Monday, August 07, 2006
Feed Post 0.1a Released - Polls RSS feeds and sends updates to an e-mail account.
I have released Feed Post 0.1a on my web site. Feed Post is a small software written in Java that polls RSS feeds and sends updates to an e-mail account. It runs on Windows (I have tested on XP Professional) and needs Java 5.
Feed Post runs in the Windows system tray and periodically polls your RSS feeds, grabs the posts and emails them one by one to your email address. It is like the original author sending you a personal copy of their post! Released under the LGPL. Source code included. Check it out!
And please send me your comments.
Edited on: Monday, August 07, 2006 2:21 AM GMT+05:30
Categories: General, Software
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Tuesday, July 25, 2006
Cuttack on Wikipedia
My maternal grandfather (now deceased) and his family hail from Cuttack. My grandmother lives there with her 6th son and his family. Her other children live all over the country (Bangalore, Varoda, Rourkela etc).
Cuttack is ooollllldddd. More than a 1000 years old now. I was happy to find a Wikipedia entry on Cuttack this morning.
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Monday, July 24, 2006
IIT, World Rankings, Rants & Raves
Late yesterday night I received the following email:
Subject: IIT
Date: 23 Jul 2006 18:09:54 -0000
From: sanket karmarkar
Reply-To: sanket karmarkar
Sir
I totally disagree with your comments on standard of IITs.latest world rankings show IITs at rank- 450-500 in the world. Ordinary state universities in USA do must better.The JEE is tough and quality of students is great and after Btech the students get into USA for MBA or MS/PhD and do a good job in USA.if you see research publications of IITs it performs so poor,nor have IITans who did their Btech PhD in India done any great engineering achievement-the Kaveri engine which Indian engineers have been trying to build for indigenous Tejas plane is failed.
Our IIT engineers are good for paper work-i.e math calculations-complex calculations on paper-they are bad at doinng things-while others..say south Korean engineers may not do good paper work but they can create-Sure IIT students are good,but quality of IIT is better than any Indian institute but-go around the world and it stands no where.I feel sorry for that,but thats true
sanket karmarkar
Mr. Sanket Karmarkar was responding to a previous post of mine about IIT World Rankings. Sanket lives in the US but from the name & other internet postings seems to be of Indian origin. Most probably Maharastrian.
Anyway, his email intrigued me and I went to Google looking for more. Came across a number of web sites including this message board about colleges. Rather heated discussions.
I noticed one thing in both Sanket's email as well as message board discussions about the IITs - It is mostly Indians who now live abroad that are so vehement about India and it's condition. Whether it is about the contibution of IITians or the state of the roads in Pune, it is erstwhile Indians who are booing the loudest. Why is that? Is it that they are ashamed of being Indian and hope to wash away this stigma by talking about how bad things are?
I am not sure. I am an IITian (Kharagpur) and I know the IITs and their students. They are good. Are they the best in the world? I don't know and I don't care. But I hope my children will go to an IIT too.
The people who are arguing about the IITs and their contribution vis a vis the MITs of the world seem to forget a vital fact; the MITs of this world have been around longer then the IITs. They have better funding, better partnership with private and govt industries and can afford to pay their staff much better than the IITs. So, what are we comparing? A youngster with a middle aged man in his prime?
Original research needs money. Great intelligence alone will not suffice. And where is the money? In the US and other such countries of the world. So what do the IIT grads do? They migrate to the US. And do research there. IIT grads are just entering the Professor levels in their careers. So far they have been doing the grunt work of research as assistants. Give them some more time. Let them guide research and then come back and compare notes.
It is surprising how people will compare apples with oranges and arrive at a 2 = 3 solution. If you live in the US or any other "developed" nation, the rest of the world will look like a slum. Have the slums changed? Is there improvement?
Saying that the Tejas engine has failed is like saying that the first US space rockets failed. So? Give it time buddy. And if you don't like something about this country, come back and help change it. It is easy to sit in a padded sofa in an air conditioned room and pontificate about how to improve Pune's roads.
What have you done about it?
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
Indian Govt. Blocking Blog Sites
The Indian Govt decided to block certain blogs that spread hate for India in an attempt to fight back against terrorism. They ended up blocking all sites on Blogspot.com and other blog sites. For example, my photo blog, Mo-Chitra, is blocked. I can of course still access it from work because our gateways are in Japan & Singapore. It is only from home that I am unable to access my blog.
I ran a tracert to mo-chitra.blogspot.com and got the following output:
d:\>tracert -w 20000 mo-chitra.blogspot.com
Tracing route to blogspot.blogger.com [66.102.15.101] over a maximum of 30 hops:
1 13 ms 8 ms 8 ms 172.30.69.1
2 25 ms 10 ms 12 ms 203.109.92.1
3 18 ms 26 ms 22 ms 125.16.0.73
4 24 ms 23 ms 24 ms 59.145.0.226
5 43 ms 34 ms 25 ms 202.56.223.109
6 59.145.11.73 reports: Destination host unreachable.
Trace complete.
Querying the IP Whois tool for the last two IPs shows that they belong to Bharati Tele.
inetnum: 202.56.223.0 - 202.56.223.255
netname: BTNL
descr: Bharti Telenet Ltd.
descr: Bhopal
descr: India
country: IN
inetnum: 59.144.0.0 - 59.145.255.255
netname: BHARTI-IN
descr: BHARTI INFOTEL LTD.
descr: ISP Division , Long Distance Group - Telesonic
descr: 234 , Okhala Phase III
descr: NEW DELHI
descr: INDIA
country: IN
So Bharati is blocking access to blogspot.com... Mr. Mital, I assume you are not a fool. With this assumption, I hope that you will instruct the idiots in your IT department to work a little harder and not block legitimate web sites. It takes a few seconds to block an entire domain. It takes a lot longer to block specific web sites. Somebody in your organization is cheating you of the salary you pay him.
I managed to access my blog inspite of your blocking access by the simple device of using TorPark. Only a fool tries to stop the Ganga from flowing to the sea. Are you one of them Sonia, Manmohan and Mittal?
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Edited on: Wednesday, July 19, 2006 11:14 PM GMT+05:30
Categories: General, India, News
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Friday, July 14, 2006
What should India do? Reader comments on Rediff.com
Lots of readers have voiced their thoughts on Rediff.com.
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Edited on: Saturday, July 15, 2006 8:54 PM GMT+05:30
Categories: General, India, News
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Mumbai Blasts - What should india do?
The Israelis have it right. Hot Pursuit and don't leave even a single enemy standing on their feet. So what should India do now?
- Take out the leaders, no matter where they live. Wht is Daewood or whatever his name is still alive???
- Ruthlessly take out domestic cells that harbour terrorists. Why do we still hear about SIMI? All of those idiots should have been taken out (shot, hanged or just left to rot in jails).
- Arm the Intelligence agencies with the latest infrastructure and the best personnel. In addition to the latest in tech toys, Human Intelligence is perhaps the key. For that we need the best minds the country can provide. Recruit from the best colleges before the IT guys can take their pick. Offer the best. You will get the best.
-
Do not be afraid to use force. A terrorist does not have any human
rights. He or she is a predator to be hunted and shot down like the
wild animals they are.
This Rediff.com columnist has it right.
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Edited on: Saturday, July 15, 2006 8:54 PM GMT+05:30
Categories: General, India
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Wednesday, July 12, 2006
BSE SENSEX climbs 315 points the day after the Mumbai blasts
July 12, 2006
The day after the serial bomb blasts in Mumbai that claimed almost 200 lives. The BSE SENSEX climbs more than 315 points!

Does this tell us something about India?
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Edited on: Wednesday, July 12, 2006 7:05 PM GMT+05:30
Categories: General, India
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Indian elixir for the world as 'saffron evil' in India - Article from gurumurthy.net
This post is an extract from Gurumurthy.net. The original article is available here.
Does monotheism -- belief in a single, omniscient God - impede globalism? If it does what other kind of religion or God will be compatible with globalism? Here is likely an interesting debate.
For over a decade the world has been debating about clashes among civilisations powered by religions. Samuel Huntington triggered this debate in the year 1993 foreseeing clashes emerging between orthodox Islam and modern West.
For many in the West the Islamist attack on the World Trade Centre was validation of Huntington eight years later.
The West viewed 'illiberal' Islam as incompatible with 'liberal' West. And this incompatibility was seen as the source of the emerging civilisational clashes.
Since the 9/11 terror, this debate, premised on Islam as the bad boy and the West as its victim has dominated the world, particularly the West.
But this debate now seems to be moving up, logically, to another level. Slowly some in the West seem to feel that the debate should not be limited to merely examining the clash between the 'liberal' West and the 'illiberal' Islam.
Says Jean-Pierre Lehmann, the advisor to Dr Supachai Panitchpakdi, the previous head of the World Trade Organisation, that organised, monotheistic religions as a class - that is not just Islam but also Christianity - are incompatible with globalism.
Presently Professor of International Political Economy at the International Institute of Management Development in Switzerland, Lehmann heads the Evan Group, a global think-tank composed of government, industry and opinion leaders from Asia, Europe and the US.
Asserting that there is link between monotheistic religions and violence and intolerance, Lehmann points out that 'monotheistic religions have caused so much turmoil throughout history - and continue to do so even now'. He sees 'a new global ethical and spiritual model' as today's need.
He sees - what will shock, even shame, the seculars here at home - India as the best candidate to supply that model to the world!
In a provocative article in 'the Globalist', a daily on-line magazine, he makes some profound points on globalisation and religions.
He says that both Christianity and Islam, the fountainhead of monotheism, have been hijacked by fundamentalists.
He argues that for progress of human civilisation all organised religions have to be eradicated by persuasive secular humanism, but admits that people cannot live without God or religions.
His suggestion is 'rather than eradicating religion per se, 'we should instead eradicate monotheistic religion in favour of polytheistic religion'.
Why prefer polytheism - the worship of many Gods - over monotheism?
He answers: 'If you have only one god, and you believe that god is all powerful and omniscient and you come across someone who does not agree, then you may feel it is your duty to kill him.
If, on the other hand, you believe there are hundreds, indeed thousands of Gods, and that none can be totally almighty or omniscient, then you are likely to be far more tolerant'.
Precisely for this, Lehmann looks to the only surviving polytheistic society in India as the hope for the world.
For him India because of 'its remarkable ability to have managed multiculturalism to such a brilliant extent' is a living illustration of how globalisation can work.
What has made this possible is obvious. Hindus have millions of Gods to worship. Divergent Gods are inadequate rather than wrong or objectionable.
Hindu Gods are related by marriage and other relations. Such vast range of inter-related Gods to worship itself has ruled out clashes among the followers in the name of the only God without a second.
Lehmann admits that 'India is not a Utopia' and has its own problems of inequality part of which, he says, is sanctioned by religion.
Yet asserts that the 'global environment is desperate for ideas, philosophy and religion'.
'India is the most prolific birthplace of all three' due to 'the great synergy of democracy and diversity' and greater degree of 'self-confidence' in Indians now'. He adds 'Indians and members of the enormous Indian Diaspora are thought leaders in economics, business, philosophy, political science, religion and literature'.
He asserts that 'the Indian religious and philosophical traditions can provide' the 'sense of moral order, spirituality and an ethical compass' which the world desperately needs.
Recalling his conversation with an Indian religious guru Lehmann says, 'I could adhere to his religious tenets' and still 'maintain my secular convictions', which, he says, 'no imam or priest would allow'.
For him Indian philosophic traditions are secularism-compatible and monotheism is not.
Lehmann asserts that the planet needs an alternative geographical force to the American Christian fundamentalist thinking that drives the Bush establishment. Who could be that alternative?
Europe being 'spent force' and China 'dictatorship', he rules them out as alternatives. He disqualifies the Islamic world as it is going through, putting it mildly, an 'awkward moment'.
That is how he zeroes in on 'the important role India must play both because of its innate qualities and also because there no other serious contender'.
He hopes that 'the 21st century better becomes the century inspired by the virtues of Indian polytheism'.
Else, he warns, 'We are headed for disaster'. This is precisely what Arnold Toynbee, the famous historian, said decades back.
But, ironically, as Lehmann looks to Indian polytheism to save the world, the 'seculars' here condemn it as 'saffron poison'.
Thus what according to Lehmann is the elixir for the survival of the world is evil for India and the world according to our seculars! How positive he is and how perverse they are.
(Posted via Thinga Web)
A gift worth $25 Million & Serial bomb blasts in two cities
India pledged $25 Million to help Earth Quake victims in Pakistan on the same day terrorists set off multiple bombs in Srinagar & Mumbai.
(Posted via Thinga Web)
Hindu Blood! Please read this blog post by KP
KP has a excellent post about the status of Hindus in their own homeland. Please read it.
Dhara Singh should have received a Govt Pension, and a bronze statue in front of the Bhubaneswar (Orissa) Secretariat instead of being dragged to court in chains like a common criminal.


