Nationalized bundhs

The 'bundh' called across Karnataka today is (kind of) supported by our own state Government. This is funny, because when the economists are calling for privatizing everything, Government wants move in opposite direction and take up conducting of strikes/bundhs in it's own hands! What next? Government-sponsored BMTC bus stoning?

Sunday, September 10, 2006

Digital generation gap

Well, it had to happen one day. There sure was going to be one day when there would be a cool new thing on the web and I was going to be too old-fashioned to pick it up. After all, how many new tricks can an old dog learn? What surprised me was that it happened so soon in my life. I am talking about the digital generation gap. The eerie feeling that creeps up your mind that you have started belonging to the previous generation and the next gen is ready to run you over.

I started using the Internet while the so called dot-com bubble was building up - mid to late nineties. So I was among the early users of many things on the Internet we take for granted now - web-based e-mail, web-based storage space, e-shopping, online chat, egroups (this was before Yahoo bought e-groups and named it Yahoo groups), etc. In the recent years I had transitioned well into a blogger's world, so I had blindly assumed that I had kept pace with the speed of the digital revolution (what exactly is that?)

I had heard about Orkut once in a while, mostly from people who are fresh out of college or who did so a couple of years back. I had conveniently assumed that it was one of the 'fringe' apps on the net I won't have to bother about. But eventually when I got an invite to join Orkut from Manju, it was time to really explore what it was all about. And what did I see? Everyone, their grandmoms and their dogs already seemed to be members of this online community! Many of my classmates from SJCE, many of my old friends living all around the globe were already on-board! There were communities that I really cared about and readily wanted to be a part of. It was as if I wokeup one morning and found that it had _snowed_ extensively in Bangalore and I did not even know about it. I was left wondering "Hey, how did I miss the bus?"

Now that I have caught up with it, I feel much better. However, I know that similar things are just waiting to happen again and one ofthese days I won't keep pace. So even though an actual human generation is around 25-30 years, a generation in the digital world will be much shorter. My guess is that people who are 10-15 years younger to us will belong to an entirely different generation altogether on the Internet. That is not a pleasant feeling, you know!

Thursday, August 31, 2006

About FM radio station

With another FM radio station, Radio One opening up, the competition in the air is heating up. I keep switching radio stations while I drive (all males are genetically programmed to switch TV and radio channels at the rate of 1 channel about 5 seconds, sometimes just 2 seconds) and I have noticed that I am more often stopping at this new station to listen to a song or a conversation. So for now, Radio One is my favorite. But my loyalty can change very fast.

I wonder how people in Radio City feel about new stations coming up. They once had a share of 90+% of market, but I guess they don't have that much anymore. Radio broadcasting must be a very difficult field to innovate and stay on top of the heap.

Sunday, August 20, 2006

Mad rush on Aug15

This year on August 15th, I committed one of the gravest mistakes that can be committed by a Bangalorean - Visiting Lalbagh flower exhibition on a weekly holiday, that too on the last day of the show. When I arrived at the gates of Lalbagh after several minutes of painful waiting in the traffic jam outside, the authorities there snatched Rs.50 from me and told me that I could park my car inside the bagh. They have a crooked sense of humour, I now think. Let alone park the car, I could consider myself lucky if I could just drive my car through the dense population inside! Once I (miraculously) found a place to park my car, I found that people pulling and pushing each other, cursing, grabbing each other by hair and so on to be able to make their way through the thousands of trying to do exactly the same! All this was not even inside, but on the way to the glass house. Situation inside the glass house was much more grim. Once we managed against all odds to get in, the only thing my wife wanted to do was get out of the glass house! Once we did that, the only thing she wanted to do was get out of Lalbagh!!!
To give credit where it is due, flower show was probably very good. I don't know exactly, because all I saw were the heads and backs of other people who were trying like me to see the flowers. However, being a person who allows some time to smell the flowers, I did snatch a couple of pics on my camera before we left.


You would think that we learnt our lesson by this time and headed straight back home and spent the rest of the evening in frong of TV, but no sir, we don't learn so easily. We went straight to the new Big Bazaar just half kilometre away. They were running some sale that was ending on that day, hence large crowds eager to buy anything in the store were thronging the place. This place seemed to be an extension of Lalbagh as far as crowds are concerned, but with more spending opportunites. But it took us just a few minutes to learn our lessons this time. We decided not to venture to any such places on any such day ever again and headed back home.

The city is now filled with people who desperately want to have a good time and are ready to spend for it, but the infrastructure is not catching up.

Duh!

First, South Africa pulled out of the triangular cricket series in Srilanka and the series was reduced to 3 matches between India and Srilanka. Next, the rain gods decided to pour cold water on the excitement and the series got washed out. This is probably one of the most disappointing cricket series for cricket lovers. But was this the right time to hold a cricket series in the island nation? I don't know, but it looks like they decided to hold it bang in the middle of their rainy season. Wasn't it like holding a world ski competition in Chennai in the month of April or a golf tournament in, say, northern Canada in January? I guess we need to tell the Srilanka cricket authorities: "See guys, if this is your rainy season, it probably _will_ rain (surprise!) and it probably _will_ affect cricket matches adversely. What you need to plan is a swimming competition in your Colombo cricket stadium during this time of the year" How can we pay back the Lankans when they tour India next time? Plan some matches in Chirapunji? Or probably Jayanagar Swimming club? ;-)

Saturday, August 12, 2006

A new blog!

It has now been a bit more than an year since I started this blog. As an anniversary gift to 'devout' followers (I hope at least one person other than me is reading this blog), I am presenting, hold your breath and control your excitement, a second blog! The only thing better than having a crappy blog is having two of it ;-) I hope two bad things cancel it out. The second blog has been in my mind for a while now, but I was not sure how it was going to take shape. Now that I have decided to take it out of wraps, why don't you have a look at it and give your suggestions?

Please please please please please please please please please please please please please please please please have a look at it :-)) http://v-chitra.blogspot.com

Saturday, August 05, 2006

Angry weather gods

Don't you feel the weather is turning out to be too extreme, too often in the last few years? In the last couple of years, I have heard about record-setting weather conditions all around the world. Last year, it was the deluge in Mumbai and Bangalore, the kind we had not ever seen. We also heard that the US had a record number of hurricanes last  year, highlighted by Katrina. We then heard about the unusually heavy snowfall and cold in eastern parts of US and Canada. This year, there has been a never-heard summer in Europe and North America. I read that weather reporters in Europe have been forced to get new thermometers because their existing ones were not designed for temperatures this high. Many countries are recording all time high temperatures. The evergreen England too is drying up!

Is it just my imagination, or am I seeing far too many such incidences in the recent past? Record rainfalls, record heats, record deaths, especially in the more 'advanced' northern hemisphere of the Earth. Is it all a part of global warming? Or are these the early signs of the impending obscuration/cataclysm that Hindu mythology describes as "Pralaya"?

Friday, July 21, 2006

Ban on blogs lifted?

I can access my blog again! Looks like the Government has finally lifted the block they had put on blogspot (and other major blog sites?). So did the Government finally learn that the terrorists they are trying to catch are a too smart to depend only on blogspot for communication?

Year of Linux on the desktop?

Every year, I see articles on various Linux related websites that this year is going to be the year of Linux on the desktop, the year when Linux desktop will start gaining significantly on MS Windows. This claim is then supplemented by various comparisons between Windows and a recent Linux distro (often debian or gentoo), feature to feature, proving that Linux can now do all that Windows can. You get to hear that you can use Evolution in place of Outlook, Firefox in place of IE, f-spot in place Picasa, this is my favorite: gimp in place of Photoshop. That is not all, article usually claims that Linux now supports most of the digicams, display cards, etc out of the box, installation is extremely easy and everyone, his mom and grandmom can now use Linux on the desktop. Later, it mentions a couple of applications or a couple of features that are available on Linux, but not on Windows, to claim that Linux is already ahead of Windows. Examples are command-line image manipulation utilities, richness of bash shell as compared to Windows terminal.

However, every year, we realize that the share of Linux on the desktop is just the same as last year. The number of Linux-only desktop boxes will be so few, nobody wants to mention that.

Once upon a time, people said it was because of hardware support. Then they said availability of applications. However, Linux now supports almost all normal hardware and it has applications to serve any average computer user. (No, Photoshop is not a 'normal' software, hardly anybody needs it). So why is Linux not gaining on Windows on the desktop?

The main reason, as I can see it, is the ease of use. Windows is still infinitely more easy to use than Linux. Let me give an example. I consider myself a 'power user', not an 'average' user of Linux. The wireless card and bluetooth hardware is supported by the Linux distro I run. However, I have not been able to configure them correctly till today. I agree that I have not done a great deal of research, I have not spent a great number of hours googling for solutions. But all these got configured without asking me a single question on Windows. Most people don't care and don't want to know whether they should use WEP or WPA-PSK or whatever for their wireless card uses. Most people don't want to edit configuration options for everything they do. If Windows can self-discover all these things, why can't Linux?

The reason, to some extent, seems to be the 'Linux attitude'. Linux no doubt benefits from having some of the brightest people on the earth developing it. However, the same people cannot think for the common user. They tend to call the Windows way of doing things 'dumb', because it does not let them configure all the options by hand. They tend to despise any UI, advocating that command line is the only right way of doing things. This is true in some cases, but it definitely is wrong in case of most average 'dumb' users. For example, nobody outside the Linux fanatic club would want to understand the command line options of 'cdrecord'. The other reason is infinite choice you get with everything on Linux. There is no doubt choice is good, but all choice, no standardization is not good either.

The distros are doing a reasonable job of making desktop Linux a viable option. However, they too suffer from the same dificiency. Also, they spend more time polishing their fonts or creating new eye-catching 3-d icons than making apps easy to use. yum and apt are a good step towards installing software, but they bring Linux nowhere close to Windows in this area. To some extent, the Linux model, where there is no central authority, is the cause of this. Most of my thoughts agree with this article
So what do I think should be done? Portland project , which aims to provide common set of interfaces for Linux desktop, is a right way ahead. It may finally end the war between gnome and kde. I also think the community should become more sensitive to the needs of common man. I don't how how this can happen, though. I think the Linux distros should put more thought in making desktop versions of their OS. I installed SuSE Linux 10.1 last week and found that it is pretty well integrated desktop. (Until you try to install some software you found on the web). Some say the Linspire way is correct, but it is clear that they will never be able to garner support of the community for this, which means it will never take off in a big way. Last but not the least, until we have really made Linux on desktop comparable to Windows, let us not go around claiming that we are already better or that Windows is dumb.

Monday, July 10, 2006

State of affairs/ affairs of the State.

I am appalled by the level of politics being played out in Karnataka. I have not written much about politics in this blog so far. In fact I had planned to keep politics out of this completely. But I can't really hold myself, looking at what is happening.

Today I saw on TV our elected representatives physically fighting with each other in Vidhana Soudha because of personal rivalry. BMIC project was the first major controversy hit by Kumaraswamy, who started out as a very promising chief minister. The way BMIC is being handled is a HUGE discouragement to anyone planning to invest in Karnataka. Even if I were an invester, i would wisely choose other states. The new controversy about illegal mining too started out as a way to put Congress MLAs, who had mines in Kanakapura, in discomfort. However, the grandson of soil never thought it would snowball into such a big controversy. Our MLAs, spending crores of our money, are not even having meaningful discussions on the floor of the house. The concept that the elected body should concentrate on making legislations, leaving implementation to IAS officers has been completely forgotten. Corruption is not a hush-hush word to be kept away from media anymore. People of the state are too short sighted to realize where all this is headed. Like a saying goes, "people get a Government they deserve, not a Government they desire".

With nobody in any of the three major political parties to show a better way, I am saddened when I think what the future of this state will be like.

End of sports season

Cricket got over a week back. With the FIFA world cup and the Wimbledon coming to an end this week, it suddenly feels like the sport season on television is over. Men can now return to informative(!) channels like AXN (programs like Fear Factor) and women can return to their entertaining(!) programs like saas-bahu soaps.

I lost most of the interest in football world cup during quarter final stages, when Argentina, Brazil and England went out. It was like a cricket world cup without Australia. My interest in Wimbledon was limited to Federer's finals and at some points in time during the finals, it looked like he too would lose, making it miserable. Luckily he held on. Federer reminds me of Sampras because of the way he keeps his composure in any situation of the match. I hope he wins many more grand slams.

Thursday, June 29, 2006

A ripple in Karnataka newspaper industry

Consolidation among corporates seems to be in the air at the moment. The publication division of VRL group, which owns Vijaya Karnataka and Vijay Times, was taken over by Times of India group (Bennett, Coleman and Co. Ltd) recently. The story of Vijaya Karnataka is amazing. They entered the Kannada press industry at a stage when the industry was very mature and the existing players, like Prajavani, Udayavani, etc had long established their hold on the readers' mindshare. Nobody thought it would be possible to come up with a new newspaper at this stage and make it successful. It is like coming up with a new brand of soap today. It is easy to achieve phenomenal success in new areas by becoming pioneer in that area. Examples are AT&T, Vaseline, IBM, etc. However, entering a crowded market and winning customers over is not easy at all. But this is exactly what Vijaya Karnataka did. It is the largest circulated Kannada daily in Karnataka today.

With this aquisition, TOI group has immediately obtained reach to almost all parts of Karnataka through Vijaya Karnataka, unlike TOI which is popular only in Bangalore. Though this may turn out to be beneficial to Vijaya Karnataka, it is surely not good for me because I was subscribing to both TOI and Vijaya Karnataka. There is not meaning in reading two newspapers from the same publisher. I will have to change one. I guess I will move to Deccan Herald.

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

Travelling on the Mysore highway

I drove down to Mysore last weekend on the old highway (probably the only highway we will have, with BMIC getting into controversy). With most of the work of making it a 4-lane road finished, it is a pleasure to drive on the road now. Compare this with the situation even a year back, when you would choose to rather be whipped than driving to Mysore in a small car. There are a few precautions to take on this road, though.

First, you will want to know which side of the road to drive on, the left or the right. The answer is "either". However, remember that if you are driving on the right side, you must have your head lights on :-)

Second, remember that the tractors have the highest right of way on the highway. It may be belonging to a farmer and a former Prime Minister may not take it lightly if you even honk at a farmer. Tractors need not turn on the head lights while travelling on the right side.

Third, how fast can you go? Answer is "depends". If you are within 10Kms distance of any village, be cautious about people crossing the road at their own sweet pace, cattle resting on the road, etc. All the time, keep a watch for vehicles coming directly at you (their right side), with their lights on. There is no exhilaration like travelling at 120kmph and suddenly realizing that there is a huge truck heading right at your car and you may be dead meat any moment. When you reach Ramanagar, be watchful for potholes. Small cars can get lost in some of them. Also, a handful of speedbreakers are intelligently placed in places where you least expect them, so watch out. I guess politicians promise for each village, apart from water, hospital, etc, two speedbreakers.

Should I overtake from left or the right side? Answer is "whichever lane is free". It is common to see trucks/autos travelling at 20kmph on the right lane and they don't intend to shift to left lane at all, so there is no meaning in sticking to rules.

Finally, where do I eat on the way? Answer is "Kamat Loka Ruchi". It is almost a unwritten rule that all cars must stop at Kamat to experience a urban, sophisticated feeling they are most used to in Bangalore - lack of parking space. After you manage against all odds to get a place to sit, you will be surprised to know that food is expensive, but not good! Masala dosa sucks big time. Coffee is not worth the Rs.12 they charge. I know this place used to be good, but I guess they have too many customers now to care about quality anymore. I hope it is so only on weekends.

Monday, June 19, 2006

Google's software

Google seems to be in overdrive to release products. I am a sucker for Google products, so it is no surprise that I have been an 'early adapter' (AKA guinea pig) for a number of their products. I have been impressed with calendar, spreadsheet, page creator, firefox add-ons, Googleearth4.0 for Linux in the last couple of months. Gmail and Google have always been very useful. The only Google prodct that seemed to be a bad idea was the Firefox browser sync. Every time you start your browser, it first contacts Google's website and restores some information like bookmarks, saved sessions, etc. If you are on a slower connection, you need to wait for a good part of a minute for the browser to start. Browser sync also lets you store passwords, but that is a scary thing to do. I like the fact that they are coming out with Linux versions of their softwares. I tried Picasa for Linux. It runs through WINE, so it is not that good.

Thursday, June 08, 2006

About Presiden't speech

I got an opportunity to listen live to our president, Dr Abdul Kalam recently. In the past I have wondered why he is such a popular person. But after listening to him, I know why.

Though he cannot be counted among the greatest orators, he seemed to be able to connect with his audience extremely well. His down-to-earth nature and genuine interest in the topics he was talking about, unlike politicians (I know he is not one), were the reasons for people instantly liking him. He had brought his own powerpoint slides for his talk (his choice of colors for slides was gaudy, if I may humbly add). It was clear that he had spent time specifically preparing for this presentation. He answered a few questions from the audience so nicely and promised to answer any question we may post on his website. If our politicians want to find a role model, they don't need to look too far.

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Stock market crash

For the last few days I wanted to blog about the stock market crash. All newspapers carry front page articles showing investors in dispair whenever stock market crashes ("Investors lose <an abnoxiously high number> of crores of rupees") However, they don't raise so much noise when it goes up.

Today I found this article reflecting my thoughts on this issue. (first page, at least). So I guess linking to it, in true bloggers' spirit, is good enough.

Monday, May 22, 2006

Eating in Bangalore

If you roam around the main shopping areas in Bangalore during the weekends, one thing clearly strikes you: Bangaloreans like to eat. Eat a lot. Be it a small road-side food joint like paani-puri stall or bonda-bajji shop or fruit juice place or a fancy and expensive restaurant, if it is in the right location, it is going to be crowded. If you go near Cool Joint in Jayanagar 4th block, you can see people putting their arms and legs at risk to grab their sandwich. The line at Ganesha Dosa camp in 3rd block is rumoured to reach at least a couple of kilometers. If you go to a nice restaurant on Saturday evening for dinner, you will be squarely asked to come back on the same time on Monday, because they are booked solid on Saturday and Sunday ;-) Bangaloreans quickly became rich, or at least spendy, but the infrastructure is not keeping up. If you want to have a nice, peaceful dinner during weekends, the only place to have it is your own home! If you are thinking of a second job, there is no better thing than to open a restaurant.

Wednesday, May 17, 2006

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Radio Mirchi

The day I realised that Radio Mirchi (I think this is their website, not sure though) had begun it's broadcast in Bangalore (93.3 MHz) was in fact one day before they came out with newspapers advertisements about their existence. But I heard that they had been on air for a while already. I was expecting them to come out with full page ads in all major newspapers the day they started out. This must be one of the softest of the 'soft launches' we have seen.

I like their tagline/slogan - "Sakkath hot maga". I also like the fact that their RJs can (and do) speak Kannada. I think they are after the FM Rainbow listeners first to build up a good listener base before taking on the Radiocity goliath. So far, I am listening. Go Mirchi!

On a related topic, we had just 3 FM stations in Bangalore till now. They differ greatly in the way they communicate with their listeners. Radiocity is the most informal ("Yo man", "hey gals", etc). FM Rainbow has the middle path ("Snehithare, Dinner Time karyakramadondige naanu nimma gelathi "). The other Akashavani station, Vividha Bharathi is still stuck in the 1960s (with a stern voice : "Shrothrugale, nimma mechina geethegalu Akashavaniyinda moodi banthu")! I think Mirchi is trying to fit somewhere between Radiocity and Rainbow in this scale.

Thursday, April 27, 2006

A bit about my Delhi trip

I'm just logging a few things about my 1-day visit to Delhi this week. First of all, Bangalore airport. I have heard that the airport is asking airline companies not to introduce any more flights to Bangalore, because it cannot handle any more passengers. In this sense the airport truly represents Bangalore :-) When we got into the flight, there were enough mosquitoes to make an army of them. Just when all of us, especially the numerous westerners in the flight were wondering if we are going to survive the 2.5 hours journey among these mosquitoes, an air hostess brought and sprayed what smelt like a nice perfume. Only after a few minutes, when there were no more mosquitoes flying, did I realize that what she sprayed must have been baygon-spray-from-hell! Apparently, this spray also results in much nicer behavior of passengers towards the crew. Who would risk their life against such a spray ;-)

Delhi was nice. No, really. In my two very brief visits to Delhi, I have realized a few amazing things about the city. First, Delhi has glimpses of a revolutionary concept in vehicular movement, already popular in most other countries, called driving in lanes. Another phenomenon hardly heard of in Bangalore is that fly-over and metrorail construction actually coming to an end (I know that is hardest to believe). When Delhi'ites complain about traffic problems, it is mostly about traffic congestion. I am pretty sure they have not seen the type of jams we see in Bangalore, where all the city roads look like Kissan factory in peak hour. Except for weather, I wonder if anything is going for Bangalore anymore.

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Dr. Raj

By now newspapers have written enough, TV channels have shown more than enough, people have seen more than they wanted to see about the demise of Rajkumar and the violent funeral that followed. The mayhem that accompanied the procession and funeral were really ugly, unfortunate and unpardonable. Sure, this is not the first time we have seen processions marred with violence and lathi charges and this won't be the last. So I won't write too much about it.

In the history of Karnataka, I don't think any person has ever enjoyed such a great fan following. Sure, political leaders have managed to rope in a large gathering to listen to their speeches, devotees have gathered in large numbers to listen to their spiritual leader. However, nobody, neither the great political leaders, nor the spiritual Gurus, not even kings have ever managed to build such a great fan following across all economic and social levels of a society. This is the kind of reverence politicians dream about achieving all their lives. If my understanding is right, Rajkumar was the best example of people uniting around a man based just on Kannada and nothing else. Rajkumar is great for having achieved such an iconic stature. If you are a non-Kannadiga and not too knowledgeable about Karnataka, you must be wondering whether Kannadigas are going to go on a rampage like this every time one of their film stars dies. Rest assured, anything quite like this and this spontaneous won't happen ever again. Nobody else has such a pull on the society.

The events at Rajkumar's death was surely going to be unprecedented. But what really happened was far beyond the expectation of the state machinery. How can the police control the mobs, when some lunatics think "I was unable to see Annavru's body. Obviously, it is the fault of that big BMTC bus. Let me go and smash up it's windshield and light it up as a revenge"

Tuesday, April 11, 2006

The fun about the Time of India...

...is that when pretty much every newspaper makes the fire in Meerut (that killed more than 50 people) the first news on their front page, TOI thinks the news about Salman Khan going to jail is more important! It is quite often that TOI puts 'masala' items on the front page (like dress code being imposed in Mount Carmel College, kids influencing buying habits of parents, etc) that appear on other pages in other newspapers. I guess their motto is "Anything for marketshare"!

Friday, April 07, 2006

Mass exodus from Bangalore

No, this is not about the IT-BT industry relocating to Chennai and Hyderabad. (I am not worried about that anymore).

Most people living in Bangalore, including Kannadigas, are not natural Bangaloreans. So whenever there is a long weekend, a very large number of people take off from the city to visit their hometowns. This happened again last week, when people took off for a 4-day weekend for Ugadi. I was one of them, trying to get onto a bus on 29th night. When my auto eventually approached the bus stand (Majestic), I noticed that traffic had piled up for at least 2 kilometres from the bus stand. I have no idea how any of the vehicles on K.G Road reached the bus stand that day. My auto driver passed through all the narrowest roads around the main road, some of the roads so narrow people fear to attempt them on two-wheelers, and eventually reached the bus stand. Once in, I noticed that KSRTC had introduced a large number of extra buses for this day, so they had piled up all inside the bus stand and all roads surrounding it. They were running a bus EVERY SINGLE MINUTE from 11PM till 11:30PM to Shimoga alone! Of course, once our bus made it's way out of the bus stand (one hour late), it got stuck in a huge traffic pile up on Tumkur road created by numerous vehicles going out of the city. It really looked like people were fleeing a disaster-hit city.

This problem will only get worse as days go by. I plan to take an extra day off in such cases and go out of the city one daysooner from now on.

Monday, April 03, 2006

Winged visitor at my home

I have always felt sorry for the sparrows, which have lost their habitat ever since our cities and towns got filled with RCC buildings. After we shifted to our new house, since there is a lot of free space all around, it is common to see many varieties of birds around our house. Today, when I returned home, I was told that a sparrow had entered the house! I found him sitting very quietly, as if it was just a stuffed model, on a CFL bulb. I am guessing it is a 'he' (and not 'she'), because he is perched on electrical equipement, which is a 'manly' object ;-) I heard that he tried to get out of the house, but could not find his way out. Since he did not ask for directions, there is no doubt it is a 'he'! He is still there, hopefully we will be able to send him off tomorrow morning. I am too scared to even switch on a ceiling fan today, what if he flies right to it? Meanwhile a lizard on the wall has checked him out from a distance. Luckily the lizard did not go too near or tease the bird too much, so they are both at peace now. Good night, dear bird!

Update (4Apr) The bird promptly flew out of my house this morning the moment we opened all doors and windows. Goodbye!

Thursday, March 23, 2006

Your favorite cartoon characters now speak Kannada!

Here is a blog that has famous cartoon strips translated to Kannada. Very unique and nice. Instead of doing a literal translation which screws up the humour completely (like most commercials on TV), this blog tries to be creative with the translated text. Names are also 'Kannada-fied'. Garfield becomes Govinda, Calvin is Keshava/Keshu and Wally, the famous co-worker of Dilbert becomes (I am not making this up!) Venkatachala!!

I am not sure how 'legal' these cartoons are, I am pretty sure they are violating some copyrights. Enjoy it while it lasts!

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

All those who want to fly Air Deccan,

Please demand to see the plane with your own eyes before booking your ticket. Looks like sometimes Air Deccan can be just air. I think the best flying experience in India now-a-days is on Kingfisher airlines. I admire Vijay Mallya - because here is a guy who has money, is willing to spend it and knows how.

Saturday, March 04, 2006

First rain of the year

It rained in Bangalore yesterday. Rains in the first week of March are a rarity anywhere in India, but Bangalore has been receiving rains during non-rainy-season regularly in the last few years. Pretty much every year, Bangalore has been receiving considerable amount of rain in March, April and May months. In fact of late Bangalore continues to receive rains all the way till November! So there is no need to be surprised. These occasional rains keep our city cooler and of course, humid.

Old timers in Bangalore are often heard saying "It used to be so cold in Bangalore during that time. Now the city has gets too hot in summer. But contrary to what they say, weather records show that the average summer temperature in Bangalore has only gone up by half degree in the last 50 years. Of course, We have fewer trees inside the city now, so we feel the heat more now.

Rains bring some miseries to me since I moved to my new house in Bilekahalli. First of all, the very first sign of an impending rain results in our area losing electricity. It is as if the rain drops, if allowed to touch electric wires, will cause an explosion or something. Secondly, due to all the construction activity and total lack of asphault on roads, roads quickly turn messy. Third, with empty lands all around, water accumulates in them and does not flow out easily. Hence I hope the rains start late this year. But I am not very hopeful!

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Speaking about dust,

there is a lot of it in Bangalore. Approximately 50% of all that dust lives on my car! I am not joking, I think my car winsthe dirtiest car competition hands down at my office. It is not completely my fault, though. All those folks with glistening clean cars, come to Bilekahalli, or for that matter any area under Bommanahalli CMC once. These are areas that have no idea what asphalting is! You will see your car, irrespective of what color it is, quickly turning into a uniform dust color. Some people even write their names in the dust on my car when it is parked!

But it is not all that bad. Dust on the car has it's own advantages. First of all, safety. Miscreants are far more likely to tamper with a shining clean car than one that forces them to take a bath after touching it ;-) Even two-wheeler riders, who normally don't think twice about creaming a car in their quest to get on the footpath, keep distance from my car. Secondly, dust hides the little scratches and dents that are inevitable on all cars in the city. There is another advantage I have realized recently. Many drivers drive with high beam on. If such a vehicle is directly behind your car, especially if that vehicle is a bus or a bigger car, the light from that vehicle shines so brightly in all your rear-view mirrors that you wish you were blind! Tinting the rear windshield solves this problem partially, but nothing like having a layer of dust on the back windshield to protect you! Now I like it so much, I don't want to disturb the dust layer on my back windshield, even accidentally. Come see my car for yourself if you don't believe. While at it, please try not to disturb the fine layer of dust I have meticulously built up!

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Alive!

Contrary to popular belief, this blog is NOT DEAD. It will rise from the slumber very soon. Or as a certain politician once said, it will rise from dust ;-)

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Weather prediction in India

Two days back the weather forecast department (I don't call it meteorological department, sounds like something to do with meteors) announced that in the next two days Bangalore will be gripped by a cold wave with temperatures hitting all time lows. Somehow this news brought out a chuckle from me. The weather forecast in India has been horrendously off target ever since they started forecasting. True again this time, it has been sunny and warm for the last two days and there is no sign of a cold wave coming. They quickly corrected the forecast today, saying something like "When we said cold wave, we actually meant sunshine and heat"!

I wonder why is the weather forecast so unpredictable in India. I have heard argument that it is because Indians don't depend on weather predictions anyway. But I think it is in fact the other way around! We have the weather satellites (I hope we do, ISRO has been sending all those INSATs for years!), we have the computers, we have the department and people. Why do they go so wrong in forecasting weather? I have seen that in southern England, where the weather can change from pristine sunshine to heavy rains in a matter of half and hour, they do a much better job of forecasting the weather. We in India are talking about a Tsunami warning system, when we cannot predict if it is going to be sunny or raining tomorrow.
I remember watching the weather report on Doordarshan's Kannada channel a number of years back. One day it went something like this: "Rajyada uttara mattu dakshina oLanaadinalli allalli chaduridanthe maLeyaagalide. ULidanthe oNa have munduvariyalide". Gah! Weather reporters on private news channels may look more professional and glamorous now, but the weather forecast is not too better than daily horoscope. May be even worse.