Archive for the ‘Social’ Category

Now Showing!

Monday, July 21st, 2008

If anyone wants a first hand look of the Indian democracy, then please switch to the next available Indian ‘news’ channel. Showing now, ‘The Great India Tamasha’, live from the Parliament, 2 days only!!!.

It’s so tragic, that it’s actually funny that we have such hypocrites as representing us in the Parliament. I am sure, not more than a few handful know anything about the Nuclear deal. Yet they will vote on the issue and make it look as if they are doing so because the people they represent compel them too.

For the record, I would like the Nuclear deal to go through, for I would rather live and hope that some day in my life time, in most places in both rural, urban India, there will be electricity, connectivity than prepare for a doomsday when we fire nuclear weapons on each other and die anyways!

All that matters

Monday, October 1st, 2007

As we all know, The Sunday Times of India is an extended edition. In addition to the news, it has articles from various prominent personalities. Two such personalities are Shashi Tharoor, and Shobhaa De. The articles by these two on this week’s edition caught my attention. Shashi’s screamed ‘Too bad we can’t have a leader like Sarkozy‘ while Shobhaa De’s read, ‘Jawani Diwani‘. Ok, so first thing first, Shashi, Ofcourse we can’t have a leader like Sarkozy, because we are not France. We are a blend of a billion plus individuals, who don’t speak the same language, are mostly Hindus yet pray to different gods, have been cataclysmically classified into the senseless hierarchy of castes, celebrate different festivals, eat different cuisine, have different traditions, have different lines of thoughts, views, have localized issues, are not educated enough, have to fight everyday to get access to life’s basic necessities, are living in a ‘developing’ nation, are surrounded by non democratic neighbors, are subjected to terrorist brutalities, are home to illegal immigrants. Yes, if we were like France, we would have a leader like Sarkozy, I would even suggest that we would find someone better than him from amongst the billion. It’s not easy juggling the aspirations of extremely diverse billion people, which call India their home. I see it as nothing short of a miracle that we even have a democracy and have sustained it for the last 60 years. I guess it’s easy to sit in an audience and be mesmerized by an orator who uses charm and wit to influence his audience, not that there is anything wrong with that, Sarkozy is a politician, he has to, but you Mr. Shashi, must also soak in the ground realities in India. We are not perfect, but we are doing well!

Next, the socialite, Shobhaa De. Hers is not an article but a cheeky summary of week’s event using some witty adjectives from the comfort of her home surrounded by, what I assume, are her uber - elite friends from Mumbai. She mentions three young ’single’ Indians who were in news this week, Dhoni, Rahul Gandhi, and Prashant Tamang. The article looks promising, but then as one skims through it, the realization is dawned that she only understands and can articulate the cricket related story. Sadly Rajiv and Prashant are just mentioned to, maybe prove to the readers that she is indeed aware of the week’s ‘people in the news’ but in no ways, well versed enough to comment on their actions, or talent as in the case of Prashant.

My point is that it’s nice that Times can get these ‘well-known’ people to write articles, but it doesn’t guarantee that these would enrich the lives of the people who read them. These two articles, this Sunday, are in my mind nothing more than ordinary views that anyone one with some inclination to writing can come up with. These are just words to fill up space. And seems like the authors can get away with them. I would want the Times, at the very least to provide for a forum to question, commend, argue the views expressed, rather than SMS a number conveying my like or dislike of the article.

Anyways, just my two cents!

Human Technology : Napster

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

The idea of writing a series like Human Technology provides me to reflect on my own journey through the IT age that is so central to my life. Technologies that have been featured so far on iRohit.com have today become so ingrained in our fabric that it’s easy to disregard the fact that till the mid nineties, most of us didn’t even know how a PC looked or what Windows was.

As I write this, the 4th chapter of my ongoing Human Technology series, I have to mention, none of the previous topics have brought a bigger smile on my face than this one. Before the BitTorrent, LimeWire, Kazaa; there was a lone pioneer, who unlocked the gates to a whole new world of sharing, sharing of music to be precise. Napster!

Napster was a brain child of 18 year old Shawn Fanning who I guess, was very passionate about his music, like most of us. But unlike most, he was brilliant with computers and coding. So he created a piece of software that would allow him and his colleagues to search and download the music of their liking from the computers on his college network. Little did he realize at that time that, what he had created was a piece of code that would change the music industry! We all are aware with the history of course. Napster changed the way we got our music. One was able to search for music on any computer located anywhere in the world and download it on to his computer. Foul, cried the music industry, but that didn’t stop this phenomenon of sharing music. Napster doesn’t even exist anymore. Well, definitely not in its original form. The original Napster has mutated into many things. Today’s it most successful form is the BitTorrent.

For many people, around the world, Napster provided a way to listen to music without actually owing it. It helped people to find that most obscure of artist in a jiffy. All it required was for some patient person to rip the cd and make mp3s of the album and share it. The copies then just grew in geometric progression. Today one can share not only music, but books, movies, software, documents, presentations, well almost any file on the computer. Of course there are legal suits going on, preventing such peer to peer sharing. But then that is a topic for another blog. The point of this blog is to acknowledge the place of Napster in Internet folklore. It added a whole new dimension to Internet. Music is one thing that unites the world, and sharing and finding music connected with the masses. As they say, ‘music is the food for our soul’ and I guess the entire world is hungry!

Incase you found this blog interesting, I would recommend you look at my other posts from the Human Technology series. Let me know which technologies touched you. I would love to hear you views.

Brain fried.. Literally..

Thursday, August 2nd, 2007

The transposition of Bheja Fry from the tattered menu of a sleepy Irani restaurant to your chosen multiplex is no small tale. A (French) inspired tale of an upscale Mumbai socialite bringing along a local idiot for dinner was made at a miserable budget and laughed its way to surplus profits and is still adding to the sum total through DVD sales.

Enough statistics of the movie. I was not overtly impressed by the movie on the whole; it, of course, had its moments with the protagonist Bharat Bhushan (played brilliantly by Vinay Pathak) pulling the movie away from mediocrity.

The movie, largely, talks about a typical Indian middle class citizen being constantly abused, unbeknownst to him, by a rich snobbish socialite via innumerable contorted funny situations. Which led me to think about the typical mould into which the middle class has been cast into, both in media and in society in general. The urban middle class, which by reports, has been constantly burgeoning and being empowered over the last decade is, by far, the most abused caricature or social model that is thriving out there.

Beginning the last decade, the unknown Indian, created ingeniously by Laxman, has been used as an excuse for sympathy and grit time and again by movies and media. Be it socialist movies like Main Azaad Hoon or the media reporting on tragedies, the common man has been the showcased as the model of identity for his only attribute: being common. Till the late nineties, politicos and media used the tag to narrate heart pulling incidences and swell the pride of the common man.

The scenario changed early this century with the boom in disposable income that broadened the spectrum inhabited by the middle class and saw them making their way to malls and multiplexes enjoying their popcorns and plastic money. Again, the media kicked in singing hosannas about the common man and the power he now holds to change the destiny of the country. It is painful to realize how such marketing gimmicks seem to influence sane people into getting classified as the “common” man. If anything, I hate the tag and though I, by broad classification, fall into that category, I would refuse to called “common” by anyone.

The common man, if such a myth exists, is that individual who wants to up himself into the upper crust by munching the Big Mac, forming the bee hive on weekends at your neighbourhood mall and sporting the latest smart phone gadget in the hopes that he be recognized differently. Sadly, however, the common man remains common.. all alone in ever broadening spectrum…

Sometimes.. probably ignorance is bliss..

Global Village

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Of all the available media for self expression, internet is, in my humble opinion the most powerful and the most liberal. Of course there can be censorship imposed by govt, law, lobbies but there are ways to still get your view out to the masses. Today it’s possible to voice your opinion on almost about anything under the sun and maybe things around it ;)

It’s about time you realize this. Really, don’t let this opportunity just pass you. Write a blog, comment on a blog, make a podcast, create a video blog, join a news group, forum and if you are really inspired start your own website. Our predecessors at most could only talk to people in they knew, family, people they grew up with, studied with, worked with, people they met at social events. That was it. Today, you have the power to communicate with a person living in Santiago, know him, his way of life, discuss global warming if that’s what you care about. So if you have a point of view, then make it known! Currently, YouTube and CNN are asking netizens to post questions to the Presidential Candidates in the US. Similar things are happening all over the world… Isn’t that great!

We perhaps are at the gates of the mythical ‘Global Village’ and the doors have started to open, and it may be the beginning of the most exciting journey we have ever embarked upon. So come, join in!

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