Sunday, September 23, 2012

The Story Of India:The Power of Ideas


The second episode of the legendary documentary by Michael Woods depicts the time in India when ideas started generating in the minds of people and they begin to question the standards. This was the phase in history when philosophers started questioning the old order all over the world; In china Confucius; Old testament in Israel and Greek Philosophers in Europe, but nowhere the questioning was as intense as in India. It was a revoltuionary time for humanity. It depicts the story of various religions which evolved in India especially Buddhism and its effect on Indian civilization and as well as on the world. This story also explains the invasion of Alexander the Great on India and the rule of Mighty kings thereafter like Chandragupta Maurya and his grandson Ashoka which heavily influenced the culture of India. Wood traverses various places throughout the India related to Buddha and unravels the story of how Buddha discovered enlightenment and shares some of his philosophy. 

Then Wood describes the rule of Chandragupta Maurya who ruled all over India from Afghanistan to Assam  and from Kashmir to parts of Tamil Nadu. The Greek ambassadors who visited the capital city of Patna (known as Patliputra as that time) described it as the best city of its time with the city expanding around 9 miles along the banks of the mighty Ganges with palaces lining the riverside. In the end Chandragupta adopted Jainism and lived such a ascetic life that he died of starvation. After him, Bindusara ruled the Mauryan empire. After him came the great ruler Ashoka who expanded the limits of his rule further. Ashoka was a fierce ruler and was involved in lot of violence. His attack on Kalinga(present day Orissa) is said to be one of the most brutal wars in the history of India. 

But the war changed Ashok, he was so moved by the horror of war that he adopted the path of non-violence and for the rest of his life followed the philosophy of Buddha and maintained good relations with neighboring states. Ashoka created a lot of  monuments all over India to preach Buddhism. When India got independent in 1947, the symbol of Ashoka became our national emblem. Ashoka even started various forms of governance to improve the lives of people. 

Steve Jobs Resume

I found the resume of Steve Jobs on internet and I think it deserves to be published.


I think this is splendid. Wow!!!!

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Forbes Subscription

Today I completed the first magazine of my subscription of Forbes magazine, the issue of 15 August. It was all about India, its growth and how can it be a great nation after few years if and only if we take some right but difficult steps in the correct direction. It had an article "65 Things We Love about India", listing 65 great things about India on its 65th Independence Day. Moreover, the magazine praised various bureaucratic of India who brought a positive change for nation. Overall it was a good read.

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

A Tribute to Steve Jobs

Sometimes there are moments in the life, which touch you to the core. One such moment happened to me when I read the biography of Steve Jobs by Walter Issacson. The former managing editor of Time magazine depicts the story of his life in an artistic way. Earlier I had heard of Steve; the legendary entrepreneur and founder of Apple, but now I am little more familiar to his life. Steve was an eccentric, innovative and visionary guy who had the keen sense of judging how thing should be. His life teaches us that facts are not everything, sometimes we have to believe in ourselves, in our sixth sense. He was a college dropout and still he hired some of the best people all around the world. The biography traces his life right from the beginning when he was adopted by Paul and Clara Jobs to the very end when he was on deathbed due to cancer. Steve was very much interested  in Zen teachings and it is said he learnt his love for simplicity from it.

On 5th October 2011, Steve died at an age of 56, don't know whether Apple will survive after him or not. But they will feel the loss for sure. Steve was responsible for quick decisions and binding different departments of the organization together. Whatever Apple does they cannot be leaders without the vision of Steve. The effects are beginning to show, the new iPhone 5 has no wow factor in it. The Apple Maps are a disaster; completely opposite to the perfection Steve craved for. The last time Apple launched such a product 'Mobile Me' in 2008, Steve fired the team lead responsible publicly.

He never did any market research, but believed in his intuition that people will buy this product. He was a magician who had the capability to woo people like the piper. In his lifetime he founded three companies : Apple, Next and Pixar.He believed in simplicity and his products show that. Every product of Apple from Macintosh to iPad was simple to use and futuristic in features. After reading the book I really wanted that maybe Steve Jobs shouldn't have died so soon, so that we can have some more inspiring products. He revolutionized the whole industry by bringing products that changed the viewpoint of people and forced the whole industry to change their plans.

Here are some pics of him I liked:











Some quotes from Steve:

  • Again, you can't connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something - your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.
  • You can't just ask customers what they want and then try to give that to them. By the time you get it built, they'll want something new.
  • Do you want to spend the rest of your life selling sugared water or do you want a chance to change the world?
  • It is hard to think that a $2 billion company with 4,300-plus people couldn't compete with six people in blue jeans.
  • The only problem with Microsoft is they just have no taste. They have absolutely no taste. And I don't mean that in a small way, I mean that in a big way, in the sense that they don't think of original ideas, and they don't bring much culture into their products.
  • The only problem with Microsoft is they just have no taste. They have absolutely no taste. And I don't mean that in a small way, I mean that in a big way, in the sense that they don't think of original ideas, and they don't bring much culture into their products.
  • Sometimes I believe in God, sometimes I don’t. I think it’s 50-50 maybe. But ever since I’ve had cancer, I’ve been thinking about it more. And I find myself believing a bit more. I kind of – maybe it’s ’cause I want to believe in an afterlife. That when you die, it doesn’t just all disappear. The wisdom you’ve accumulated. Somehow it lives on, but sometimes I think it’s just like an on-off switch. Click and you’re gone. And that’s why I don’t like putting on-off switches on Apple devices.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

16/09/2012

From now on I have decided to make regular interval reports to see how am i using my time. What actually I am doing.This will help me in the same way companies use analytics to see their progress. So, for me today started when I woke up at 11 O' clock. I had slept late yesterday night after watching the fourth installment of Mission Impossible Series - The Ghost Protocol. After that I freshened up and had breakfast of fried rice with tea. Then, I took up the newspaper - Economic Times. The newspaper was full of opinions of various people on the new reform agenda unveiled on Friday by the Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. Then, I just had a glance on the 'The Hindu'.

After that, I heard voices coming from kitchen, so I moved there. I saw my freiends preparing something for lunch as cook is on leave on Sunday. We prepared chapatis and heated the tinned curry of 'Kadi Pakoda'. It was delicious. After I had lunch it was around 3 PM. Post lunch, all my friends went to do their daily chores. I also came back to my room and started reading the biography of Steve Jobs. I read about the development of iPhone and cancer complexities of Steve Jobs. After that I started to just browse the internet and watched some videos on YouTube on Apple. I have also started downloading the Windows 8: Preview Edition. Let's See how is the newest edition of Windows is actually.

Then, I saw a ted video on how the usage of thorium reactors can change the energy scenario in the world and can even help us to form colonies in the world. It is five minutes to 5PM now and I am just writing this blog. I have to also send the courier to the mobile guys and I have to rearrange stuff in my closet. I cant believe how fast time passes on. Tomorrow, I have to go office again the weekend is over. :(

Naruto : A Manga

Recently I have started reading Naruto;one of the most famous manga in the world. I started it after a recommendation by a person in his resume online. The story is addictive; it is about an orphan boy who wants to become the strongest ninja in the world. 

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Movie Reviews

Just browse a little on Friday and you will see every website's homepage having reviews of movies released that day. So, from now on I have decided I will also start rating the movies I watch and keep updating the same on this blog. Now, the question arises how should one review a movie, there should be a set of parameters on whose basis we can rate a movie. After a lot of thinking and research I have come on the following attributes required in a good movie :
  • Screenplay/Story
  • Cinematography
  • Casting
  • Soundtrack 
  • Depiction/How you show what is there?
All these parameters carry one star each. Cinematography includes the skill of camera and the backgrounds used. While depiction includes how the plot is shown to evolve in the movie.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

Story Of India : Beginnings

Finally after a long gap, I started the documentary I downloaded a long time ago : The Story of India; a six volume documentary series on India narrated by famous historian Michael Wood. I had first seen this series on my cousin's computer and he recommended me to watch it. I watched the first episode today : The Beginnings. In this episode, Michael tries to find the beginning civilization in Indian subcontinent and how people came here. This journey takes us from the hamlets of Kerala to ruins of Indus Valley Civilization in Pakistan and finally to mainland India. The magic of Michael wood was overshadowing the video, his unique British accent, priceless expressions and huge knowledge about the world was unmistakably charismatic. One more thing which kept me spellbound throughout the episode was the background Indian classic music composed by Howard Davidson.

The Series starts with Wood explaining about the first migrations of humans from Africa. Then, he takes us to remote villages of Kerala; one of the few regions of India still highly culturally intact. He goes to the Brahmin homes where father and sons are reciting incantations in an ancient language. This language is a very old language and there is no written mode of it. It is only known in its spoken form. It is told that this is was one of the earliest languages known to mankind and after research it has come to knowledge that it is composed of strange sounds resembling the hooting of birds. It is speculated that when the humans first came to settle down in India, they were using this language. 

Then, wood packs his bags and moves on the Indus Valley in Pakistan, where civilization is believed to have started around 3500 B.C . There he moves to ancient towns of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro. In its peak of power, Indus Valley civilization is believed to have been home of around 5 million people. In his eloquent tone, Wood also describes how British archaeologists discovered this place. But suddenly the civilizations got disappeared from here and migrated to other places. The shift in climate is believed to be a major factor in this. The change in weather affected the river system in which was the lifeline of Valley. So, the people migrated to east in the interiors of India; right in the plains of mighty Ganges.

The story then takes us to the earlier capital of British India - Calcutta. The city still shows the impact of British in its architecture and culture. Wood meets some members of Asiatic Society which has lots of historical texts. Wood discovers the Rig Veda and the various theories in it about the Indian gods. Rig Veda is written in Sanskrit and is believed to have been written around 1700 - 1100 BC. It is considered to be the oldest of the holiest scriptures of Hindus. Wood compares the texts of Rig Veda with what he found in Indus Valley that people of that age tamed horses and had chariots. He even mentions Soma, a drink believed to be taken by even gods. He tries to recreate Soma in the markets of Peshawar. Soma is believed to be  prepared from plants in Central Asia and supports the strong relation between Central Asia and India. Then, he observes the fact that the people not just migrated to India alone, but even to upper Central Asia like in Tajikistan, Turkmenistan of present. Wood doesn't leaves these parts behind for his quest to uncover the mystery and goes to an Archaeological complex in Turkmenistan and meets an Russian archaeologist who is working on the same mystery. Then, he concludes the episode by going to Holi celebrations in Mathura and quotes "This is just the beginning".