Monday, December 12, 2005

India's IT Capital to be renamed

As reported in news agencies,

Authorities in India have decided to rename Bangalore, the country’s Information Technology capital, as Bengaluru. Karnataka Chief Minister Dharam Singh has asked the state’s top bureaucrat, Chief Secretary B.K. Das, to initiate steps for renaming the city, the NDTV network reported. Bangalore is known as Bengaluru in Kannada, a Dravidian language spoken in the state. Singh added the change of name was proposed at a meeting of prominent Kannada litterateurs recently. The name change will be effected by November 2006, the golden jubilee of the formation of the state.

Indian authorities continue to bamboozle me. They are renaming Bangalore based on the logic that if Bombay, Madras, Calcutta can change their name suiting their traditional culture, why can't Bangalore follow the suit. But one teeny-weeny point they forgot is that Bangalore is not just India's IT hub, its a powerful global brand now. Outsourcing worldwide is synonymous to Bangalore, they even made a verb out of Bangalore. Changing name of such a brand doesn't make any sense. Come on guys, what local culture are you trying to address with a stupid name as Bengaluru. This is the time when we should be using our brand image and be making big strides in world economy. Alas, but who cares what this moron thinks!

Cheers!

Rejection #1

One down! Plenty more rejections on their way.

Friday, December 09, 2005

$100 Laptop from MIT

A hand-cranked laptop that will cost roughly $100, developed by MIT is expected to be available to poorer countries by late 2006. This project is for bringing poor school children in poor countries closer to computers and create a new wave in field of education.


In principle, the project seems simple: Design a laptop with built-in wireless and minimal power consumption, find manufacturers willing to build it for about $100, convince governments to buy it in quantities of at least 1 million as an initial order, and give it to schoolchildren to keep as their own property.The proposed design of the machines calls for a 500MHz processor, 1GB of memory and a unique dual-mode display that can be used in full-color mode, or in a black-and-white sunlight-readable mode. It's not clear yet how much cranking will be needed for the higher-power color mode.

It's expected to run an open-source operating system, probably Linux, MIT Media Lab Chairman Nicholas Negroponte said, rather than a closed-source product from Apple Computer or Microsoft. Companies including Google, Advanced Micro Devices, News Corp. and Red Hat have donated to the project. This laptop will surely bring one hell of a technological revolution in developing countries. The wait is on!

Cheers!

Mouse-less Firefox

I always believe one thing that differentiates nerds from newbies is way they handle computer interaction. You will always find nerds, instead of using mouse, use keyboard shortcut keys for interaction. And with the world going gaga over Firefox, here is the list of few keyboard shortcuts that could reduce your trips to the mouse and can lead to a much more fulfilling web browsing experience.

Navigation from the toolbar:

  1. Select location bar: Ctrl+L or Alt+D
  2. Select search bar: Ctrl+K
  3. Change search engine: Ctrl+Down after doing Ctrl+K
Opening pages:
  1. New Window: Ctrl+N
  2. New Tab: Ctrl+T
Grab Bag:
  1. Switch tabs: Ctrl+Tab
  2. Select tab (1-9): Ctrl+[1-9]
  3. Home Page: Alt+Home
  4. Complete .com Addres: Ctrl+Enter

For comprehensive list, click here.

Cheers!

Bill Gates LIVE webcast!

Bill Gates today in Bangalore will launch the next generation of integrated computing platform - SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005 and BizTalk Server 2006. If you don't have the invitation, just do no miss the webcast. Register for Bill Gates LIVE webcast.


[via Enginerd]

Cheers!

foXpose: Cool Firefox Plugin

The Viamatic foXpose plugin is a tiny little extension that lets one view all the tabs inside a browser window. This extension will works only on Firefox 1.5 or higher. With this we just need to click on the icon in the status bar to view all the browser windows with a single click. Its nifty and impressive, check the result:



Install foXpose extension now.

Cheers!

Bill Gates visits India



Bill Gates, chairman and founder of Microsoft Corporation, the chief architect of software revolution, is in India from 6th to 9th December. He has come here with his wife Melinda and had numerous public engagements such as Confederation of Indian Industry-hosted CEOs' Forum and Microsoft Government Leaders Forum in New Delhi. Today there is a Developers' Forum in Bangalore.

As always, a visit from such a high profile personality raises lots of investment hopes and to be true Bill Gates has lived up to the expectations with his announcements.
He said that the company will invest $1.7 billion in India over the next four years to expand its operations. The amount will be deployed across select focus areas in line with Microsoft's strategic vision for India. He also announced that Microsoft will scale up its India operations by increasing the local headcount by 3,000 over three to four years, taking the total strength to 7,000. Gates was emphatically impressed with India's human resource saying, "India has a fantastic pool of software professionals. The world needs to benefit from this. I never thought with so little product companies software services sector will grow so strong as it has grown here."

Bill Gates also met political and industrial heavyweights. He met Sonia and Rahul Gandhi in New Delhi. He had a meeting with Anil Ambani to d
iscuss cooperation between the two companies on next-generation Internet Protocol (IP)-based television services in India.

This is a very high profile visit and has generated lot of hype. One view is that he came to India and has conquered the mindspace of everyone with his announcements, but techies like me think that he has come here just to buy some cheap labour in disguise of big announcements. Pretty wierd thought.. huh?!

Anyways hail Bill Gates, hail Microsoft because for last few days I have been using Linux extensively and have realized that nothing beats the simple and effective user interface of Windows. I simply love windows!!

For complete coverage of Bill Gates visit to India, click here.

Cheers!

Friday, December 02, 2005

Reboot (Ctrl+Alt+Del)



Rebooting was never such fun.. David Bradley would be so pleased!

Thursday, December 01, 2005

World AIDS Day

Today, December 1, is recognized as the international day of action on HIV and AIDS. World AIDS Day is about people getting the facts about HIV and AIDS. Considering that in developing countries like India, AIDS is still considered a taboo, such days should be marked with tremendous awareness campaign. It can make help people accept an HIV positive in the society. Its about time, we make a difference and help eradicate the social injustice done to the sufferers of this deadly disease!

Thursday, November 24, 2005

Random #1

Iam creating a repository of some good links on world wide web. Herez the first edition:

1. Celebrity Maps
Hey where does Pamela Andreson live? The question is about to be answered.. unleashing Celebrity maps which combines the power of google maps with celebrity address found across the web.

2. Guess-The-Google
Guess-The-Google is a simple web application in which a grid of images is displayed and the user has to guess the keyword which when entered in google image search will give the same result as is appearing on the grid. Simple but very addictive!

3. Protopage
Protopage provides you free personal start pages. You can have list of your favourite links, some sticky notes, panel amalgamating all search engines. This is how moronz start page looks like.

4. 10 ways to keep updated about new Google services
Google is officially releasing a new product every six days, and a new google rumor cuts the blogosphere’s fresh air every couple of hours. How to keep tabs on all the happenings? Click on the link to find out more.

5. Cool Animation
Click on the link to check out a very nifty and impressive animation.

6. Rtm86
A website made up of only images. Very innovative and very original!

7. Don't Click It
This site is making waves with HCI aficionado's. This site aims to remove the entire concept of mouse clicking.. interesting, isn't it?

Stay tuned for more such randomness.

Cheers!

Wednesday, November 23, 2005

Did you get an e-mail from FBI?

This is the question that is doing the rounds today in the computer society worldwide. This is because a mass e-mail purportedly from the FBI is circulating online, carrying with it an attachment that contains a variant of the Sober computer virus.

ComputerWorld reports of this fake e-mail scam:

In an announcement today, the FBI advised computer users that the agency never sends unsolicited e-mails and that they should not open the attachments in the fraudulent messages. The scam e-mail tells recipients that their Internet use has been monitored by the FBI and that they have accessed illegal Web sites, according to the FBI. The e-mails, which are sent from e-mail addresses including mail@fbi.gov, post@fib.gov and admin@fbi.gov, then direct recipients to open an attachment and answer questions.

The text of the fake e-mails says: “We have logged your IP-address on more than 30 illegal Websites. Important: Please answer our questions! The list of questions are attached.” The messages then include a fake name of an FBI official and the real address and phone number of the agency.

No information was available early today on how many of the e-mails might have been sent or how many computer users might have launched the viruses on their machines. The FBI said it “takes this matter seriously and is investigating” the scheme. Recipients of the fake messages are being asked to report them online to the Internet Crime Complaint Center.

Hmm.. seems like even, FBI are vulnerable!

Tuesday, November 22, 2005

Google Base up and running

Yesterday Google officially released Google Base. Google Base is a place where you can easily submit all types of online and offline content that google will host and make searchable online. Google Base enables content owners to easily make their information searchable online. Anyone, from large companies to website owners and individuals, can use it to submit their content in the form of data items. Google will host the items and make them searchable for free.

Google says "our goal is to organize the world's information and make it universally useful and accessible, and the world's information certainly includes almost anything you might wish to contribute. We encourage you to submit your item, whether it's your store inventory, collection of original poetry, or research paper on cancer receptors."

You can read more about google base at google's official blog but Iam off to try my hands at google base first hand.. you coming?

Cheers!

The 8 basic steps of Image Editing

Tweaking around with images is always fun but not everyone's cup of tea. To help dolts like me Matt LeClair author of Oreilly’s, “Photoshop in a Nutshell” has written an article explaining the very basic steps of Image Editing. Author claims that this article will also help you to understand how to use Photoshop’s tools together.

Know, The 8 basic steps of Image Editing and manipulate digitally your way to glory.

Cheers!

Sunday, November 20, 2005

The Great Indian Dream aka CAT

The Great Indian Dream is left shattered.. shattered Big Time..



One year long fucking journey to 20th November ended in a huge disaster. Iam left depressed, demoralised and rejected. Life cannot be any more fucking full of shit! Hope the imprints of this Black Sunday are erased from my memory soon..

Friday, November 11, 2005

Letz go sightseeing


Want to go to exotic locations?
Getting in touch with Cox & Kings or SOTC?

No need!, Google Sightseeing offers you the pleasure of roaming around the world from the comfort of your own computer. It is an intelligent and innovative extension exploiting Google's excellent Maps technology.

Google Sightseeing is not a part of Google Maps or even sponsored by Google, it simply links to the data found there, but is an excellent way to quickly locate many of the most popular tourist destinations in the world via satellite images from Google Maps.

So try out Google Sightseeing, meanwhile Iam off to a virtual tour of NYC!

Cheers!

Tuesday, November 08, 2005

Take on Project Management

By any chance did you ever think that Project Management is a highly systematic and specialized thing? If yes, then your illusion is about to be eliminated..



In case you can't read:

Pic 1: How the costumer explained it
Pic 2: How the project leader understood it
Pic 3: How the analyst designed it
Pic 4: How the programmer wrote it
Pic 5: How the business consultant described it
Pic 6: How the project was documented!!
Pic 7: What operations installed
Pic 8: How the costumer was billed
Pic 9: How it was supported
Pic 10: WHAT THE COSTUMER REALLY NEEDED

Cheers!

Thursday, November 03, 2005

World Usability Day: Making it easy

Today, Novemeber 3 is celebrated as the World Usability Day. World Usability Day promotes the value of usability engineering, user-centered design, and every user's responsibility to ask for things that work better. The Usabililty Professionals' Association is doing that by encouraging, organizing, and sponsoring 36 hours of activities at the local level around the globe, all occurring on November 3, 2005.

Staying put on the same topic of usability, here is a piece of article, which says India is short of 60,000 usability professionals.

Sunday, October 30, 2005

Stop It

Stop it Pakistan..
Stop the terrorism..
Stop disturbing our peace..
When will you stop this blood bath?



A series of explosions rocked Delhi yesterday evening, killing at least 55 people and leaving many injured, some of them critically. Terrorist planted these bombs at very strategic locations targeting innocent people doing their last minute Diwali/Eid shopping. Blasts took place at busy South Delhi Markets of Sarojini Nagar and Govindpuri and in Central Delhi at Paharganj market. Fortunately, bomb in Chandni Chowk area was diffused. Market areas of Paharganj and Sarojini Nagar were reported to be choc-a-bloc with shoppers doing their last minute purchases for Diwali, just a few days away. The blasts are suspected to be the handiwork of banned Pakistan-based Lashker-e-Toiba outfit.

Without any reports or evidence, I have blatantly blamed Pakistan for the serial bomb blast that has rocked the capital city of India. I don't know why, but immediately after hearing this news, I couldn't control my anger against them and their act of sponsoring terrorism. They have continously stabbed our genuine efforts of peace building measures. Their terrorist stormed into our parliament, they unnecessarily bought up Kargil and are wholly responsible for turning beautiful valley of Jammu & Kashmir into terrorist haven. A stupid advise to top honchos of our country, stand up, get the forces in order and demolish this sick country, so that we can live in peace..

I apologize for my outburst, but terrorism is turning to be a huge menace to the society. They have turned the festive season of Diwali into days of grief and sorrow.

Readers, I didn't mean to hurt any sentiments. Well to digress from this topic, FYI, I am taking a sabbatical from blogging for few days as Iam heading to my home town, Delhi for Diwali, to be with my parents, brother and friends. But yesterday's event will have a bearing on how this festival will be celebrated this year. Wishing all a very happy diwali and at the same expressing grief over the incident and praying that affected people get well soon and the city comes out of chaos soon.

Arpit.

Friday, October 28, 2005

Human Clock

I always thought machines were replacing humans. But alas, I have been proven wrong. A very unique clock has emerged on webscape recently; our good ol' mechanical clock is being replaced by the human clock! Oh, you credulous soul, have a look below:


The Human Clock is a collection of photographs and images made by people from all over the world to signify each minute in the 24-hour clock. The pictures vary between people holding up signs with the time on them, to photographs of every day objects made to look like the time. Charm of this clock is unthinkable and it is really fascinating to see all the different types of entry. Yesterday, I spend more than 1 hour checking all the entries and now this site is my official time-piece!

So what say, wanna check time on human clock?

Cheers.

Thursday, October 27, 2005

What exactly is this RSS?

RSS is a new web technology that helps online users manage the flood of information in cyberspace. RSS, these days is one of the latest buzzword on internet. Many tech savvy users or "geeks" might be aware of it, but for rest of the dolts, here is a quick FAQ on RSS, courtesy ABC News:

1. What is RSS?

RSS is a new way to publish information online. Depending on who you ask, RSS stands for either "Rich Site Summary" or "Really Simple Syndication." At the heart of the technology is special Web coding, called XML, that has been widely developed by the global online community over the past few years.The XML code for RSS describes a new type of Web information called a "news feed." Essentially, the feeds can contain a summary and links of the new content on a Web site or anything else a creator desires to share. Anyone — an online surfer or another Web site — can pick up the RSS codes and with the appropriate Web software display the information automatically. The concept is similar to how a newswire service operates: Information published by one news organization can be "syndicated" — picked up and displayed — by any other news organization.

2. What Does RSS Mean for Web Site Publishers?
Through syndication, online content creators have a much easier way to get their information published and seen. By supplying the RSS code on the Web site, visitors can "subscribe" to the feed and automatically receive updates on their personal computers of new content on the site. Such an RSS feed will free content creators from creating and sending e-mail reminders — many of which may be stopped by anti-spam filters.

3. Why Would Ordinary Web Users Like RSS?

For Web surfers, the advantages of RSS are quite simple: They save time and bandwidth. Instead of remembering to visit a favorite Web site, the news comes directly into your computer daily or at whatever interval you want. What's more, most RSS feeds contain just links, headlines or brief synopsis of new information only. That means the small amount of Web data can be sent to any XML-compatible device — a cell phone, pager or handheld computer — without a lengthy download process. More importantly, RSS gives you control over receiving information you want without revealing information about yourself. Unlike subscribing to an e-mail newsletter, you never have to give out your e-mail address with an RSS feed. That avoids the possibility of receiving spam or unwanted junk e-mail from the Web site.

4. What Do I Need to Receive RSS Feeds?
First, you need a so-called feed reader. Performing a search for "RSS Feed Readers" in any major online search engine such as Google.com or Yahoo! will produce a slew of software options — many of which are free or at little cost. Once you've obtained a feed reader, subscribing to an RSS feed is as simple as looking for the appropriate XML code. Most Web sites that publish an RSS feed will display a tiny orange box or button labeled "RSS" or "XML." Click the button and your Web browser typically goes to a page of cryptic code. Just copy the Web "address" or URL of that page and plug it into your feed reader. The software will then automatically retrieve and display that site's latest information.

Thatz all to know about RSS, guess now you are ready to conquer the information world!!

Cheers.

Monday, October 24, 2005

Apple gets sued over iPod nano scratches

Unhappy iPod Nano customers are taking Apple to court over scratching issues they have experienced with their players. The suit, filed in a U.S. District Court in San Jose, alleges the screens scratch even during normal usage, "causing Plaintiff class members to incur loss of use and monetary damages." The suit is the latest in a string of headaches for Apple over the device. Scratching problems have been the most common complaint from users, although several had screen breakage issues that Apple dismissed as a "quality control issue."

The lawsuit asks for damages including the retail price of the iPod Nano, statutory and punitive damages, and attorney's fees. Furthermore, the class action members want a portion of the Nano's profits.

Apple has repeatedly dismissed the scratching issue. "A few vocal customers are saying that their iPod nano is more susceptible to scratching than prior iPods," the company said previously. "The iPod nano is made with the same high-quality polycarbonate plastic as the fourth-generation iPod."The suit disagrees with this assessment, and suggests that Apple was attempting to profit off of the issue. "Rather than admit the design flaw when consumers began to express widespread complaints about the screen's propensity to scratch easily and excessively, Apple concealed the defect and advised class members that they would need to purchase additional equipment to prevent the screen from scratching excessively," the complaint alleges.

Click here for related article.

Sunday, October 23, 2005

Few Internet Deception Methods

It is a well known fact that consumers' ability to spot fraud in the Internet is still not very good. Even savvy users sometimes falter against the newest scam. What are the possible Internet Decpetion Methods? Here is a list of few:

  • Phishing: (also carding and spoofing) is a form of social engineering, characterized by attempts to fraudulently acquire sensitive information, such as passwords and credit card details, by masquerading as a trustworthy person or business in an apparently official electronic communication, such as an email or an instant message. The term phishing arises from the use of increasingly sophisticated lures to "fish" for users' financial information and passwords.
  • Pharming: is the exploitation of a vulnerability in the DNS server software that allows a hacker to acquire the Domain Name for a site, and to redirect that Web site's traffic to another Web site.
  • Page-jacking and mouse-trapping: are techniques used by scammers to divert Internet users from their intended Web destination (page-jacking) to the scammers site from which the user is unable to leave using their browsers back, forward or even close buttons (mouse-trapping).
Click here to read the article, Fine-tuning your Internet deception detectors.

Arpit.

Saturday, October 22, 2005

Letz track her


Worried, your wife is cheating on you?

Want to know where your daughter is late at night?

Forget-me-not panties answers all these questions. These panties have built-in GPS and unique sensor technology which can help give you her location, and even her temperature and heart rate, and she will never even know it's there! Unlike the cumbersome and uncomfortable chastity belts of the past, these panties are 100% cotton, and use cutting-edge technology to help you protect what matters most.

Want to order one? Or have a look at people's view of this amazing device.

Cheers.

| WetNoodle

Friday, October 21, 2005

Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes

Jakob Nielsen, often referred as the usability guru, has addressed usability issues concerning weblogs. According to him,

Weblogs are often too internally focused and ignore key usability issues, making it hard for new readers to understand the site and trust the author.
Click here to read the top ten design mistakes concerning weblogs, which will enable you to put your blog for a usabiltiy test.

President Kalam warns against Google Earth

Google Earth puts a planet's worth of imagery and other geographic information right on your desktop and ever since its launch, has become one of the most popular services on the internet.

But many top government officials are wary of this service. Recently, Indian President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam has joined the list of government officials charging that the geographic details provided by Google Earth's satellite imaging program pose a security risk. "Developing countries, which are already in danger of terrorist attacks, have been singularly chosen." Kalam said.

While addressing the nation's top police officers at the Vallabhabhai Patel National Police Academy at Hyderabad, he cautioned them to be aware of emerging "open-source intelligence." He also showed the audience aerial pictures of some of the sensitive locations in India.

"When you look deeper into it, you would realize that the specific laws in some countries, regarding spatial observations over their territory and UN recommendations about the display of spatial observations, are inadequate" he noted.

For entire story, click here.

Shitty Blogs

While browsing random blogs, I stumbled upon a post which talked about Shitty Blogs. Shitty Blogs is a new and supposedly clever (or so the makers think) website, which aims to review all the really bad blogs out there in Blogland (good luck with that, dudes!). It's title is, very originally, Shitty Blogs, and this is how they describe themselves:

Shitty Blogs features reviews of blogs that are really boring, stupid, or ugly.
I liked their reviews and mailed their mastermind, Horatio to review my love blog - moronsgospel. But what followed, wasn't pretty. He tore my blog apart and described me horny! So all of you, looking for a good laugh, click here to read the review.

Cheers!

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

We have new 007


The name's Bond. James Bond
.
This line has almost become a trite, but has always been associated with class and elegance! After Pierce Brosnan announced that Die Another Day would be his last outing in the famous tuxedo, the search was on to find his successor. Couple of days back, producers Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc. and Sony Pictures Entertainment, announced the arrival of new Bond Man. It is Daniel Craig, who takes over 007 mantle.

Craig will follow in the footsteps of previous Bond stars Pierce Brosnan, Sir Sean Connery, Sir Roger Moore, George Lazenby and Timothy Dalton. Daniel Craig has been cast in the role of the legendary British secret agent, James Bond, in the highly anticipated 007 adventure thriller Casino Royale.

Casino Royale will be the 21st James Bond film produced by the franchise holders, EON Productions. The MGM/Columbia Pictures production begins shooting in January and is due for release worldwide on November 17, 2006. It will be filmed in the Czech Republic, the Bahamas, Italy and the UK.

Tuesday, October 18, 2005

Bad Designs

We have bag full of products, which we use almost daily, but are badly designed. Here are few examples:

1. Mixer Lid

While operating the mixture the snaps as locking device are not sufficient enough to hold the lid of mixer jar. It needs an external force for keeping it on the jar. This keeps the operator engaged unnecessarily. Even though its not required to hold it in position and a separate jar is provided for this purpose, due to the requirement the user uses in his own way.


2. Console Indicator in Pulsar

The dashboard consol show a blinking light as an indication when left or right indicator is on. But it doesn’t provide which indicator is on as the arrow provided without any separation. The two arrows have a common light. So when the indicator is turned on this light is lit. What it conveys could be more suggestive by lighting only one-half. The user can get the feedback by seeing the actual knob or by seeing the actual light. But when the console is provided which is located in such a way he get to see all the information, this could be enhanced more.


3. ATM - Swallowing of cards

One feels insecure if the card is swallowed by the machine. On contrary user feels in control with swapping action since he still holds it than loosing it altogether. Swallowing is rather a systems requirement than a users’ preferred option. Moreover, if case of system failure, the card gets stuck inside and the user is frustrated in such scenarios. Users especially in rush hours forget to get card back, which puts them in difficult positions. The next person may take advantage of his position which could have been avoided.


4. Door Handle of Hyderabad Buses

The handle at the door of entrance of Hyderabad city buses are hidden inside making it difficult for the users to find the location. It should be more promptly seen and accessible. Most of the passengers especially in rush hours and in Indian scenario run and catch the bus.


And there are plenty of more such products, coming out of our daily lives and we being ignorant fools, continue using them. Need of the hour is, good design to facilitate usable products for the users.

Arpit.

Big Black Pencil

Wooden Wisdom has many takers and while surfing along Pencil Revolution, I came across very interesting website of Big Black Pencil, which say, Big Ideas come out of Big Pencils.



Visit the home of Big Black Pencil for one of the most coolest designed websites around. They say,

"Big black pencils are as much a part of Leo Burnett as
that ever-present bowl of crisp apples. Why? Because
Leo believed big ideas come out of big pencils."

Who is Leo Burnett? Well, Leo Burnett (October 21, 1891 - June 7, 1971) was an advertising executive famous for creating such icons as the Jolly Green Giant, the Marlboro Man, the Pillsbury Doughboy and Tony the Tiger.

Arpit.

Monday, October 17, 2005

Season to remember for Renault

2005 Formula 1 season comprising of 19 races, most ever, came to an end yesterday. This season will go down in history books as the season which broke the back of Ferrari's and Micheal Schumacher's stranglehold on this sport. Fernando Alonso of Renault outfit, won 7 races on his way to becoming the youngest F1 champion at the age of 24. Throughout the season, he has been a model of consistency amalgamating it with cautious aggression and audacity. Meanwhile, in the last race at Shanghai, Renault also won the Overall Constructors Championship pipping McLaren by just 9 points. For, Renault a team which was never a big shot in this sport, all these achievements maybe looking like a dream come true and you can just imagine the wild celebrations that will be going on this time..





Congratulations to Renault and Fernando Alonso, but I cannot hide my disappointment that Kimi Raikkonen, the Iceman could not pull it off. He had argubaly the quickest car and the best package, but guess lady luck was never with him and he had to settle for 2nd position in the championship. Cheer up, Kimi, its just matter of time before you and McLaren totally dominate F1 and destroy your opponents!

A quick word on Micheal Schumacher:
This seven time world champion is undoubtedly the god of Formula 1. But for his sheer arrogance and supremacy, I hate him and his all red Ferrari Outfit. With great pleasure, I tell you that there is now a refreshing change in the sport. Ferrari have lost and Schumi's arrongant, all victorious arse has been kicked! And, it seems all is not well in Ferrari Camp, to my belief, Micheal has taken this season defeat very badly and after crashing out of the Shanghai race, he was so embarassed, that he could not show his face to anyone and was seen running away from the action to possible exile! Have a look below:



Cheers!

Sunday, October 16, 2005

Google Fight

Sachin Tendulkar v/s Sania Mirza
Cricket v/s Formula1
Love v/s Lust

Ever wondered who or what will win these fights? Worry not, we now have Googlefight at our disposable to put an end to all the nagging fights. Googlefight is a simple web service that allows users to compare the number of search results returned by the Google search engine for two given queries. The results are displayed graphically in a Flash animation.



Two animated stick figures fight on screen after the queries are entered, and then an animated bar graph appears showing the results.

So you ready to fight.. err, Googlefight.

Cheers.

Friday, October 14, 2005

Desi Cyberwar

The hottest topic on blogosphere for quite sometime has undoubtedly been IIPM.

Brief History:
The furor started with the article by JAM, a youth magazine exposing IIPM. JAM and its editor Rashmi Bansal enjoy a strong following which troubled IIPM as their credibility was getting seriously tarnished with such an explosive article being read my thousands of people. They quickly got into action and gave Rashmi Bansal a legal notice and accused of her taking bribe, and claimed it was caught by a sting operation by AajTak. This accusation broke out a desi cyberwar, first of its kind with all the bloggers backing the JAM editor. Most desi bloggers supported her and wrote post in their blogs condeming IIPM and supporting Rashmi Bansal. One such blogger is Gaurav Sabnis, who was an IBM employee. IIPM decided to act against Sabnis and fired a legal notice to him. But this thing did not seem to bother Sabnis. But IIPM had another trick up its sleeve, they put pressure on Sabnis employers IBM - saying they would burn the IBM laptops they use on their campus in front of IBM Delhi Office. IBM last year sold 1,500 laptops to IIPM . Seeing that, IBM was unnecessarily being dragged into the controversy, Sabnis being a man of principles, decided to stand by his opinion about IIPM and thus quit his job at IBM.

Current Status:
Blogosphere is united, and totally against IIPM. This controversy has now become a national news. To put smile on bloggers who condemn IIPM, Outlook Magazine has issued a caution notice:



But sad news is that after Gaurav Sabnis, another blogger has become a victim of IIPM rage. Varna has recieved a legal notice and that too, a 175 crore lawsuit. This war is turning real ugly, innocent bloggers are getting targeted, which has angered the online community a lot. In response to this an Online Petition has been created to protest against IIPM.


This is turning out to be a fascinating story because this war is looked at as a fundamental breach of the right to free speech. But as they say every war is ugly and same is the true with this one. Bloggers are getting threatning legal notices, people are losing their jobs but the sad part is that future of IIPM students is getting damaged because of all the bad publicity their institute has gained in these last few weeks. Just for the record, Iam sympathizing with IIPM students, but not with IIPM. For years it's outrageous ads have been a menace and it was about time, things were put in right perspective.

To end this post, I have this great feeling to witness and be part of the first cyberwar of the country but at the same time, my sympathy to Rashmi, Gaurav and Varna. I hope they come victorious out of this mess!

Arpit.

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

Other Side of the Coin

When you come across such things, frustation level just soars up because other side of the coin is rusting and we seem to be doing nothing about it.

Can't we do something to stop this rusting.. don't we have any moral responsibility?

Arpit.

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

Aargh..

whywhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhy
whythewhywhywhymoronwhywhyinsidewhywhy
whywhymewhywhywhyrefuseswhywhywhytowhy
whywhywhywhydiewhywhywhywhywhywhywhywhy

.
Don't even try to make sense out of this gibberish!!
Alas, I thought, I had regained senses :(

Toxic Blogs

Blogging has oflate stormed into the Internet Community and its presence can be seen anywhere and everywhere. With such phenomenal success, it was just matter of time before cybercriminals took a note of it. This is exactly what has happened, below is a shocking piece of news:

Cybercriminals are increasingly hosting malicious files on blogs, ready for a Trojan to download them to a victim's PC.

Blogs started turning toxic in the first half of 2005 as malware authors started using free Web hosting and blogging services to store their malicious files, according to Internet security firm Websense.

According to the Websense Security Trends Report 2005, the first half of this year saw the Web become "by far the fastest growing attack vector", as malware authors started distributing links to malicious files in socially engineered e-mails instead of sending the actual files, which would most likely be blocked by corporate antivirus and spam filters. "These aren't the kind of Web sites that someone would stumble upon and infect their machine accidentally. The success of these attacks relies upon a certain level of social engineering to persuade the individual to click on the link. In addition, the blogs are being utilised as the first step of a multi-layered attack that could also involve a spoofed e-mail, Trojan horse or keylogger," the report said.

The increasing popularity of sites offering free blogs and Web space means malware authors now have access to an almost unlimited amount of hosting space in which to store their code. Websense claims that the general lack of security provided by these services means they are now regularly used to launch attacks.

"The blog can be used as a storage mechanism, which keeps malicious code that can be accessed by a Trojan horse that has already been hidden on the user's computer [blogs] do not require any identity authentication to post information, and most blog hosting facilities do not provide antivirus protection for posted files," the report said.

In July, Websense told ZDNet Australia that it had seen an alarming increase in Web sites offering free hosting services being used to store and distribute malware, which indicates that this trend is set to continue being a problem for the foreseeable future. At the time, Dan Hubbard, senior director of security and technology research at Websense, said more malware was found on free hosting services during the first two weeks of July than in May and June combined.

Sorry state of affairs..

Sunday, October 09, 2005

No. 1: The Knife

Forbes ranked the "2o Most Important Tools" recently, and the knife topped the charts.

Forbes.com readers, editors and a panel of experts rank the knife as the most important tool of all time, in terms of its impact on human civilization.

The knife is one of the most ancient tools in our arsenal, in use for more than 2 million years, longer than modern humans have walked the Earth. It's evolved alongside us, changing form to meet our needs and demands. Knives help feed us, shelter us, defend us and assure our survival. It's the most reliable, useful and important tool in human history.

For full story on this, click here.

Cheers.

Saturday, October 08, 2005

Notice

October 7, 2005
1902 Hours

Moron Regains Senses,

ANNOUNCES

Termination Of
MORONSGOSPEL

Arpit.

Possible Avatar?

Gone are the days when mobile phones were used only for talking. Now we are in age where mobile phones means ringtones, SMS, caller tunes, bluetooth, games, photos and the list simply goes on. I was contemplating what else could be in store for us in coming years and then I got my hands at an interesting pic:



Doesn't Mobile Phone + Swiss Knife makes for a good combo?

Cheers.

Thursday, October 06, 2005

England stamps Ashes triumph


Its no secret that I hate Australia's cricketing supremacy and I was totally ecstatic when England won the Ashes. For me, arrogance of Australian players and media, a byproduct of their supremacy is perhaps most irritating. But England have come up with a great idea to kick their arrogance by stamping Ashes triumph, their style of celebrating their nerve-wracking series victory this summer. Imagine Ricky Ponting receiveing mails from his friends from England with this stamp on it.. is he going to cry or tear that mail apart?

Images of Michael Vaughan, Andrew Flintoff, Kevin Pietersen and England colleagues will appear on four stamps to mark the "momentous occasion" of regaining the Ashes from Australia. The English cricketers will be the first living people outside the Royal Family to have their likenesses clearly identifiable on British stamps.

The stamps go on sale this Thursday.

| Rediff

Tuesday, October 04, 2005

Yahoo! trying to catch up

Google has been working on the idea of Online library for over a year now and now Yahoo! is trying to catch up. Guess, they have realized that this idea is a hot cake, so today Yahoo! came up with plans to build a vast online library of books and multimedia files.

Check out this piece of news:

INTERNET group Yahoo! today outlined plans to build a vast online library of books and multimedia files that will address publishers' copyright concerns.

The Open Content Alliance, a project that the search engine is backing with several other partners, plans to provide digital versions of books, academic papers, video and audio. Much of the material will consist of copyrighted material voluntarily submitted by publishers and authors.

Other participants in the alliance include software firm Adobe Systems, PC maker Hewlett-Packard, the Internet Archive, O'Reilly Media, the University of California and the University of Toronto. The potentially vast library would be searchable and freely available to anyone, whether individual web surfers or commercial sites.

Although Yahoo! will power the search engine located at www.opencontentalliance.org, all the content will be made available so it can be indexed by all the other major search engines, including that of rival Google. By joining the project, Yahoo! is hoping to upstage Google, which has a one-year head start on scanning and indexing books so more literature and academic research can be accessed from anywhere in the world with an internet connection.

David Mandelbrot, Yahoo!'s vice president of search content, said: "We are building a collaborative effort that will make a great deal of copyrighted material available in a way that's acceptable to the creators. That is novel."

Guess in this fight of supremacy between Yahoo and Google, we users will probably emerge as winners because of free access to loads of materials.

Sunday, October 02, 2005

Banned Books Week

Banned Books Week, celebrated this year from September 24 - October 1, came to an end yesterday. Herez a short note on Banned Books Week:

Banned Books Week: Celebrating the Freedom to Read is observed during the last week of September each year. Observed since 1982, the annual event reminds Americans not to take this precious democratic freedom for granted.

Banned Books Week (BBW) celebrates the freedom to choose or the freedom to express one’s opinion even if that opinion might be considered unorthodox or unpopular and stresses the importance of ensuring the availability of those unorthodox or unpopular viewpoints to all who wish to read them. After all, intellectual freedom can exist only where these two essential conditions are met.

Each year, the American Library Association (ALA) is asked why the week is called “Banned Books Week” instead of “Challenged Books Week,” since the majority of the books featured during the week are not banned, but “merely” challenged. There are two reasons. One, ALA does not “own” the name Banned Books Week, but is just one of several cosponsors of BBW; therefore, ALA cannot change the name without all the cosponsors agreeing to a change. Two, none want to do so, primarily because a challenge is an attempt to ban or restrict materials, based upon the objections of a person or group. A successful challenge would result in materials being banned or restricted.

To check the 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books from 1990-2000, click here.

Friday, September 30, 2005

Just Curious

Questions just keep popping up in our minds and most of the obscure questions remain unanswered. But not any longer, because now therez a site which can satisfy your thirst of curiousity. Website's URL couldn't have been more intutive -


This is what they say about themselves:


justcurio.us is an anonymous question and answer system, open to anyone, with one simple rule: to ask a question, you must first answer someone else's question. Question yields answer yields question. Strangers helping strangers.

The questions can be about anything — the best Beatles album, your saddest moment, your worst fear, your biggest regret, your fondest childhood memory, the meaning of life, whether you should break up with your girlfriend, the best crepe place in Paris, the best cure for loneliness. Anything at all. This is our chance to lean on each other, to look to a stranger for help, to discover what other people think.

justcurio.us is entirely confidential, allowing anyone to ask and answer questions with complete anonymity.


So, what's on your mind? Somebody may have an answer to it!

Arpit.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Happy Birthday

27th September, a celebrated day! and as Iam desperate to say the two coveted words today,
I use the occassion of Google's 7th Birthday as a pawn to do it..

H A P P Y ...B I R T H D A Y .Honey !




Google opened its doors in September 1998, with a mission: to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful. To say that they have been successful would be an understatement, because they have been a revolution ever since. Larry Page and Sergey Brin set up the first Google data center in Larry’s dorm room at Stanford. Today, along with web search based on Larry and Sergey’s original Backrub search engine, they offer specialized search for everything from satellite images to academic papers, local business info to your own computer. Google Talk, Gmail, Google Earth are few more things added recently in Google's kitty. For a glance over Google's History, click here.

On their 7th birthday, google claims to have expanded its web search index that is 1,000 times the size of its original index, which makes Google more than 3 times larger than any other search engine. Pretty impressive, eh? For more info on this click here.

That should wrap it up for Google's Birthday feature and my desperation to speak out Happy Birthday in public! So guyz, what say.. letz go and hit it out at Google.

Cheers.

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Lazy Geeks

Geeks and that too Lazy Geeks!, Can't you smell something?
These people have this inbuilt knack of coming up with crazy ideas and what could be more ingenious, than having your desktop computer in bed. Sure you could use your laptop, but where’s the fun in that? Plus apparently you get better posture with a full-on keyboard and monitor layout.
Not Impressed? Check out the pics..



One more..



Cheers.

Wednesday, September 21, 2005

"Bangalored"

"I got Bangalored"

This is one of the most wierdest phrase that I have come across in a long time. Bangalore, the IT face of India has been making waves across the world with the outsourcing business but coining a term after it, is kinda outrageous. Bangalored is a verb which recently got added in the dictionary! A person is said to be bangalored if he lost his job because the work got outsourced to Bangalore or any other city in India. Lot of people in US got bangalored that it became an issue during the US presidential election. Thats exactly when this word was coined.

Bangalore is cited in particular because of its reputation in the USA as a high-tech city, the Indian equivalent of Silicon Valley, that has benefited significantly from such outsourcing. There are even some websites which are selling T-Shirts with the slogan “Don’t Get Bangalored” as a way of telling people about the issue.

A place name becoming a verb: strange and very whacky. As an Indian, Iam not sure whether this is an achievment, that we are able to shake US economy or its derogatory to have one of our cities used in such negative sense world wide. Any comments?

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

12th September 2005


This day will be remembered in cricketing history as one of the most memorable day for English fans as England regained the coveted Ashes after almost 18 years. Ashes 2005 has been an incredible series where arguably in the end, the best side won. But Australia did not give up the Ashes in a whimper, they fought with great ferocity in every match but just coudn't match up with England's determination. Even Shane Warne's stupendous effort of 40 wickets in the series couldn't prevent the unforeseen slide in Australia's fortune. Pietersen's knock on the final day, Flintoff's audacity, Warne's mesmerizing spell's and Ricky Ponting becoming the first Australian Captain to lose ashes in nearly two decades will remain the highlights of this pulsating series.
Many see this as end of Aussie era, and with two of the greatest bowlers of all time, Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne about to retire, wounds of Ashes 2005 might take a long time to heal!

Iam not an ardent England fan, but I simply love to see Aussies lose and their losing an Ashes is simply a great feeling and it was about time their aura of supermacy was broken. Great work by Vaughan and Co., its time to celebrate!

Cheers.

Monday, September 12, 2005

Thatz me!

It seems my search is over! I have finally discovered myself, Iam:

Artificial Robotic Person Intended for Troubleshooting

Are you one of those who are still baffled about your identity? Well help is on its way, just click here

Arpit.

Friday, September 02, 2005

Google Zeitgeist

I confess, I love google and every now and then you will find a post relating to Google. Here's another one, about one of their service that I discovered of late known as Google Zeitgeist.
Google Zeitgeist compiles all the tidbits of information relating to searches made on Google to unravel search patterns, trends and often surprises. Here, you can find the most obscure search patterns such as most popular brunette search for the month or the most popular cities across the world.

This is what Google say about this service:

Pulling together interesting search trends and patterns requires Google’s human and computing power together. Search statistics are automatically generated based on the millions of searches conducted on Google over a given period of time - weekly, monthly, and annually. With some help from humans, and a pigeon or two when they have time, these statistics and trends make their way from the depths of Google's hard drives to become the Google Zeitgeist report.

We should note that in compiling the Zeitgeist, no individual searcher's information is available or accessible to us. What you see here is a cumulative snapshot of interesting queries people are asking – some over time, some within country domains, and some on Google.com – that perhaps reveal a bit of the human condition. We appreciate the contribution all Google users make to these fascinating bits of information.

Check out Google Zeitgeist for some interesting and novel search patterns!

Arpit.

Blog Day 2005

Shit Man! I missed Blog Day yesterday, and being an ardent blogger, I can tell you, its not a great feeling. Thanks to Enginerd and Prasoon, I came to know that 3108 (August 31) is celebrated as Blog Day, (for all the dolts who can't make it out why, just look at the pic closely) .

After this interesting thing came to my knowledge, I decided to use good ol Google to find more about it, and herez something which one might find amusing about,

3108 BLOG DAY


BlogDay was created with the belief that bloggers should have one day dedicated to getting to know other bloggers from other countries and areas of interest. On that day Bloggers will recommend other blogs to their blog visitors.With the goal in mind, on this day every blogger will post a recommendation of 5 new blogs. In this way, all Blog web surfers will find themselves leaping around and discovering new, previously unknown blogs.

We need BlogDay because:

1. Information Overflow! The more Blogs there are, the less time Bloggers spend on reading new weblogs. Because of the overload of information, you miss a lot of good Blogs and Bloggers.

2. Its Fun!


So, comrades as per Blogger Instruction about today's posting, here are some of my recommendations (don't loathe me, if you don't like them ;):

Cheers!

Thursday, September 01, 2005

Blogger Responds

Spamming had just recently begun to bother bloggers with automated systems adding comments to blogs (i got some too, in my previous post) to advertise their product/website. But blogger has responded by enabling Word Verification option which can be found on the Settings | Comments tab of the blog. This will help prevent many unwated comments since it takes a human being to read the word and pass this step.

Word Verification may seem as an unnecessary hassle, but as of now, it seems the only viable solution to save yourself from spamming.

Saturday, August 27, 2005

Way of future

Technology is scaling heights and it can find its use in the wierdest of ways. Here's one:

What does one do, when there's no mirror..


Yup.. webcamera to the rescue!!

You can laugh at it, but this is the way of future ;)

Arpit.

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Intellisense

IntelliSense™ is a feature which was introduced and popularized by the Microsoft Visual Studio Integrated Development Environment. It involves a form of autocomplete for variable names, functions and member functions (for C++ classes). Using IntelliSense is a convenient way to access descriptions of functions, particularly their parameter lists. It allows significantly faster software development by easing the amount of keyboard input required. It also allows less reference to external documentation as documentation on many functions appears with the function name.

The feature works by accessing an automatically genereated database of classes and variable names. As the user begins typing a variable or function name (which the IDE determines by context), IntelliSense starts suggesting completions with a pop-up window containing a variable or function name. The user can either accept the suggestion by pressing or continue typing the name. Eventually IntelliSense will determine exactly which variable or function the user desires, given enough information. The feature also allows the user to select from a number of overloaded functions for object oriented programming. IntelliSense can also display a short description of a function in the pop-up window.

for example:

class A {
void sample();
void innovate();
}

class B extends A {
A obj = new A();
obj. //pop up menu comes up, which displays list of suggested methods,
hence user need not type it all


What promted me to write this post was that we use this feature every now and then but don't know that a term exists for it. 'Intellisense'.. interesting!

Monday, August 22, 2005

"Google Dance"

No two thoughts about it: Google is smart!
Instead of running aways from their enemies, they try to work with them. Strange it may sound, but this what happened recently at Googleplex, where they had their annual summer bash called "Google Dance". Behind the scenes, it was actually rendezvous between cunning internet entrepreneurs who constantly try to manipulate Google's search engine results for a competitive edge with Google's top notch engineers.

For the millions of websites without a well-known domain name, rankings can mean the difference between success or failure because Google's search engine drives so much of the internet's traffic. Being on the first page of Google's result is almost like gold.With so much at stake, low-ranked websites spend much time and money trying to elevate their standing, even if they must resort to deception. The tactics include "keyword stuffing" -- peppering a web page with phrases associated with a specific topic such as "laptop computers" in hopes of duping the software "spiders" that troll the internet to feed Google's growing search index. It's a risky strategy because Google and other search engines penalize websites that get caught gratuitously repeating the same word. In the worst cases, the offending websites are deleted from the index so they don't show up in search results at all.

Sometimes webmasters collude to populate their sites with a large number of incoming links from other sites. This approach makes a site appear more authoritative and popular than it really is and thus rise in rankings. Such dirty tricks pollute the search results with websites that have little to do with a user's request, frustrating consumers, diminishing Google's credibility and threatening to undermine the company's profits by driving users to its rivals.

Not surprisingly, Google works hard to thwart the mischief makers, sometimes branded as Black Hats because of their subterfuge. Engineers frequently tweak the algorithms that determine the rankings, sometimes causing websites perched at the top to fall a few notches or, worse, even plunge to the back pages of the results.

Hoping to ease the tensions with webmasters, Google hatched the idea of its "dance" party during an annual search engine convention held in Silicon Valley, just a few miles from Google's headquarters. The company invited some of the Black Hats, effectively welcoming the foxes into the hen house. "Google realized it was never going to get rid of these (Black Hats), so it decided it may as well work with them," Chris Winfield, a Google Dance party veteran who runs 10e20, a search engine marketing firm. "Until then, it always seemed like it was 'us against them.'"

Google knows it can't entirely avoid Black Hats, so its finding ways to subside their effect!

| Wired News

Sunday, August 21, 2005

What is Eclipse?

Eclipse is an open platform for tool integration built by an open community of tool providers. Operating under an open source paradigm, with a common public license that provides royalty free source code and world wide redistribution rights, the eclipse platform provides tool developers with ultimate flexibility and control over their software technology.

Eclipse has formed an independent open eco-system around royalty-free technology and a universal platform for tools integration. Eclipse based tools give developers freedom of choice in a multi-language, multi-platform, multi-vendor environment. Eclipse provides a plug-in based framework that makes it easier to create, integrate and utilize software tools, saving time and money. By collaborating and exploiting core integration technology, tool producers can leverage platform reuse and concentrate on core competencies to create new development technology. The Eclipse Platform is written in the Java language and comes with extensive plug-in construction toolkits and examples.

The Eclipse Platform is a fresh start at an open integrated development environment (IDE) system with broad commercial participation. While classic tools like Emacs and others have supported the development needs of developers worldwide, most lacked the advanced features and convenience of GUI based IDEs, as well as an easily extensible nature, available in commercial tools. With over 1200 developers from 63 countries involved in the Eclipse open source community process and with more than 150 leading software tools vendors working with it, Eclipse stands a chance to change that entirely.

Eclipse is the basis of IBM's next generation of Websphere Studio products, which is a suite of tools that encompasses all of your development needs -- Web development, enterprise-scale application development, and development for wireless devices. The Studio tools run on top of WebSphere Studio Workbench, an open, extensible, tool integration platform that lets tool builders seamlessly integrate tools and application resources across the development lifecycle. The Workbench is the foundation for IBM's next generation of application development tools.

For more information on Eclipse, click here.

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Sudoku

Sudoku which has taken the world by storm has become one of my latest infatuation. Sudoku is a simple game of logic, in which the objective is to complete the grid such that every row, every column, and every 3x3 block contains the digits from 1 to 9. Simple as it sounds, but comes in variety of difficulty levels and each puzzle is enticing in its own way and has something to offer which simply makes it an addiction!

Here's an interesting article about history of Sudoku:



The concept of Sudoku (Japanese: 数独, sūdoku) seems to begin with the Swiss mathematician Leonhard Euler who in 1783 invented Latin Squares - NxN grids which have all numbers from 1 to N appearing exactly once in each row and column. Because Euler used Greek letters, these grids were often called “Graeco-Latin Squares”. Sudoku puzzles as we know them were first published in the late 1970’s in Math Puzzles and Logic Problems magazine by Dell Magazines. The name given by Dell to these puzzles was Number Place, as they are still called by this company until today. Dell took Euler’s Latin Square concept and applied it to a 9x9 grid with the addition of nine 3x3 sub-grids, or boxes, each containing all numbers from 1 to 9.

So, the Sudoku concept was not invented in Japan as many people may believe, but the name Sudoku was. In 1984 Nikoli, Japan’s leading puzzle creating company, discovered Dell’s Number Place and decided to present them to their Japanese puzzle fans. The puzzles, which were first named Suuji Wa Dokushin Ni Kagiru, ("the numbers must be single" or "the numbers must occur only once") quickly became popular. In 1986, after some important improvements were added, mainly by making symmetrical patterns and reducing the number of given clues, Sudoku became one of the best selling puzzles in Japan. Realizing that the only problem with the Sudoku puzzles was their long name, Kaji Maki, the president of Nikoli abbreviated it to Sudoku - (Su = number, digit; Doku = single, unmarried). Today there are more than 600,000 copies of Sudoku magazines published solely in Japan every month.

At the end of 2004 Wayne Gould, a retired Hong Kong judge as well as a puzzle fan and a computer programmer, visited London trying to convince the editors of The Times to publish Sudoku puzzles. Gould, that had written a computer program which generates Sudoku puzzles of different difficulty levels, demanded no money for the puzzles. The Times decided to give it a try and on November 12, 2004 launched their first Sudoku puzzle. The publishing of Sudoku in the London Times was just the beginning of an enormous phenomenon which swiftly spread all over Britain and its affiliate countries of Australia and New Zealand. Three days later The Daily Mail began publishing Sudoku puzzles titled as "Codenumber". The Daily Telegraph of Sydney followed on 20 May 2005. By the end of May 2005 the puzzle was regularly published in many national newspapers in the UK, including The Daily Telegraph, The Independent, The Guardian, The Sun and The Daily Mirror. <>But that was not it. In July 2005 Channel 4 included a daily Sudoku game in their Teletext service and Sky One launched the world's largest Sudoku puzzle – a 275 foot (84 meter) square puzzle, carved in the side of a hill in Chipping Sodbury, near Bristol. The BBC Radio 4's Today began reading numbers aloud in the first Sudoku radio version. Famous British celebrities as Big Brother's Jade Goody and Carol Vorderman, that her book How to do Sudoku is the best-selling book in the country, have testified to its benefits as a mental workout. Even the Teachers magazine which is backed by the government recommended Sudoku as brain exercise in classrooms and suggestions have been made that Sudoku solving is capable of slowing the progression of brain disorder conditions such as Alzheimer's.In April 2005 Sudoku completed a full circle and arrived back to Manhattan as a regular feature in the New York Post. On Monday, July 11, the Sudoku craze spread to other parts of the USA when both The Daily News and USA Today launched Sudoku puzzles on the same day. In both cases the Sudoku puzzles were instead of traditional crosswords and bridge columns.

Today there are Sudoku clubs, chat rooms, strategy books, videos, mobile phone games, card games, competitions and even a Sudoku game show. Sudoku has also sprung up in newspapers all over the world and is commonly described in the world media as "the Rubik's cube of the 21st century" and as the "fastest growing puzzle in the world".


For some Sudoku strategies, click here.

Arpit.

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

Open GL

OpenGL is the premier environment for developing portable, interactive 2D and 3D graphics applications. Since its introduction in 1992, OpenGL has become the industry's most widely used and supported 2D and 3D graphics application programming interface (API), bringing thousands of applications to a wide variety of computer platforms. OpenGL fosters innovation and speeds application development by incorporating a broad set of rendering, texture mapping, special effects, and other powerful visualization functions. Developers can leverage the power of OpenGL across all popular desktop and workstation platforms, ensuring wide application deployment.

Different areas where the aforesaid capabilities are used include markets such as broadcasting, CAD/CAM/CAE, entertainment, medical imaging, and virtual reality to produce and display incredibly compelling 2D and 3D graphics.

Some of the developer driven advantages are:

  • Industry standard
    An independent consortium, the OpenGL Architecture Review Board, guides the OpenGL specification. With broad industry support, OpenGL is the only truly open, vendor-neutral, multiplatform graphics standard.
  • Stable
    OpenGL implementations have been available for more than seven years on a wide variety of platforms. Additions to the specification are well controlled, and proposed updates are announced in time for developers to adopt changes. Backward compatibility requirements ensure that existing applications do not become obsolete.
  • Reliable and portable
    All OpenGL applications produce consistent visual display results on any OpenGL API-compliant hardware, regardless of operating system or windowing system.
  • Evolving
    Because of its thorough and forward-looking design, OpenGL allows new hardware innovations to be accessible through the API via the OpenGL extension mechanism. In this way, innovations appear in the API in a timely fashion, letting application developers and hardware vendors incorporate new features into their normal product release cycles.
  • Scalable
    OpenGL API-based applications can run on systems ranging from consumer electronics to PCs, workstations, and supercomputers. As a result, applications can scale to any class of machine that the developer chooses to target.
  • Easy to use
    OpenGL is well structured with an intuitive design and logical commands. Efficient OpenGL routines typically result in applications with fewer lines of code than those that make up programs generated using other graphics libraries or packages. In addition, OpenGL drivers encapsulate information about the underlying hardware, freeing the application developer from having to design for specific hardware features.
OpenGL runs on every major operating system including Mac OS, OS/2, UNIX, Windows 95/98, Windows 2000, Windows NT, Linux, OPENStep, and BeOS; it also works with every major windowing system, including Win32, MacOS, Presentation Manager, and X-Window System. OpenGL is callable from Ada, C, C++, Fortran, Python, Perl and Java and offers complete independence from network protocols and topologies.

For more details on Open GL, click here

Monday, August 01, 2005

Don't confuse web design with sex

Interesting headline.. eh? Well it was this very headline which prompted me to go through the content of the article written by Vincent Flander, Usability Guru. After completing the article, I kind of related to the analogy and soon realized the power of this headline which may seem absurd on first look. Anyone minutely interested in web design MUST go through this article and will soon realize how we ourselves make life difficult for users.

  • Don't confuse web design with sex

Sex is the one thing everybody understands -- to a certain extent -- and that makes it easier to make analogies. I've tried many ways to convey a simple message and sometimes I feel the message is not getting through. Maybe a sexual analogy will work. This topic does not revolve around personal sites or other sites that aren't accountable -- movie sites, band sites, art sites, web logs, etc. I talk about sites where the focus is making money or disseminating information. It's my opinion that web designers are confusing the web world with the real world. In the real world, foreplay is mandatory. You have to set the mood, you have to be gentle, you have to entice. Fine. But in the world of the web there's no place for foreplay. It's not necessary. It gets in the way. To put it bluntly, the web is "Wham. Bam. Thank you Ma'am." People don't need to be enticed or put in the mood when they visit your site. They're there for a particular reason and the sooner you give them what they came looking for, the better. They don't need Splash pages, Flash pages, Mystery Meat Navigation, or whatever silliness you think will put them "in the mood." They want what they want NOW. "Give me your information. Sell me your product. Thank you, ma'am." (There is an exception to this "rule." Certain non-profit organizations can effectively use Splash pages to get potential donors "in the mood."

One line from a Pointer Sisters (I believe) song went something like "I want a man with the slow hands." Can you imagine the following line about a web site -- "I want a page with the slow load"? Not really because web design is about giving people what they want as quickly as possible in a way that they'll buy your product, your service, or contribute to your cause. (Some non-profits may be an exception -- some mood setting may be necessary. You should know the difference.)
Just as we've all been told not to confuse love with sex, we should also remember not to confuse web design with sex. Web design is about making money for the designer and, more importantly, the client.

This article is also available here.

-Arpit-