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    7/14/2009

     

    Why-kee-pedia?

    I caught my eleven year old nephew browsing the web and I asked him,
    "What are you up to?"
    He said, "I am researching on Tamil freedom fighters on 'why-kee-peedia'. For an essay?"

    I was impressed. When I was his age, I had to rely on the government library in Greamspet, Chittoor, for research. The wiry, old librarian was a hostile man. He walked about in those cramped corridors between bookshelves, his shoulders hunched over and his eyes roving: we stole half the books within a week of the opening of the library. The modus-operandi was simple. Pick a book of your fancy, check if anyone's watching, if no one was, tuck the book under your shirt. And, walk s..l..o..w..l..y. That rule is the same I guess: for shoplifting, bank robbery, and running away from eateries without paying the bill. You always walked out calm and composed.

    As time wore on I realised the importance of a library and how it could help me in my projects. So I stopped stealing books from libraries. Other than research, I chanced upon classics like Alex Hailey's Roots, Melville's Moby-Dick. The catch was that they were all Telugu translations. I didn't regret it though. I spent hours reading in the library. Now, I am not one of those 'well read' 'I-can-quote-Kafka' kind of a 'well read' guy. I read for fun. I read action, adventure, and stuff. And I read like a maniac.

    My mom used to send me to the market to buy provisions or coffee. Those days they never used plastic covers: You walked into Anji Shetty's store and asked for say, half a kilo of moong dal. He packed it in a paper from a magazine or sometimes when you're lucky, a sheet from a Telugu novel. The cone shaped parcel was bound by Twine. Remember those huge twine globes hanging in old stores? They tugged the loose end and deftly wrapped your parcel, and snapped the Twine in one clean move? I used take that parcel home and wait for mom to unpack the parcel ("Don't tear the paper! Just undo the Twine!!") and grabbed that paper, sat down in the hall read it as if my life depended on it. I put together a collection of Telugu short stories that way, thanks to Anji Shetty's store.

    I tore myself away from my reverie and noticed that my nephew was making notes. I didn't want to disturb him but I had a couple of questions.
    "So you are interested in reading and writing about stuff like this?"

    He said "Hmmmm? Interes.... I don't know?" and continued making notes. I could sense it. He wanted to say 'Why don't you buzz off?' I decided to push it. What the heck, as a kid, I had to bear with quite a few nosy morons. 'It is payback time buddy.' I thought. Also, I wanted to know what kind of reading my nephew did. Mark Twain? Crusoe? Nancy Friday?

    "You don't read books? I mean you could go to the library and read about the freedom fighters... they have a lot of books..."

    He stared at me and I could almost read his thoughts again. He said "But why!? I get that information on why-kee-pedia!" And, the first prize is only a 1000 Rupees! Who wants to walk to the library for 1000 Rupees!"

    Touche.

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    4/28/2008

     

    Ubuntu Ahoy! The Wubi Revolution

    Note: The points I discuss here are applicable mostly when you want to install Ubuntu alongside Windows XP (dual boot).
    I was curious about a Linux Desktop OS. I have heard so much about Ubuntu. A few months earlier I did try to install it on my Windows XP box but the whole partition thing overwhelmed me; I did not want my curiosity to kill my box. So I left it at that. I recently upgraded my computer. Bid goodbye to my old, wheezing CPU (R.I.P ol' boy!) and got me self a new one (AMD 64-bit processor, Geforce motherboard with Nvidia chipset, 2 gigs of RAM, and a 250 gigs HDD). I installed XP all right and one night when I was half asleep, watching Arnab of Times Now act like a moron on steroids, a little voice in my head whispered, 'Ubuntu?' Very soon the whisper became a scream and I went online to see if things had changed since the last time I had tried to install Ubuntu on my Windows XP. Yes, things have changed! And how!

    Wubi Installer for Windows

    I was chatting with Arnab - no not the news chap - my geeky friend who is doing a Phd on some very geeky shit in University of Michigan, and he told me about this new Windows installer called Wubi for Ubuntu. You can install Ubuntu on Windows like you would any other executable and uninstall it from the Add/Remove Programs menu. I went 'Whaa....t the faaaaaaaaaaaaaa...k?' And, and, and I discovered that Ubuntu had packaged Wubi in its current release (8.04). So all you folks out there that want to try a Linux Desktop OS, just to get a feel of how stuff works on planet Linux, I got news for you: you don't need to worry about the tricky partioning etc anymore. Download the latest Ubuntu release ISO, follow instructions, and Voila! Your Windows PC is now a dual-boot PC. I installed it last night and I gave Ubuntu a spin. Now, I wouldn't call it the most intuitive OS for I am still struggling to set up my broadband connection on Ubuntu. But hey, I am a complete dufus when it comes to all this and even I could install Ubuntu and have it up and running. I am sure I will figure out how to get my Internet working on Ubuntu shortly.

    Ubunti (with Wubi) Pros
    • Faster, easier Ubuntu installation: It breaks down that old barrier. More people are going to give it a try. I like the 'install and try' approach than the 'try and install' of Live CD.
    • No need to burn CDs. When you run Wubi, it downloads Ubuntu (around 700 MB so might take an hour or more; depends on your connection). If you don't want Wubi download, copy the latest ISO (Ubuntu 8.04) to the same folder where Wubi resides.
    • Does not eat up your computing resources.
    • You can uninstall it like any other Windows program from 'Add/Remove Programs'
    • No more virus.
    • Comes loaded with all the software you'll ever need, including OpenOffice
    • Seamless upgrades through the Internet.
    • Install add-on software that the huge Ubuntu community churns out; there is some cool stuff out there man-o!
    • And, it is all free of cost.
    Ubunti (with Wubi) Cons
    All right, that's all I had. If you wanted a stable, no-nonsense OS that did not cost too much (read 'nothing') and one that offers an amazing array of software for your productivity and entertainment; and you wanted to kick Windows through that window. This is it. Repeat after slowly, U-B-U-N-T-U. Yeah, that's right mate, Ubuntu.

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    4/10/2008

     

    DO NOT Sign up for Youmint.com

    Do so at your own risk. They make indiatimes look like an angel when it comes to spamming you and your contacts (from Orkut, Gmail, etc). Repeat after me, "I Will not sign up for youmint.com" Don't tell me I didn't warn you. Even if you received an invite from me, ignore it. They have been spamming all my contacts.

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    2/09/2007

     

    Ultimate htaccess Examples

    1/10/2007

     

    Quotable Quotes

    "At Motorola, we call this the device formerly known as the cell phone," Padmasree Warrior, Motorola's chief technology officer recently said, holding up her own RAZR.

    Padmasree Warrior, on Apple's iPhone.

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    11/10/2006

     

    Vamsi Krishna Nakkina wins Google Wordmasters creative writing contest

    10/07/2006

     

    Making Water From Thin Air

    A company that developed technology capable of creating water out of thin air nearly anywhere in the world is now under contract to nourish U.S. soldiers serving in Iraq.

    "This is our secret sauce," Sher said. "Like Kentucky Fried Chicken, it tastes good, but we won't tell you what's in it."

    He did, however, provide a hint: Think of rice used in saltshakers that acts as a magnet to extract water and keeps salt from clumping.

    "We figured out how to tap it in a very unique and proprietary way," Sher said. "We figured out how to mimic nature, using natural salt to extract water and act as a natural decontamination.

    "Think of the Dead Sea, where nothing grows around it because the salt dehydrates everything. It's kind of like that."

    The 20-foot machine can churn out 600 gallons of water a day without using or producing toxic materials and byproducts.

    [Read more on Wired]

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    9/28/2006

     

    Web 2.0 Winners and Losers

    9/25/2006

     

    ThinkPad Battery Explodes

     

    Charles Bonnet Syndrome

    "When people lose their sight their brains are not receiving as many pictures as they used to. Sometimes, new fantasy pictures or old pictures stored in our brains are released and experienced as though they were seen."
    [Link ]

    Reference: V.S. Ramachandran's Phantoms in the Brain

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    8/17/2006

     

    Curtains to Caps Lock?

    "The antagonism toward the Caps Lock key extends beyond its misuse by 13-year-old trolls and naive users. Caps Lock is also responsible for failed entries of passwords and other case-sensitive phrases. Users of word processors are forced to retype any text that was entered with Caps Lock accidentally turned on." [via Wired]

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