Saturday, December 29, 2007

A nice sense of duty

This comes from page 514 of "Einstein" by Walter Isaacson.

Einstein's search for a unified field theory was proving to be futile. But Einstein never regretted his dedication to it. When a colleague asked him one day why he was spending - perhaps squandering - his time in this lovely endeavor, he replied that even if the chance of finding a unified field theory was small, the attempt was worthy. He had already made his name, he noted. His position was secure, and he could afford to take the risk and expend the time. A younger theorist, however could not take such a risk, for he might thus sacrifice a promising career. So, Einstein said, it was his duty to do it.

I think this is amazing. The way Walter Isaacson puts it, Einstein was like a lotus leaf in water, affecting it, but never wetted by it - this is exemplified by instants where Walter says Einstein was always amused by the world, and was mostly a spectator than a participant in it.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Newton and God?

If found this on page 125 of "Einstein" by Walter Isaacson and it impressed me a lot. I think this explains the fact that science and religion are not separate, but two paths to the same goal.

The concept of absolute time - meaning a time that exists in reality, and tick-tocks along independent of any observations of it, had been a mainstay of physics ever since Newton had made it a premise of his Principia. The same is true for absolute space and distance. "Absolute, true, and mathematical time, of itself and from its own nature, flows equably without relation to anything external" wrote Newton. Absolute space, in its own nature, without relation to anything external, remains always similar and immovable.

But even Newton seemed discomforted by the fact that these concepts could not be directly observed. "Absolute time is not an object of perception," he admitted. He resorted to relying on the presence of God to get him out of the dilemma. "The Deity endures forever and is everywhere present, and by existing always and everywhere, He constitutes duration and space."

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Spirituality on the way to Chicago

This amazing person met me while I was waiting to board the plane from Pittsburgh to Chicago today. He was Christian and he took Hinduism and its teachings to his heart: he said it made more sense to him than Christianity. We had a wonderful discussion regarding spirituality and the meaning and purpose of life. I was getting along well with the conversation because I had read part of Vivekananda's works, but at some point I blanked out because he talked about more complicated things than I could understand.

What surprised me was when he said India was going up and the US was going down - there is so much hate and materialism in the US. He said that! I remember my father saying something like that from the news that India's culture was influencing the world in some way (he said this yesterday!) and I saw a living example right today!

I am glad I was thinking along the same lines as such an experienced person (he is 60) and that means I have learnt something in life from experience. What I found especially interesting was his answer to the question "What is the purpose of life?": He said God created the world and matter to experience his fullest/lowest potential. Experience and knowledge is the ultimate goal (I agree with that) and it can only be gained when there exists polarity (good or evil/right or wrong/up and down) in life. That's what the world is! We also discussed Maya (the illusion) and Advaita philosophy. It struck me today in the Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh, when I saw a book on Einstein, that his formula E = mc^2 is a mathematical formula for the teachings of Advaita philosophy that the material world (mass/matter) is a consequence of the supreme consciousness (Energy). This totally makes sense to me! It's also fully understandable how Einstein could come up with such great thoughts just by thinking, because everything in the world is an outcome of thought and experience.

Saturday, December 08, 2007

End-of-Semester updates

Hi all,

Just thought I would update you with recent events/issues here:

1. Chicago trip:
I am leaving on the night of friday the 21st of December by Southwest airlines to Chicago and returning on the morning of 24th the Sunday to Pittsburgh...no idea how they will receive me especially since peddhamma is leaving for India, and I have never known them :)

Many friends of mine are going to India in December, but many are staying too. Dhishan is going to Raleigh to meet his relatives, Naresh was asked by his uncle to come but he refused to go - picchi naayana: wants to work without a break even in December holidays (not that it's bad though, I admire his diligence)

2. Casino night:
I attended a Casino night arrange for the BME grads and learned to play Poker and Blackjack (both are card games, based on strategy and guesswork) and Roulette (that rotating coloured disk on which you let a ball stop on a number - totally based on chance). As a board member of GBMES (Graduate BioMedical Engg Society), my duty was to attend and take photographs of the event, but i enjoyed it a lot too..

3. Camera/Photography:
I want to learn photography, so i bought the camera with lots of manually controllable features. I hope to learn new techniques and skills in photography (Summit 2008 I told Akka about has a course on Black and White Photography too) during the December and after. Will have to warn myself and others that Photography is an expensive hobby, and lenses cost a lot :)

4. Dance classes - shoes
As i told you, I plan to compete in the upcoming Ballroom Dance Competition in March in Pittsburgh, and hence am now searching for Latin dance shoes. Lauren and I roamed around the city to search for shoes, but I couldn't find any that fit my feet (dance stores cater more to Ballet dancers than Ballroom dancers). I will try to find som luck in Chicago, and if all else fails, I will have to order them online without trying them on first.

5. Music interest
To be discussed and pursued later in my (PhD) life: I want to learn to play the flute, but i think I have enough on my hands already, don't you? :)

6. Courses - Biochemistry, Statistics and Image Registration:
Biochemistry has been very interesting - protein structures and functions and dna/rna replication and transcription, and all that stuff...i love it!

Statistics is hard - not because I don't like it, but because the course is entirely theory based and no practical problem solving...all the problem solving will have to come in my research, and I have to learn things the hard way. :(

Registration in Bio-imaging course was relatively easy, mostly because the Professor is new to teaching himself, and the course deals with matching images say for example between CT scan of brain and MRI scan of brain...

7. Research:
Currently I am working on a project on automated tracking of particles in a movie/image sequence. It has to do with position prediction using filtering techniques and stuff. I like the work I am doing, but have to put in more effort and concentration. Never before did I realize so much the need for mental effort and control of the mind.

8. Bathtub issue:
The bath tub at home was recently blocked with my hair that is constantly being lost :( It took a week to get the maintenance guy free, but a minute to fix it with a vacuum plunger :) . One day I went to the showers at the swimming pool to have a bath when we couldn't use the tub :)

9. Wine and cheese party:
I don't remember whether i have told you about this or not, but I went to a wine and cheese party with Lauren at one her friends' house:

Following is an extract from an email to my friends:

Naresh and I didn't do anything for Thanksgiving nor visited any place, we neither did homework or much fun-work :) . I just stayed home and did nothing but watched movies all day...By the way, I bought a Digital SLR camera (canon digital rebel xt) for 570 bucks...that's yesterday the last day of sale, in Circuitcity store here. And I went to a wine and cheese party with my dance partner the day before...I didn't have any wine though...had a nice experience of a typical american friends' party...what happened is this: they had wine first...i had tea and water :)... and crackers (like papads, made of rice, wheat and rye) and other stuff..then i listened while they talked and joked abt parties, vacation, wines etc...then we had desserts - cookies, cake etc...then we played a game called auto auction (it's a board game of business with cars - involves strategy and luck - i learnt abt maintaining a poker face :) )...then we watched a recorded TV show called the big bang theory and the gospel bill show...it was comedy...then we left and went home... while the others stayed on to play other games..

If anybody wants fundaes abt buying Cameras ask Naresh...he made me buy this..not that i didn't want to, though :) ...his iris recognition research has a lot to do with cameras and macro-photography - oh i so envy him for that..especially since mine has nothing to do with microscopes :( though the images i work on come from many hi funda microscopes i have never seen in life...

10. ITA test

This is the international TA test. All students who have TA duty have to take this test. I took it and was placed in category 2 - which means I can TA any course and any lab, but have to concurrently attend 15 hours of teaching related seminars the semester i am TAing a course. Have to really improve my English speaking, haven't I? I might have to TA a course next semester.

11. Summit 2008

I told Akka about this, but now there is no chance akka can come to this (Registration ended): It's a three day event on Jan 11,12,13 next month. There are many learning activities like photography, drawing, rafting, yoga, cuisine, dances, etc. I gave my preferences for my courses and will be assigned the courses some time later.

12. NCSU trip
Jayanti Srikant is at NCSU (North Carolina State University) and Dhishan and I had plans to visit Raleigh city, but Srikant said he might not stay there since his cousin was going to Virginia and he might join him. So, I cancelled this thing.

13. Courses next sem:
I might have to do Physiology, Cell Biology and Image Processing using Wavelets next semester depending on the outcome of a Petition I filed to the Graduate Affairs Committee of our department. I will update you after I know about it.

That's all and have a nice day :)

Vamshi


Monday, October 22, 2007

The Parable of the Black Belt

Source: http://www.cs.unc.edu/~azuma/hitch4.html
%%%%%% Begin %%%%%%%%
    Picture a martial artist kneeling before the master sensei in a ceremony to receive a hard-earned black belt. After years of relentless training, the student has finally reached a pinnacle of achievement in the discipline.

    "Before granting the belt, you must pass one more test," says the sensei.

    "I am ready," responds the student, expecting perhaps one final round of sparring.

    "You must answer the essential question: What is the true meaning of the black belt?"

    "The end of my journey," says the student. "A well-deserved reward for all my hard work."

    The sensei waits for more. Clearly, he is not satisfied. Finally, the sensei speaks. "You are not yet ready for the black belt. Return in one year."

    A year later, the student kneels again in front of the sensei.

    "What is the true meaning of the black belt?" asks the sensei.

    "A symbol of distinction and the highest achievement in our art," says the student.

    The sensei says nothing for many minutes, waiting. Clearly, he is not satisfied. Finally, he speaks. "You are still not ready for the black belt. Return in one year."

    A year later, the student kneels once again in front of the sensei. And again the sensei asks: "What is the true meaning of the black belt?"

    "The black belt represents the beginning -- the start of a never-ending journey of discipline, work, and the pursuit of an ever-higher standard," says the student.

    "Yes. You are now ready to receive the black belt and begin your work."

To me, there are two lessons in this story.

First, the Ph.D. is the beginning, not the culmination, of your career. Don't worry about making it your magnum opus. Get out sooner, rather than later.

%%%%%% End %%%%%%%%

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Sonic boom

If you are interested, first watch the Youtube video linked to by the title of this post. It's a very interesting video that explains in simple terms how and why a sonic boom is caused.

Here is my attempt to explain to you and myself and understand the principles behind supersonic flight: Actually I am trying to answer this week's question in The Hindu's SciTech section's Question Corner.

As you might know, sound is pressure changes in air (that's why sound needs a medium to travel). Every moving object changes the pressure of the air it's trying to occupy as it tries to move, and this makes sound, whether or not we can hear it.

As explained in the Wikipedia article here, it's accepted by the current scientific community that the sudden drop in pressure is what causes the visible condensation cloud that surrounds an aircraft travelling at transonic speeds (speeds slightly below and above 330m/s).

As the nose of the aircraft hits a point in the plane into which it's moving, pressure of the air suddenly rises, and as the aircraft moves through the plane, it falls steadily and goes below the normal value to reach a minimum, and when the tail of the aircraft leaves the plane, it suddenly rises back to normal again. This can be thought of as tracing the letter 'N', and hence the name of the wave, N-wave. This N-wave follows the aircraft wherever it goes.

Now, in this N-wave there is a point at which the air pressure goes below a certain point, causing a corresponding sudden drop in temperature. The temperature goes below the dew point, and hence causes the water vapour to condense into water droplets, forming a condensation cloud around the tail of the aircraft.

I hope that explains the formation of condensation cloud. I still don't understand how dew point works though, I hope I can make another post out of it.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Dr. Kalam's visit to CMU

Yes, Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam visited CMU today, and due to a lucky coincidence (I was looking for something to eat), I had the opportunity to attend his talk and the interaction session that ensued. At the beginning of the talk, he asked the audience to pick a topic that they wanted him to talk about. Unfortunately, nobody suggested anything (and I neither) and he fell back to his default starter topic - his career and contribution to India's science and technology.

It was amazing to hear him say "I don't buy the brain drain." And I agree with it too. The world knows no borders - the countries are human made divisions on earth for their self-destruction. Even Sunita Williams, after having spent a record time in spaceflights and spacewalks, said the same thing - she couldn't see borders between countries.

He concluded his talk with the an answer to the question: "What's India's biggest problem right now?" - Confidence.

Naresh got an autograph from him at the end.

Monday, October 08, 2007

bolisms

Metabolism is the term used to refer to the set of all the reactions occurring in the living body.
Metabolism comes from the greek root metaballein "to change". I think it has nothing to do with the word meta, meaning beyond/para.

Metabolism can be split into catabolism and anabolism. Reactions can occur in two ways, remember? A + B gives AB in anabolism, where the reactions occur to build up tissues and cells. Catabolism is the other way round: It's the breaking up of large molecules into constituent parts, and then used in assimilation.

How's that now?

Fats, Carbs, Calories and the whole shebang

I was always confused when people discussed fats, carbs and their calorific value, and what makes you obese, etc with or in front of me. So, to avoid that confusion and shun the ignorance, I decided to do some research myself and this is what I found out about food and nutrition:

Calorific value of each: Each gram of fat has 9 Calories, each gram of carbohydrates, or carbs, has 4 Calories and each gram of protein has 4 Calories of ENERGY (along with the building blocks of the body), which is equal to that of carbs. Note that 1 Cal = 1 kcal of energy, which is the standard convention, but is rarely used. It's surprising to me to note that the body can survive without carbs - because, unlike vitamins, minerals, amino acids and fatty acids, etc, the carbs are not essential nutrients - the body can synthesize everything it needs from the essential nutrients mentioned above. For example, glucose, a carb, can be synthesized from the protein you eat. Then why should we eat food with carbohydrates in it all? Because carbs are the most important source of energy and the most abundant in the food we eat.

Fat is not what you think it is: It's unfortunate that it was named fat by someone I don't know, and this whole confusion always pops up when people discuss fat(s). READ CAREFULLY: Fat is ESSENTIAL for the body, because some important vitamins can be digested only in conjunction with fats (fat-soluble, they are called), and fats are required for maintaining healthy hair, skin, cell function, body temperature, basically MAKING the body, AND they also serve as energy stores for the body, and the last function is what scares people away from fats, and the primary purpose of fats is forgotten and we tend to think that fat makes us fat. Then what makes you look fat if you are eating too much? It's the excess energy you are eating in the form of Calories (all that comes from carbs, fat and protein in total), that you are not spending fully, that gets stored as body fat and that's what makes you look fat.

What makes you look fat is actually adipose tissue, also informally known as body fat, and is typically present deep beneath the skin in the form of adipocyte cells. The main function of body fat is to be used as a reserve energy source for the body, as mentioned above. Adipose tissue is built up when you are taking in more energy than you are actually spending, and this energy can come from protein, carbs and fats - in the ratio I mentioned in the first paragraph.

Lesson learnt: It doesn't matter if you are eating carbs or fats or protein or anything else, if you want to be in control of your weight, your flab and hence your health, eat only that many calories you are going to spend - and that's what my dad's been telling me all my life - "Exercise cheyyaraa naa kannaa!"

First post during my PhD life

I am taking three courses here and I also have to start some project work after discussing with my advisor today what projects are available in the first place. I am doing Biochemistry, Intermediate Statistics and Image registration in Bio-Imaging - the three courses. I didn't think I would do chemistry ever in my life again, but this biochemistry is different: it is clearing some of my unanswered doubts in chemistry and biology - exactly because of which questions that were left unanswered, I used to hate chemistry during my JEE days.

Statistics is the extension of what we did in PRP, but it's getting much more complex with multivariate analysis. The only problem (maybe not a problem, but a plus point in the long run) is that we have three assignments every week...one every week per course...and no copying - the TAs are competent enough to detect fraud, unlike back on our campus. I am very disappointed by the plummeting quality of JEE, GATE and other entrances to IITs by the year. They are the first step in maintaining the quality of education at IITs.

In addition to this, I will have to start research in day or two. As we come to the topic of cooking, it's completely different for me here. We are buying vegetables off the store called Giant Eagle and are cooking every dinner - Naresh and me. Naresh is helping me a lot with everything. It's good that he is a little miser than me: when I answer his question - "Why do you need to buy that thing?" it helps me answer myself and gain control of my own spending. There is also an Indian store called Kohli's where you can basically get all the spices for Indian cuisine and all edible items available in India that you can't typically buy in the US.

Life is not yet boring here - I am taking Ballroom dance classes this semester - (I think you know what ballroom dance is...), so I have something to look forward to when the week gets boring. And some weekends we go out to some place to visit in Pittsburgh - we visited the Ventakeswara Temple here - the largest in the US, on our first weekend. We went to a museum (Carnegie Science Center), but it was basically like a children's museum - all physics principles we studied at school demonstrated by working models. Then we went on top of a hill in the heart of the city (called Mt. Washington, and people live there, it's not just a hill) in the center of the city (main areas/centers of the city are called Downtown areas anywhere in the US, like Mount Road in Chennai, Koti in Hyderabad, etc), and it was very good to see the whole city from such a high point above the city. These are the three places we visited. I am planning to buy a camera sometime later after I get my first stipend at the end of this month and write a kind of online blog article explaining my experiences in my first month in the US for people who want to know abt my welfare - and they can read it...

Get more enthusiastic - mingle with more people and ask questions to everybody you meet - life will get more interesting. I am trying to change myself after I got out of the campus - talk to more people, try not to be feared by things that look insurmountable at first but are just pebbles later on, get active in whatever you do, utlilize all the resources here - by the way, all games and sports are free here - they give you all the equipment when u show your id card - we played baddy twice, frisbee once, some indoor games like pool, foosball, TT sometimes. I am trying hard to balance my curricular and extracurricular life, and have to get used to resisting temptation, I don't want to repeat the same mistakes I made on the campus at IITM - tempted by the comp and waste time on movies. It's good that there are no DC++s or somethings like that here. We can watch movies online but have to put fight and search for the movie we want. I haven't tried that yet, and I have no reason to try anytime soon.

I request you all to keep me updated with happenings in India and for that matter anywhere in the world- it could be anything - what's happening in AP, India, your family if you want to let me know, your office, political situation that's not reflected in the newspapers, rumours, gossips, philosophical articles - virtually anything you think would be of some or even no value to me. Email is the only means of visual and more effective communication. We can't trasmit all the information we want over just voice on the phone!

This is the first time I am writing such a long post after I got here.

PS: This post is copied in most part, from an email I sent to my friend, since I didn't want to write it in a new way and spend a lot of time on it.

Tuesday, May 01, 2007

Article on VT Shootout by Arindam Chauduri

Capitalism is a great slave, but a pathetic master. This truth unfortunately gets lost in our chase for that elusive dream...especially in America, the land that has been marketed as the land of dreams...the great American dream. It's the dream of being independent masters of our lives, the dream of making big bucks and the dream of being happy even if that happiness is being bought by money which all of them chase out there. No doubt, the US, on its part, has been fairly successful in creating material comforts aplenty. It has upped the living standard of its average citizen to an extent that it stands amongst the highest even if that is a result of more than 200 years of unbridled growth and exploitation. Thus, the shop window of Americanism looks lucidly attractive; you've got all of them standing there from Bill Gates to Michael Dell in Tommy Hilfigers and Ralph Laurens! And that is what has made the rest of the world mindlessly chase Americanism, not necessarily happiness or an ideal form of society. All because the shop window looks very impressive and it has been marketed very well.

But a deep look inside the shop, of course, tells a different tale. A different world lies behind the designer clothes and the designer dreams, a world that is quite not visible to the starry eyed millions for whom the American way of life seems to be the ultimate dream because this other side of the truth about the American society, unfortunately hasn't found marketers. Thus, we have Indian girls having their dream to get married to an NRI, preferably settled in the US, and Indian middle class fathers dreaming of their sons reaching the Bay area and landing tech jobs, unmindful of the second class life they end up leading in the US. What goes unseen and almost unheard is that America also happens to be the land that is right amongst the top in terms of the number of divorces per thousand, the number of single parent families per thousand, the number of old people in old age homes, the number of rape cases per million, the number of suicides, homicides, and of course, the number of college/school shootouts...

And why not! After all, in a society where 'what you are' is equal to 'what you have' plus 'what you consume', the only way to achieve more is to have and consume more (That's why we call the US a consumerist society, and its culture, consumerism), and therefore, be constantly driven towards higher profits and materialism. Expectedly, this materialism comes at a cost that the world is paying today. This is the reason why we have missions dying of curable disease in Africa and other lesser developed countries, while the rich grow richer. Their growth will be reduced, if they were to start thinking of the poor. So what do they do to justify their greed for more? They most shrewdly propagate and market a ridiculously primitive law of the jungle for our 21st century civilisation, the 'Law of Survival of the Fittest'!

The interesting thing about material things is that they only give an illusion of happiness; and even such happiness always is momentary in nature. Ergo, at this juncture, you feel you are the happiest person in the world, after buying your new car of flat screen TV, and just a few days later, these are the very possessions that cease to make you happy, because you are already thinking of a bigger car of a bigger TV. While you chase the bigger car to become larger than life in order to be happier, you sacrifice those that have the maximum power to make you happy - family, emotions and love. Prolonged abstinence in employing emotions finally destroys them; and you don't even realise when you've become a dry-eyed moron (Yes! America also happens to be the land, which has the maximum number of dry-eyed people). And then, while chasing after never-ending desires, one day you are left alone...probably divorced, without children, and in an old age home (If not that, the situation is more often close to that, than not) ... and suddenly, you realise that there is emptiness all around... and you land up in a Deepak Chopra workshop to find out the real meaning of life or whatever he is capable of explaining. But by then, it's really too late.

By then, you have made profits out of arms, and engineered wars to deep that industry alive. You've sold guns across counters Wal-Mart and made more profits. You've lobbied that guns should be made accessible to the common man, and all for the sake of profits. You've created an end result of a society increasingly becoming devoid of emotions; not a society where man was born with all the natural traits of love, bonding and emotions, but a society which has succeeded in making one fall prey to the idea of greater happiness through endless materialism, in making him appreciate the bombing of countries and killing of millions, because the profits from the war would help accumulate more materialistic assets...

This is the society that finally creates an emotionless monster, who gets satisfaction in killing 33 innocent students for no cause, no reason and for none, but himself. It is the utter destruction of spiritualism and the total focus on endless self-gratification at the cost of others and their lives that has left America today with the maximum number of young school and college going kids taking up guns and shooting others in the most horrendous manner possible. A country with so many single parent families and divorces, neither can bring up its children any better, nor could influence Cho Seung-Hui, the Korean who took those lives any better.

Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Jamuna Hostel Night 2007

Wowwwwww!!!!

That was the best hostel night I have been to in these four years. I will always remember the efforts we all put in for four days to create the Fourth wing video, the new steps I learned that night when we danced to the DJ, all the scribbles on those white T-shirts, the food and ice-creams by Dhabba Express and all the memorable moments and events that happened this semester. I never felt I would be taking good memories out of IITM until yesterday.

Though I wasn't a resident of Jam, most of my best friends were there and that was where I felt home in IITM, much more than in Tapti.

YYYYAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYYYY!!!!!

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Horrible Me! - vamshiami

I admit it was my mistake. I agree with you that I shouldn't have talked to you in front of him, ever. Never in all these years did I know you were held responsible by him for my actions.

I did another mistake too, but consciously this time. I knew about all this stuff only when I peeped into his chat with you where you discussed what I had revealed in front of scores of other people that day. Please don't hold him accountable for being irresponsible with his mail account, I said it was my mistake, and I took advantage of him being himself - he is always like that.

I am not writing this to explain to you why "it wasn't my fault", but to vent my feelings after realizing it was in fact mine. I never felt so bad about myself yesterday. I just felt like telling somebody about this, but I didn't find anybody suitable to hear this, so I am writing about it.

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

April fool!

[15:00] <adithepseudguy> n 1 thr

[15:00] <adithepseudguy> what are other hubs workin

[15:01] <Peeves> type +hubs

[15:02] <adithepseudguy> type +hubs

[15:02] <adithepseudguy> where to type

[15:03] <adithepseudguy> dude r u thr

[15:03] <Peeves> go to windows>run>notepad.exe and then after a new document is opened, type +hubs and save it in the system32 folder

[15:04] <adithepseudguy> got it

[15:04] <Peeves> then you will automatically connect to all the hubs on the network

[15:04] <Peeves> you should have asked this three days ago

[15:05] <adithepseudguy> thanks

[15:06] <adithepseudguy> one more question

[15:06] <Peeves> what is it?

[15:06] <adithepseudguy> under what name the notepad should be saved

[15:07] <Peeves> oh...dchubs

[15:07] <adithepseudguy> ok

[15:07] <Peeves> junta are you reading this?

[15:09] <adithepseudguy> hey peeves that didn't work

[15:09] <Peeves> that's why I said you should have asked this three days ago

[15:10] <adithepseudguy> what do u mean three days ago

[15:10] <Peeves> think da

[15:10] <adithepseudguy> i did what u said

[15:11] <Peeves> which year are you in?

[15:11] <adithepseudguy> why

[15:11] <Peeves> first year right?

[15:11] <adithepseudguy> 4

[15:11] <Peeves> nice try

[15:11] <adithepseudguy> serious

[15:11] <adithepseudguy> final

[15:11] <Peeves> apped or job?

[15:11] <Peeves> where placed?

[15:12] <adithepseudguy> BPCL

[15:12] <adithepseudguy> mostly app

[15:12] <Peeves> what was the date three days ago?

[15:12] <adithepseudguy> fuck u

[15:12] <Peeves> thanks

[15:12] <adithepseudguy> nice PJ

[15:12] <Peeves> you type +hubs where you are typing right now, but without the word type

[15:13] <adithepseudguy> i di that ages back

[15:13] <Peeves> and?

[15:13] <adithepseudguy> thought what u said was true

[15:13] <Peeves> cool

[15:13] <adithepseudguy> thanks for fooling me

[15:13] <Peeves> i am blogging this seriously

[15:14] <adithepseudguy> me too, but turned out funny

[15:14] <Peeves> why? did you wake up and realize you have to change your nick?

[15:14] <adithepseudguy> which year u r

[15:14] <Peeves> 2

[15:15] <adithepseudguy> of course not

[15:15] <Peeves> ok ...

[15:15] <adithepseudguy> this is not my comp

[15:15] <adithepseudguy> my friends

[15:15] <Peeves> my batch doesn't depend on your comp

[15:15] <brucewayne> ne 2 has the OMEN

[15:15] <brucewayne> ??

[15:16] <adithepseudguy> pardon

[15:16] <Peeves> are you saying you can be fooled better on your comp?

[15:16] <adithepseudguy> again PJ

[15:16] <brucewayne> any 1 has the OMEN

[15:16] <adithepseudguy> in my comp no hubs r workin, so came here

[15:16] <Peeves> but i fail to understand why you said it wasn't your comp

[15:17] <adithepseudguy> u said i may change my nick

[15:17] <Peeves> that is irrelevant

[15:17] <Peeves> thanks for a nice blog article anyway...bye

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Will you for sure to join us?

The following justification is meant for the one who is in support of the grammar behind the interrogative sentence: "Will you for sure to join us?"

The word sure is both an adjective and an adverb. The word surely is also an adverb. The word sure is used as an adjective in both the following sentences:

  1. "Will you for sure join us?" which is the same as "Will you join us for sure?"
  2. "Are you sure to join us?"
Both the sentences are grammatically correct. According to the Oxford Dictionary, there is no way you are above which, explains the usage of the phrase for sure and the idiom be sure to do something in the following extract verbatim:

IDM be sure to do sth used to tell sb to do sth: Be sure to give your family my regards. for sure (informal) without doubt: No one knows for sure what happened. $I think he'll be back on Monday, but I can't say for sure. $One thing is for sure - it's not going to be easy.

In case you don't understand which sentence uses which form, the second one uses the idiom.

And just because an American Professor typed it out in an e-mail to you doesn't make it right, because nobody is perfect. Just like the occasional blunders in your Telugu and Oriya!

Monday, March 19, 2007

Stuff

  • One stupid cricket fan in Jharkhand threatens to commit suicide if he is not allowed to sell his kidney to get the money needed for a ticket to the West Indies, where the tournament is being held. [Link]
  • Internet restrictions on IITians, detailed news from BBC - [Link]. IBNlive just gave us bits and pieces of information (unlike BBC) and that's when I got so frustrated!
  • Totally ridiculous - Condom drive targets Indian women. [Link]
    First of all, are sex workers legally allowed to exist in India? If not, why are they being helped prevent AIDS and other STDs? If they are, I think that law must be looked into. To quote one of Gandhi (1982) 's, "There are unjust laws as there are unjust men."

    Here you go - I found an article about this on Wikipedia - [Link]. I am not summarizing it here, since the article itself is short. But, the situation is this: Prostitution in India is neither legal nor illegal, but the law is so close, you would think it's illegal. The worst part is that India passed this law only to comply with the 1950 UN declaration in New York.
  • Racing games 'breed' bad drivers.[Link]

Thursday, March 15, 2007

I must change

I recently saw a news item on rediff NEWS when one of my friends passed me the link to the article. It goes like this :


I was overwhelmed by the comments following the article, which ran for five pages and are still increasing. But, around 95% of them criticized Mr. K R Ramakrishnan for such beliefs and Rediff for publishing it. I strongly agree with them, too.

I liked one comment where one quoted a verse from the Quran:

"GOD WILL NOT CHANGE THE CONDITION OF ANY PEOPLE UNLESS THEY CHANGE THEMSELVES"

It is perfectly true. Realization and self-change is the first step in the path of success and achievement, or societal change. I said this, in my comment that goes like this:

I strongly agree with many readers who say "Rediff must stay away from publicizing activities and personal beliefs like this and not create such a hype for its own monetary gain or fame!".

But before we abuse Rediff and Mr. Ramakrishnan, I think we must realize that it is WE, the readers, who are publicizing it. Please, let's think. It's big news if the readers are interested in it and talk about it among themselves. For example, you send your friend or relative this link and ask him/her to read it - you are spreading the word. But isn't that what publicity is? You comment on it and express your view for everybody to read and no matter how much your comment opposes the news item itself, you add to the count of readers who are concerned about it, whether your concern is negative, or on an extremely rare occasion, positive. I am sure an ad agency only cares about the number of hits a particular page/news article receives and not about its comment content, even this negative publicity is equally preferred by the media because it's fetching them good money.

Since I firmly believe in action a lot more than I do in words (I believe in words too, which is why I am writing this post), I think the moment that link or article comes to us and we read it, we must put it out of our minds and never talk about it to anybody. We must treat it as if it doesn't exist. If every reader does this, which is a test of people's unity and mass awareness, I think news like this will gradually decay from the media for the sole reason it would otherwise publish it - NOBODY IS INTERESTED IN IT!.


Friday, March 09, 2007

Google!









You can see here a tiny piece of Google Search implementation. I found the commands and stuff from Google itself.


Here is the source code in image format. I am very sorry not being able to post it in text format for you to copy easily, but I didn't have time to find out how to display html code using html coding.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Hi Plato!

"One of the penalties for refusing to participate in politics is that you end up being governed by your inferiors." - Plato, 3rd Cen BC, Greece. - This was quoted in a manifesto. I don't know if manifestos are allowed to contain advertisements and quotations.

"The main job of a Branch Councillor is to talk!" - This was what he said to me when he came for campaigning. I almost decided immediately whom I should vote for. He proposed to establish a department library.

I asked him, "Have you talked to any department Prof about the possibility of beginning a library?"

"I am coming to that point."

I couldn't see how. He jumped straight to E2A fest. Well, he didn't actually jump to it, he assumed it was going to happen because he had made a schedule for it already. Actually, he made a schedule for the entire academic year."I will buy books for the library from the money that gets left over after the E2A fest, and that precludes the need to talk to a prof completely!"

"WOW!", I thought. Vitto would have given a zero for this derivation because since the first step itself is wrong, the entire derivation is wrong.

Now, I have absolutely decided whom I should vote for. I will show no discrimination based on age in voting. I won't abstain from voting either.

"I have done my homework. I hope you vote for me!."

I agree with you on one point. You did do your homework. A lot of it, I must say. But, I think you have failed to understand the meaning of the phrase "doing your homework". All you did was understand the meaning of the word "homework", Laddie!

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Nice try!



Without feeding me basic and taxes bullshit, if you have ever travelled from Hyd to Delhi with that fare, prove it to me and I will humbly apologize and remove this post.

I HATE publicity stunts and cheap tricks!