Sunday, March 29. 2009
Holi is one of my favourite and I really love all aspects of it -
colours, the burning of the bonfire the day before Holi (Holika
Dahan), Bhang and the food! I had not had a good Holi celebration
after I moved to Bangalore (2005).
However, I had a GREAT Holi yesterday when I joined thousands of
others from Bay Area in the Asha Stanford's Holi celebration. I had
tons of fun coloring my wife, friends and random folks, having yummy
food and enjoying a beautiful day in the sun.
We had planned to take the train to one of our friend's (N) place and
then accompany him and his wife to the Holi celebrations. The day
started at 8 AM and we had a hiccup when we missed our train to get to
our friend's place. We had to wait another hour to catch the next
train. However, things started looking better after this incident.
We ran into another acquintance Of ours on the train station and they
got on the same train as us. We passed them a few tips about which
places to visit in San Francisco (they were on their way to SF for
some tourism).
We got down at our station and N. came down to pick us up. We went to
his house, chit-chatted for a while and then started off for the venue
to Stanford.
I was expecting a jolly good time and that is what I got . The
holi was in full swing when we got there. One of the playgrounds had
been cordoned off for the holi festivities. We took our tickets and
jumped into the festivities. There were lots of colors and lots of
people. After we had colored each other, we started putting colors on
random people. After 30 minutes with colors, it was difficult to
recognize each other. There were some dance performances by some
Stanford groups. And then the dancing started. And then we put color
on more random people. The festivities ended around 3 PM. We had
some food and then we came back home. Back home, we had to scrub
ourself for around 15 minutes to clean out the colors, but it was a
minor hassle.
Overall, I had a very good time and I hope to go back to the Holi
celebrations again next year.
Wednesday, October 15. 2008
The most favorite activity that Bangaloreans indulge in is
Trafficking. It is a social activity surpassing the bounds of
caste, creed or religion. Every morning and evening all the people
in Bangalore come out on to the streets with whatever vehicle(s)
they own and create a mass procession. They honk, rev engines,
brake hard, bump, double park, shout, jump traffic lights ... its a
mass revelry. — Taken from Uncyclopedia
After living here for three and a half years, I think I can say with
some authority that commuting in Bangalore is a daily adventure.
Every day there is something unpredictable that will happen and will
affect the flow of traffic. Either a truck would be parked on the
wrong side of the road, or a car would have broken down, or the
traffic police would mark one of the roads as one-way.
There is a "magic window" in the Bangalore traffic. This is the time
when the traffic flows without the interruptions of the traffic police
and the heavy trucks have not yet come out on the roads. If you are
able to get to your destination in the magic window, your day will be
relatively tension free.
The amount of time wasted on the streets is staggering. If we add the
cost we pay in terms of health and peace of mind, the costs would be
enormous. To give you an idea, the route to reach my office is
around 12 kilometers from my home. However, it takes me around 30
minutes to cover this distance.
In my opinion, a two wheeler is the best way to navigate your way
around Bangalore. It is easy to work your way around cars and trucks
waiting at the traffic signal. Not to forget, the savings on the
petrol bill.
Speaking of cars, I don't understand why people buy luxury cars in
Bangalore. I have seen quite a few traffic snarls caused by one
luxury car going slow or waiting to take a turn.
Anyhow, enough of my rantings.
Friday, October 20. 2006
There has been a thread going on in the india-gii list about
hiring and retaining talented coders in india. Here is the email that
the original poster had posted
Over the past few weeks I've met with several people who are all
having the same headaches
1. Hiring talented coders
2. Retaining talented coders
The first is usually down to lack of talent (coders directly out of
college just don't have the "new " skills (for example) in things like
ajax, ruby, but have core knowledge of things like C, and what I call
"old" languages), and also salaries wanted, especially if you are
trying to sell abroad and compete with pricing abroad, i.e brazil,
russia, ukraine offer lower prices these days.
My thoughts about this
When hiring freshers, I don't think you should look for what languages
they know. Instead you should
- try to gauge how much of the fundamentals they know
- if they (freshers) are self-learners
Point 1 can be checked by asking them about sorting/searching
algorithms or networking or process management (basically the topics
which are covered in their operating system course or their data
structures course).
Point 2 can be checked by seeing if they have contributed to any free
software project and actually asking them to show their code (it is
after all free software and there is no NDA). If a fresher has worked
on an open source project, it usually means
- he knows about version control
- he knows about mailing lists
- he can work without much supervision
- he can work with a distributed team
- and most importantly, he can work with a team
In the email, the original poster had also mentioned this point
the big guns (tcs, infosys etc) hire like 10K users in a go, and its
seems that the prospects of getting a good wife/husband are directly
linked to the name of the company on the CV (again this maybe biased,
but am seeing it more and more).
WTF!! ROTFL!! 
Sunday, August 20. 2006
The Hindu has a thought provoking article on Isarel's militarism. The
most striking line in that article is in the first paragraph.
AS a Jew, I've been asked if I'm ashamed at what Israel has been
doing in Lebanon. And the answer I give is that I am disgusted, I am
angry, I am appalled, but, no, I am not ashamed. Why should I be? I
bear no personal responsibility for this criminal activity — except,
of course, in so far as I fail to take whatever action I can to stop
it.
If you are on any of the mailing list or if you have had an email id
for at least one year, you might have received an email titled "jai
hind" or "proud to be an indian" around 15th August. The email has a
bunch of questions and answers like
Q. Who is the creator of Pentium chip (needs no introduction as 90% of the today's computers run on it)?
A. Vinod Dahm
Q. Who is the founder and creator of Hotmail (Hotmail is world's No.1 web based email program)?
A. Sabeer Bhatia
and so on.
The email ends thus
Say proudly, I AM AN INDIAN. Please forward this email to all known
INDIANS...............
I have always been baffled by this chest beating. As an Indian, why
should I take credit for the success of Sabeer Bhatia, Azim Premji and
Vinod Dahm - what contribution did I make to their success ?
I am totally unpatriotic. Defined tags for this entry: india
Thursday, July 27. 2006
Yahoo! news has a coverage about this
The government's main AIDS prevention agency has filed an affidavit
in the Delhi High Court, supporting a request by an AIDS activist
group to scrap the law.
The National AIDS Control Organization, part of India's Health
Ministry, argued in the affidavit filed last week that the 1861 law
creates a public health risk.
"So long as the gay community is forced to go underground, it
limits the access to them and makes it difficult for the AIDS
prevention campaign to reach them," Sujatha Rao, who heads the AIDS
Control Organization, also known as NACO, told The Associated
Press.
I hope this law gets scrapped. This is covered under the Section 377 of the Indian Penal Code (IPC) of 1860.
"of unnatural offences: Who ever voluntarily has carnal intercourse
against the order of nature with any man, woman or animal shall be
punished with imprisonment for life or imprisonment of either
description for a term which may extend to 10 years and shall also
be liable to fine.
Defined tags for this entry: India
Saturday, February 11. 2006
Last week, I had gone to GNUnify, a conference organized by
Symbiosis(SICSR), Pune. I had spoken on webservices together with
Gopalv and Premshree.
An interesting event we organized was a Birds of a Feather (BoF)
meeting on "Why you should be a FOSS programmer" that we had with the
students there. My first observation during the BoF was that most of
the students had no idea what FOSS is. One of them actually thought
that FOSS was a programming language. Most of them had been
absolutely brain washed by MS propaganda or maybe they had been
brainwashed by their teachers. Not may of them had used any of the P
languages (Perl, PHP, Python). I asked them this question - "will you
like to work for Yahoo!, Google or Amazon or will you like to work for
another IT sweat shop? If you want to work with the big names, then
you have to know the P languages". Gopalv, Premshree, Pankaj and
Philip spoke about their respective projects, how they had gotten into
free software and how it had helped them in getting jobs. Gopalv
pointed out how our education system is flawed when it comes to exams
and assignments. In a class, you have to beat the others to be called
a achiever. In the real world, you have to work with others to come
up with something good. Working with FOSS allows you to collaborate
with others and have a taste of how things work in the real world.
Our main aim in organizing this BoF was to get even 2 students
interested in FOSS. Sadly, I am sure we failed to do that .
However, we told the students about the mailing lists and irc channels
that they could use to find help. I hope some of them eventually turn
up there.
Danese was one of the speakers in this conference and she gave a good
presentation on how to get into open source. Answering the audience
questions on how to make money with Open Source, she said that Open
Source allows you to make money by offering services, and India
understands the service model well. This rankled me quite a bit.
There aer ways to make money by selling FOSS products too - MySQL and
SugarCRM being the prime examples. However, in India, you don't have
any companies which make products. Lots of companies outsource their
development work here, but except Tally (a closed source accounting
software), I don;t know of any Indian companies making products. I am
not sure why this is the way things are - one reason might be that
product development is inherently a risky business. On the other
hand, the payoff from a product is quite high.
I also met a bunch of people whom I knew only in the online world. We
went to this amazing restaurant called "Horn OK Please". Even though
we had to wait a bit to get the tables, it was really worth it. If
you are in Pune, try out that restaurant.
All in all, I will say that this experience was really good. The
students did excellent work in organizing the event, though I would
have been happier if they participated in the event instead of just
being a volunteer in it.
Monday, July 18. 2005
A discussion was going on in the Linux Gazette's The Answer Gang about a post by RMS on harry potter book. Ben Okopnik, an all-round nice guy and a perl guru, made the following observation -
> If the injunction really orders them not to read the books they have
> purchased, that strikes me as wrong, but hey, we all know the law is an ass,
> even in Canada. If I'd bought a book and got an injunction like this, I'd
> still read it, I just wouldn't tell them
...and if we extend that line of reasoning just a bit further, it brings
us to (what I think is) RMS' original point. How much of a right do we
grant to our governments to declare arbitrary actions illegal, no matter
how trivial or harmless?
The cynic in me says that governments love having their citizens buy
into a belief that they (the citizens) are guilty of something; people
with something to hide are likely to keep their heads down and be good
little sheep lest they be noticed and shorn. As the saying in Russia
went, "nobody ever asks 'why' when the KGB takes them away." The KGB, of
course, had a matching expression: "if we have the man, we'll make the
case."
If the government is allowed to control trivial aspects of people's
lives, then they will do so. Not in all cases, but... oh, the
"opportunities" that arise. Perhaps this case is not as black-and-white
as it could be, but I surely do see it as a very steep and well-greased
slippery slope - with its entry point just under a hidden trap door.
Ben Okopnik Editor-in-Chief, Linux Gazette http://linuxgazette.net
I agree with his sentiments completely. Most people assume the
government to be all knowing and always correct entity. What they
forget is that the government is not an amorphous mass, it is made of
people - who might have no clue. Anyone has just to look at the
Indian government's blunderings in the IT LAW to learn how
clueless it is.
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