For some reason I cannot resist posting videos such as this that challenge my senses and leaves my lower jaw hit the ground :=>
--
Posted by Suresh to Random thoughts at 12/30/2006 09:15:00 AM
"You're a part of me. I'm a part of you and we are all a part of this great nothingness."
"We aren't anything in particular. There is no self. There are only ideas and states of mind."
“The best way to predict the future is to invent it.”
-Dr. Alan Kay
Saturday, December 30, 2006
[Random thoughts] Jaw dropping human feats
Saturday, June 17, 2006
[BOOKS TO READ] books
Reading.....
Marc Aronson :The Real Revolution : The Global Story of American Independence
Fascinating... I liked his analogy of India and America being two daughters of a british father -one rebelling and the other daughter who stayed home paying the price for that. He traces historic events that connects Robert clive to George washington, Bengal famine to the boston tea party. He connects the dots so well that its indeed a truly "ah ha" moment as he calls it.
Completed:
The Second Coming of Steve Jobs by Alan Deutschman -
I highly recommend this book. Was a good read and reveals the complex mind of steve jobs and you even briefly see him not as a creative genius but as a mad man and a neurotic slave driver. The book ends up rescuing steve jobs from that devilish portrayal and leaves you with respect and some awe at his second coming.
The only disappointment for me was that it did not cover the ipod success but the timing may have been overlapping and perhaps there might be a second edition that covers it.
If you are looking to get inspired or get of essence of steve jobs I would recommend reading his commencement speech at stanford :
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html
Krishna Playful Divine by Pavan K. Varma
This book was a bit scattered for me or maybe I built the wrong expectation about this book.
I was expecting the book to appeal to be similar to the sensibilities he evoked in his other book "Being Indian".
I would still recommend it for contemperary indians who are pavan varma fans. You still appreciate his intelluctual and scholarly approach he takes in his writing
-
--
Posted by Suresh to BOOKS TO READ at 6/17/2006 02:06:00 PM
Marc Aronson :The Real Revolution : The Global Story of American Independence
Fascinating... I liked his analogy of India and America being two daughters of a british father -one rebelling and the other daughter who stayed home paying the price for that. He traces historic events that connects Robert clive to George washington, Bengal famine to the boston tea party. He connects the dots so well that its indeed a truly "ah ha" moment as he calls it.
Completed:
The Second Coming of Steve Jobs by Alan Deutschman -
I highly recommend this book. Was a good read and reveals the complex mind of steve jobs and you even briefly see him not as a creative genius but as a mad man and a neurotic slave driver. The book ends up rescuing steve jobs from that devilish portrayal and leaves you with respect and some awe at his second coming.
The only disappointment for me was that it did not cover the ipod success but the timing may have been overlapping and perhaps there might be a second edition that covers it.
If you are looking to get inspired or get of essence of steve jobs I would recommend reading his commencement speech at stanford :
http://news-service.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html
Krishna Playful Divine by Pavan K. Varma
This book was a bit scattered for me or maybe I built the wrong expectation about this book.
I was expecting the book to appeal to be similar to the sensibilities he evoked in his other book "Being Indian".
I would still recommend it for contemperary indians who are pavan varma fans. You still appreciate his intelluctual and scholarly approach he takes in his writing
-
--
Posted by Suresh to BOOKS TO READ at 6/17/2006 02:06:00 PM
Saturday, April 29, 2006
[Random thoughts] Dear God,
Dear God,
When I die and come back I wanna be like this guy who can do this ==>
If my Karma credit does not permit that than, I wanna be able to do at least this =>
--
Posted by Suresh to Random thoughts at 4/29/2006 01:28:00 PM
When I die and come back I wanna be like this guy who can do this ==>
If my Karma credit does not permit that than, I wanna be able to do at least this =>
I Challenge Numa Numa Watch it now on StupidVideos! |
Oh and also one other thing God, Can you make me capable of playing at least one sport even if its only DodgeBall ?
Thank you. Much appreciated.
Thank you. Much appreciated.
--
Posted by Suresh to Random thoughts at 4/29/2006 01:28:00 PM
[Random thoughts] Tube Talk
Commented on Jinal's post:
http://stylestation.typepad.com/home/2006/04/late_night_voye.html
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Posted by Suresh to Random thoughts at 4/29/2006 09:28:00 AM
http://stylestation.typepad.com/home/2006/04/late_night_voye.html
--
Posted by Suresh to Random thoughts at 4/29/2006 09:28:00 AM
Wednesday, April 26, 2006
Random test
Ignore this post just testing something
-Suresh
Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Abolishing Time Zones
The problem he posed to me was :
"Why do we have different time zones ? Why doesn't earth have just one single time ? ".
Let me elaborate. His idea was that the people of this planet should be able to freeup their brains from the notion of different time zones and time differences. They shouldn't have to ask a question such as "What time is it over there ?".
Basically what he was proposing was that everybody in the planet should follow one time. Period.
No time zones, and no time differences.
I am not sure if it was the food that had made us indulge in this kind of conversation but it was during our lunch break so I am pretty certain we were not drinking and even if we were, that's besides the point. Lets just talk about this radical idea for a minute. OK.
What if everybody on the planet had the same time? You call your mom in Indiana or uncle in kansas or boss in Bangkok they all have the same time. You dont ever have to ask the question "what time is it over there? " again.
Everybody's watch shows the same time.
The question of time is likely to come up only when say a Martian looks up and queries his wife "What time is it on earth honey ?"
If time zones were abolished, lets analyze this and ask some of the basic questions first.
Q. How would your day be organized in such a system ?
A. Well In this system, people wont try to organize chores around time but would rather assign time to their chores. Let me explain.
All other countries and cities now adjust themselves from this baseline but they dont adjust time like the current system instead they adjust their chore. That means New yorkers now wake up at 12:30 AM, go to work at 2:30 AM , Lunch at 6:30 AM , Get out of work at 11:30 AM, (yeh!) and be in bed at 5:00 PM. (This is assuming new yorkers conduct their days just like londoners). Do you get it ? Now is it that radical ?
Q. Is there a need to have AM and PM then ?
Q. so whats the big benefit ?
A. Well, lets list a few obvious ones..
Travel Industry will benefit tremendously. World travel will be such a breeze with all departure and arrival times being truly universal and not local times. Your intinerary will match the flight plans and best of all no need to constantly adjust your watches every time you plane lands on a different time zone. So, after a long shitty flight if you wanna know how long you have been couped up in your coach class all you have to do is subtract your arrival time from your departure time.
Airline Industry. Flight control systems and routing software will be so much more simplified with a single time. Imagine that, every flight on the planet having a universal take-off and landing time. No more complicated flight management systems, I understand that just the is not done by human brains but it still helps in reducing the margin of error.
Computing. Computers have been around for over half a century now. And time has been a important component of computers since its invention. But they being our creations we have perhaps passed on our imperfections and our notion of "time" to them as well. Every computer is configured to whatever time zone its physically located in. Agreed all computers have internal clocks whose basic tick units are independant of time zones but they are almost always reset to the time zone of its human user. So in effect what we have done is use the computer like a over priced clock to obtain the local time and then further built our software systems treating time as a local parameter and thus tying down the entire application to the geography of where the computer is located. This type of view and usage of time is endemic to almost all software. This means the computer suffers from the same notion of time as does its human counter part, ie. they are a prisoner to their longitudinal time zones and need adjustment everytime they wander out of that zone. This was fine before the onset of the digital age when computers were isolated pieces of machinery happy and content to be running their applications in their own little capsules . But now with the internet and the explosion of distributed computing, data and network packets traverse from one computer to another thousands of miles away within microseconds. And guess what, How do these computers start talking to each other when they cross geographic boundaries ?
They ask the question - "What time is it over there ?".
Agreed, this problem has been already solved and computer are good at doing just that -adjusting to new time zones, doing it faster and better than humans at least, and some might argue that thats the exact reason why computers were invented, to do all the adjustments and relieve the humans from that burden.
But what if in the digital age all computers were synchronized to one single universal time.
Wouldn't it be better if computers didn't have to deal with this time issue at all and instead focus on other problems. Time sychronization is a huge problem that scientists have pondered over the years. In fact its one of the toughest problems in science and some have concluded that it can never be really solved because time is such a relative dimension as einsten's theory of relativity tells us. But given such constraints we can device our modern control systems better and efficiently if only all computers ran under one universal time zone and dont have to perform any sychronization at all. The benefits from this for distributed computing would be tremendous. Imagine communication networks, protocols design, real-time systems, embedded systems, enterprise applications, p2p systems, communication gears, cell phones, satellite systems basically every piece of hardware and software - freed from the bondage of geographic longitude based time zones. Computer scientists are already talking about third generation control systems (first being analog, second being digital) where all systems of the future are just intelligent devices that will all be able to find each other in a global grid (internet or wireless or whatever) and communicate with each other and perform their tasks in a collaborative matrix.
Don't you think this matrix of the future would be better off with a single time zone ?
IMHO Dave could be on to something here. The time has come to perhaps clean the slate and devise a new universal clock that is well suited for the digital age. Unfortunately the internal clocks of the human citizens of this planet may not be as easily programmable as that of its electronic citizens.
So what happens to things such as - Human bio rhythms, Time/epoch based human existence, Time based social systems, Human cultural affinity towards time, Time based belief systems such as horoscopes etc
..... Stay tuned
Sunday, April 23, 2006
Open your Pandora's Box
A colleague at work sent me to www.pandora.com few weeks ago and I am loving it.
What I like about it, besides the interface is its extremely low latency between the time when my brain says "Put on some music NOW" and the time when the music actually starts playing.
- No Firing up of your media player and navigating to your MP3s
- No Fishing for your iPOD or whatever MP3 gizmo you have and fumbling with its controls or headsets
- or Worse, NO looking for a CD to play and fidgeting with your CDROM drive or Stereo.
Just open your browser and point it to www.pandora.com (of course assuming you already logged into pandora before) and the music just plays instantly (well almost instantly).
If you are not too picky about your music or finicky about playing only your MP3 collection then go ahead and open your pandora's box..at.... www.pandora.com.
Unlike the Greek, Pandora this curiosity won't kill you :-)
What I like about it, besides the interface is its extremely low latency between the time when my brain says "Put on some music NOW" and the time when the music actually starts playing.
- No Firing up of your media player and navigating to your MP3s
- No Fishing for your iPOD or whatever MP3 gizmo you have and fumbling with its controls or headsets
- or Worse, NO looking for a CD to play and fidgeting with your CDROM drive or Stereo.
Just open your browser and point it to www.pandora.com (of course assuming you already logged into pandora before) and the music just plays instantly (well almost instantly).
Unlike the Greek, Pandora this curiosity won't kill you :-)
ORB
At various times in the past I have used the following tools to both access my media remotely or share them with friends and family.
1. For Audio Broadcast - Shoutcast+Winamp
2. For TV/Video streaming - Microsoft Media Encoder
3. For Photo sharing - Local FTP/Web/File Shares or public photo-shares such as Flickr/Yahoo
But installing and configuring the above tools is not always easy. For a average home user its geeky, technical and can be frustrating especially if you have to configure firewall ports, figure out bandwidth settings, encoders etc. I had always wondered why noone has not yet come up with a single application to do all of the above. Maybe XP should have had a movie broadcaster along with its movie maker. Maybe it was a strategic decision with creating markets for their Media Center PC.
Then about a year or so ago I heard about SlingBox and few weeks ago I even checked it out at the local Radio Shack. Cool little gadget. I got the feeling its well poised to be the next Internet Tivo.
Untill I stumbled across ORB.COM on Scott Hanselman's blog. Its a great alternative to the SlingBox and does all of the above in a sleek software only solution.
Within minutes I had it running and was able to broadcast a movie, webcam, listen to my mp3 collection and view my photos remotely.
Check it out. http://www.orb.com
1. For Audio Broadcast - Shoutcast+Winamp
2. For TV/Video streaming - Microsoft Media Encoder
3. For Photo sharing - Local FTP/Web/File Shares or public photo-shares such as Flickr/Yahoo
But installing and configuring the above tools is not always easy. For a average home user its geeky, technical and can be frustrating especially if you have to configure firewall ports, figure out bandwidth settings, encoders etc. I had always wondered why noone has not yet come up with a single application to do all of the above. Maybe XP should have had a movie broadcaster along with its movie maker. Maybe it was a strategic decision with creating markets for their Media Center PC.
Then about a year or so ago I heard about SlingBox and few weeks ago I even checked it out at the local Radio Shack. Cool little gadget. I got the feeling its well poised to be the next Internet Tivo.
Untill I stumbled across ORB.COM on Scott Hanselman's blog. Its a great alternative to the SlingBox and does all of the above in a sleek software only solution.
Within minutes I had it running and was able to broadcast a movie, webcam, listen to my mp3 collection and view my photos remotely.
Check it out. http://www.orb.com
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