It is a conscious decision not to write anything about our politics here. If I did, I could put up three posts everyday- it enrages me so much.
I don't want to rant, but I need to vent my anger- Politicians are in it, Bureaucrats got some of it, and the worst of it- Army Officers, who ought to have known better.
There is talk of trying The Ghoul of small Things for sedition for her yet another hysterical raving- she won't break the back of this nation.
These idiots will.
Totally insane heartlessness to grab something meant for Kargil heroes and their widows, and make a pile of money out of it. They should be shot.
Okay, let's not waste our bullets.
Just stand them up on our LoC where honest, precious lives are lost valiantly and so vainly.
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Ernest Hemingwasy- the art of writing

INTERVIEWER
But are there times when the inspiration isn’t there at all?
HEMINGWAY
Naturally. But if you stopped when you knew what would happen next, you can go on. As long as you can start, you are all right. The juice will come.
You immediately get the idea that this is the word of a master. Insightful.
Monday, October 18, 2010
Poetry is Dead
Please look at this page-
"Once upon a midnight dreary, long we pondered weak and weary,
Over many a quaint and curious volume of translation lore.
When our system does translation, lifeless prose is its creation;
Making verse with inspiration no machine has done before.
So we want to boldly go where no machine has gone before.
Quoth now Google, 'Nevermore!'"
Over many a quaint and curious volume of translation lore.
When our system does translation, lifeless prose is its creation;
Making verse with inspiration no machine has done before.
So we want to boldly go where no machine has gone before.
Quoth now Google, 'Nevermore!'"
Specify what you want-Haiku, Sonnet, Venba- whatever. And feed it any kind of dreary sludge you find written. Google will transform it into gems of poetic pieces.
Quoth now Google, "Nevermore!"
oh yes, nevermore.
Sunday, October 17, 2010
Data Visualisation for Bloggers
I am looking for a site that will help me do better data visualisation- it should be easy and quick. This one I don't understand, but then they have a wonderful embed feature that is an absolute must for bloggers, so I thought why shouldn't I help them out with a link? :)
So here goes.
Hope they provide us with a better interface. This one is absolutely useless if you don't know anything about it.
So here goes.
Hope they provide us with a better interface. This one is absolutely useless if you don't know anything about it.
Related articles
- Something I wrote for the Guardian Datablog (and caveats) (onlinejournalismblog.com)
- Journalism In The Age Of Data (neilperkin.typepad.com)
Saturday, October 9, 2010
You can't do it in the shower for lack of friction...
I am surprised that people are worried about this-
Thursday, October 7, 2010
MeeHive to Shut Down
I am saddened to hear that Meehive will stop its services this month. I had great hopes for it- it promised to deliver a personalised newspaper, the user interface was good to look at. Meehive had autopost features that allowed you to share links and comments to Twitter and Facebook. Unfortunately, it never got off. There was no conversations. All I got news of in the "Your Friends Activity" is Louis making friends one after another, to no purpose. No one was doing any talking.
See?
What we need is something that combines the dynamics of Twitter and Facebook with a more traditional feed reader. The feed reader part should get the feeds of the links that are shared by my friends and lists that I follow, and display them in full- video, audio, text, whatever, preferably in Readability format. And there should be a panel where I can interact with my friends the way I do in Twitter or Facebook.
Actually, I need a personalised newspaper that delivers me news that I am interested in. There are two ways to go about it- one is the RSS way, where I subscribe to the feeds I am interested in, and sit back and wait for the news and posts to come into my reader. This is the way it has worked so far, but with the popularity of Twitter and Facebook, where you get news more dynamically, the idea of using a passive reader is somewhat passe.
Meehive was a step further from that idea. It let you choose your topics, and then comment and share the feed that came in. Adding and deleting topics were easy, you could do that with a click, and the it was possible to set it up so that your comments would show up in Twitter and Facebook. But then, no one was talking.
I feel they should have changed a few things to make it more interesting- but I suppose their idea of what we wanted was not in sync with what we are comfortable with. So it goes.
And in its place, the email from Meehive team tells me, is Tweetbeat and Tweetbeat Firsthand. Sorry, this one won't work. Who is going to sit watching tweets on a particular topic or person and retweet and reply them? It gets boring after the first few minutes. And then, if the topic is real hot, the tweets pour in quicker than you could possibly read. Come on, it gets stale after a while. It will, won't it- how many original thoughts can you generate on any given issue? That is what Tweetbeat is.
If you thought Tweetbeat is bad, it gets worse with Firsthand. You are supposed to download a browser addon so that when you visit a page, you get blue icons next to names and things people have tweeted about. All you need do is go hover over the icon, and you can read what Tweeple are saying about that.
Why would you do that? Suppose I am interested to read something about the Big Bang theory because there is something about it on CBS. I open a page and a blue icon comes up somewhere near Big Bang Theory, I hover over there, and get this-
If you thought Tweetbeat is bad, it gets worse with Firsthand. You are supposed to download a browser addon so that when you visit a page, you get blue icons next to names and things people have tweeted about. All you need do is go hover over the icon, and you can read what Tweeple are saying about that.
Why would you do that? Suppose I am interested to read something about the Big Bang theory because there is something about it on CBS. I open a page and a blue icon comes up somewhere near Big Bang Theory, I hover over there, and get this-
See?
What we need is something that combines the dynamics of Twitter and Facebook with a more traditional feed reader. The feed reader part should get the feeds of the links that are shared by my friends and lists that I follow, and display them in full- video, audio, text, whatever, preferably in Readability format. And there should be a panel where I can interact with my friends the way I do in Twitter or Facebook.
This should not be too difficult. Why don't someone think of it- a site with the usual single sentence format of Twitter that can be expanded to show the full text. And if you choose to, you can post it back to Twitter or Facebook or pass it on to your contacts or Blog or whatever...
It should be possible.
Related articles
- TweetBeat Wants To Kill Hashtags On Twitter By Making Them Obsolete (techcrunch.com)
Monday, October 4, 2010
Packrati Bookmarks Tweeted Links to your Delicious Account
I am automatically bookmarking URLs I tweet and favorite to my del.ico.us account. Check it out! http://t.co/WxUU7Bz via @packratiusTue Oct 05 01:06:26 via Tweet Button
களிமண் கலயம்
kalimankalayam

kalimankalayam
I came to kinow about Packrati.us via Digital Inspiration.
Seems promising- my activity on Twitter is mostly sharing of interesting links. Packrati automatically saves the tweeted links in your delicious account, converting your hashtags into delicious tags. Since Twitter is notorious for the short shelf life of tweet outs, Packrati might be a great way to archive your bookmarks.
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