Archive for the ‘Technology’ Category

Facebook & iRohit

Sunday, September 28th, 2008

My first facebook app. I_WANT_ONE lets you tell all your friend what you want this holiday season. Go ahead, give it a try.. Also know what your friends want.

Why iPhone is not for India… atleast not yet

Friday, August 22nd, 2008
  • No itunes to buy music, audiobooks or rent movies
  • No 3G duh!
  • Not enough wi-fi zones for public access
  • No quick enough GPRS to enjoy rich content of emails or the internet
  • So 31k+ for just a cell phone… noways!

    People must realise that iPhone is a success in the US because it combined iPod and itunes with a cellular service and not the other way around. People liked the idea that their portable music player could also be used to make a call, send a text message… check voicemail… check email.. surf the net.

    Tata’s 1 lac People’s Car

    Thursday, January 10th, 2008

    The Nano, pretty nice isn’t it? no not the iPod, but the new Tata’s 1 lac People’s Car. I think the Tata’s have done a super splendid job, almost close to a miracle bringing out this marvel of engineering. The world shouted that it was not possible, but leave it to an Indian to make a paisa vasool product, the Chinese will do it too, but the product might just cause you to die of lead poisoning … hehe.

    Today’s day definitely belonged to the Tatas’, the engineers who made it all possible. Ratan Tata deserves a standing ovation for taking up the challenge to build a ‘car’ for 100,000 Rs.

    The biggest challenge for this car was to look like a car, and by god, she does. Infact I think, she aced the looks department. It looks pretty trendy. And if it can survive a wife, two bustling kids, and a bag of groceries, than I have no reason to doubt why this car will not rewrite automotive history. Apart from being esthetically pleasing to the eye, it meets all the safety norms, Bharat Stage-III emission norms and can also meet the Euro 4 norms.

    It indeed is a historic day for India, and Indians all over. Today we gift the world, the cheapest car!

    Additional read, People’s Car website

    iPod touch

    Thursday, November 15th, 2007

    You know what… Steve didn’t lie or for that matter, exaggerated… I totally agree with him. iPod touch is the best iPod ever. It has the most crisp and brightest display than any other portable media device. I can totally watch a movie on it while I am on the move. The sound ofcourse is great. Pictures look amazing.

    Yes, I am a big iPod fan. Infact, buying any other mp3 player is just being colossally stupid & ignorant. You know that iPod is the best, then why in the world would you waste money on anything else. And if you argue, that some of them cost less, well then they have succeeded in robbing you in broad daylight by selling something that is not even half as good as an iPod…

    My first iPod was the silver mini. It is the best iPod ever too. I still remember the first time I saw it. The size just blew me away. How can it be so small. Infact it looked much bigger in the pictures that I had seen on the web. And the first time I heard music on it, it was so clear, so perfect. And then the touch-scroll wheel.Whoa! It was having space age technology in your hand.

    That’s whats great about Apple. They just deliver so much more than what you expect. Everytime!!!

    Cheers to A380

    Thursday, October 25th, 2007

    A historic day for aviation! And a sterling example of the ability of the human genius and its spirit. Kudos to all the people who made the A380 fly! How I wish I could have been on it’s maiden flight from Singapore to Sydney. Well, anyways…. I hope I fly this marvel of engineering, ASAP.

    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.

    Yahoo! pipes

    Friday, August 17th, 2007

    Have you heard about this one? I was aked by a friend to have a look at this new concept. Initially I could not understand, I couldn’t figure out how to make it work, what to implement, what it achieved. So as usual, I let it slip out of my mind and more simpler things kept my grey matter active… like watching tennis, cricket, and when I wanted to give the grey cells a little bit of breather I watched bollywood movies. This continued till yesterday, when suddenly some anomaly in the universe popped the Yahoo! pipes back into my mind. Since the work schedule was bit relaxed, I decided to unearth the mystery of these weird pipes. After all what followed through these pipes, certainly not crude oil or did it???

    Well after some initial read up, it was safe to conclude that Yahoo! still did not have any say in OPEC. And then as I delved more into these pipes, I realized that this was a ingenious concept that I think has the potential to change, hmm well, create a new way of serving information to the user from data scattered all over the web. Normally as it stands today, a user can request information from a single website. He can set filters and narrow the scope of the data that he thinks contains the information he requires.

    But here is what Yahoo! pipe promises. You can feed this application data from multiple sources dynamically from the web and channel this information through various pipes applying your custom rules and transform this information so that it maps with any entity and voila! You have something which I am sure has no business sense now, but in time will spark an idea which in a few years will be sold for an insanely huge amount.

    Currently creating a pipe is kinda complex, as it uses meta-language and programming constructs that a layman may find hard to grasp. But with time I am sure this will get simpler. And it is from here on that I expect this framework to deliver.

    There already is a pipe that takes the top songs list from iTunes and then gives the user links to the videos for these songs. You can check it out here. And this is a fairly simple pipe to implement and actually sounds like something that one may find useful, right??? So Yahoo! pipes has the capability to deliver, but it requires the ingenuity of the human grey matter to realize its full potential…

    Looks like Web 2.0 is finally beginning to deliver. Also I must give it up for the guys at Yahoo! to actually come up with this cool technology. Microsoft too, not so long ago, announced what I think is the most exciting technology since Windows, MS Surface. It’s time for guys at Google to pull up their socks… looks like they are falling behind.

    For more information

    http://www.dashes.com/anil/2007/02/yahoo-pipes.html

    http://radar.oreilly.com/archives/2007/02/pipes_and_filte.html/

    Useful videos to get you started

    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!

    Free tools to help you out

    Blogger
    LiveJournal
    WordPress
    MyPodcast.com
    YouTube
    Google Pages

    Human Technology : Google

    Sunday, June 24th, 2007

    What more do I have to say. This one uncanny word has today become synonymous with goodness, nobleness, ‘do no evil’, usefulness, innovation, user centric principles, almost miraculous products… the list could go on. Google has touched our lives in some way or the other and for good. What started with a simple page with a colorful name which fetched precisely the results that you wanted in .232 odd secs has today become the biggest brand in the world. Though search is still its core, it today provides an amazing mix of services to all the netizens, and for free. Today you can mail, chat, find directions to that new restaurant that your friend told you about, publish your thoughts, ideas, get in touch with your school friends, manage your calendar, share it with family and friends, buy gifts, watch steaming videos, share pictures, well you get the point right.. Google helps us to make the things that are important to us simple. And isn’t that what we all want!

    I was introduced to Google in 1999. A friend of mine advised me to give this search engine a try. And after it fetched me my first set of results, search on the net was never the same. It delivered results that really mattered. And over the time it just got better and better. One major thing that I think added to the popularity was the absolute basic interface. No fancy categories, no heavy graphics. And in the era of dial up internet connections that made all the difference.

    Over the years, it has grown. Today it’s one of the biggest companies around. It has kept adding services to its arsenal. Gmail, Froogle, Adsense, Youtube. But the principle of KISS still remains at its core which probably is the biggest reason for its unprecedented success.

    I still remember the day Gmail was announced with a storage space of 1gb. People, including me thought it was another of Google’s brilliant April Fool’s joke. But when it became official, it changed the whole web email domain.

    Google too has managed to rally huge public goodwill. It has become a standard by which people judge any service provider today. Google has managed to convey very successfully that it genuinely is concerned and committed to provide its user the best net experience. It has used its many official blogs to keep people updated on all that is happening with the company. I personally think that this is a master stroke in marketing and connecting to its customer base.

    I expect Google to grow even further but not unchallenged. Until the next epic idea… here’s three cheers to Google!

    Programming: a commodity?

    Thursday, June 21st, 2007

    Madz signing in…

    Got to hear a very interesting comment the other day.. It was “Programming is now a commodity”..

    Of course it was not quoted by someone very knowledgeable about the topic and must have been the result of a CYA approach, but delving over it, it does start painting a picture and it may not turn out to be very pretty overall..

    Agreed, programming is still the Holy Grail for all the quality products and services that you see out there. But the power today lies not in the quality of the number cruncher lying under the hood but rather in the quality of the data produced as a result. And the real killer deal today is the ability to string together multiple sources of data together (more or less in a loosely coupled manner) to generate new platforms for the sharing of information and services.

    As a result, you see a killer application in FaceBook that allows you to share anything you want under the sun through widgets and Flickr that allows you to build up a prolific community based on images, image capture devices and image locations. Linking of relevant data sources was always around by means of makeshift workflow models adopted enterprise-wide. But with the emergence of a global community generating meaningful content on a daily basis, there was the natural need to take this out of an organizational perpective to a global one.

    Enter Indigo (refer .NET 2.0) by Microsoft which is essentially a programming platform/model that drills into you that no binary code out there is an island anymore and every binary code out there is a potential service. Indigo allows you to build connected services on the fly and would automate to a large extent the ability to expose your application as a service thus allowing it to be consumable by anyone who might be able to link it with another source of relevant data to create that killer application that is now looming in the horizon.

    Hence, while the laying the business rules into practice still essentially belong to the domain of the premium programmer, the eventual monetization in terms of scale and volume to a bigger audience is now becoming very much a commodity.

    Madz signing off….