Wednesday, July 15, 2009
So my new blog is at http://www.venu.in/blog - powered by Wordpress of course. Somehow it slipped my mind that I should announce it here. :( Most of the posts on this blog have already been migrated to my new blog.
Request you to update your RSS/ATOM feeds. See you there. :)
Monday, February 23, 2009
Windows Starter Editions for "Emerging Markets"
This morning while driving to work, I was listening to Leo Laporte and Paul Thurrott’s TWiT podcast – Windows Weekly. (A must listen for people interested in Microsoft technologies.) The topic under discussion was the various versions of Windows 7 Operating Systems – in particular, the “Home Basic” or the “Starter” edition of Windows 7 planned for the politically correct “Emerging Nations”, which in plain English denotes the group of third world nations including India/China.
The so called “Starter” edition is a heavily stripped down Windows – No Aero, no gloss, only three applications running at a time. It is supposed to be the poor man’s window to the world. While I appreciate this nice gesture of Microsoft to serve the poor and the needy – I would like to see some statistics on how many Vista Starter editions it has sold till now in these “emerging markets”. Let us talk India since I am an Indian and I stay in India. I have traveled well – from the tech savvy Metros to the What-Is-A-Computer parts of India. I have used various computers. These computers have either a pirated version of Windows XP Home/Vista Home Premium operating system or simply Ubuntu. I am yet to come across a Windows Vista Starter edition.
Piracy is rampant in this part of the world. It is a menace that Microsoft is trying to tackle in a wrong way. The solution lies in making the software affordable to the common public of India – not in offering a skeleton of the OS and charging for it. People would simply buy the pirated version (Available at 2 $ - Any software) or load Ubuntu. If Windows Vista were available today for say – 50$ instead of the insane 150$ (for the premium version), the revenue Microsoft gets from these third world nations will be far more than what they are getting from the sales of Windows Vista Starter – which I believe is a big zero. The key is in differential pricing – not differential features.
I am not advocating piracy here. Please don’t get me wrong. I am one of the very few legal owners of Windows Vista Home Premium operating system in India. I am just amazed by the lack of business acumen demonstrated by these big corporates. They have consistently failed to read the Third World script and they haven’t learnt from their mistakes till now. I reiterate – fight piracy and boost your revenues by lowering the prices – not by stripping down the features. It just doesn’t work that way.
By the way – you can follow Leo Laporte’s TWiT podcasts on www.twit.tv
Friday, February 20, 2009
The Language Story
I have suspected it for a long time. It has been out there lurking around the corner waiting for the right time to strike. And boy! It did – with full force. The “it” here is the realization that my language skills have been going down the drain steadily.
It defies logic actually. There is this age old wisdom shouting from the rooftops that knowledge is permanent and that it can only improve. Once learnt, it stays with you till you die. Of course there are exceptions to this rule as you probably cannot solve an integro differential equation as deftly as you could fifteen years ago. However “language”, I have been of the opinion, is a permanent fixture – something that gets printed on your subconscious mind and is readily available in chaste purity whenever its services are called for.
Of late, I am beginning to realize that this opinion is merely a hypothesis concocted by a defiant mind which is far removed from reality. No wonder the Chromagnus human beings believed in the adage - “Practice makes a man perfect”.
If you don’t practice – you lose the skill – whatever skill it may be. Language is no exception to this. Unless you keep reading good literature, write grammatically sound sentences by putting some effort into making it clean and precise, you are going to go down the drain along with your language skills. If you are of the opinion that content is more important than structure, congratulations – your journey to the bottom of Mariana Trench has already begun.
This morning, while warming the nice cozy bench in the office, I decided to read a couple of my stories/reviews from 2002. I couldn’t believe that I wrote them. They were great. They had long sentences with proper punctuation and grammar. I am not saying that in 2002 I was giving P G Wodehouse a run for his money. Those writings had their usual share of grammatical as well as spelling errors. However, the density of such errors was minimal back then. Now, I write four sentences of which at least three break some rule of grammar and the remaining one, though pure from a grammar/spelling point of view, is as awkwardly constructed as possible.
This set me on an introspecting expedition. What has changed since 2002?
1. I came back to India from the US in 2002.
2. My reading habit has taken a beating. I don’t read Wodehouse anymore. My reading these days consists mostly of Chetan Bhagat and Digital Inspiration blog on the internet.
3. I have become more politically correct.
The third point in the list above requires some explanation. Back then, I was a free bird. I had no affiliations. I would skin alive anything and everything if I didn’t like it. However, today I think twice before recording a negative view about the stuff I review. I try to an objective assessment and in the process lose the focus and thereby the interest. By the time the article crosses the midway mark, my mind is elsewhere and the only goal dictating the proceedings is the burning seven year itch to complete the article and post it on the internet.
The second point, I believe, is a big influencing parameter. I started “writing” in English after my graduation at the age of 21. I was unbelievably raw (for want of a better word) in English and I must thank P G Wodehouse, O Henry and even Michael Crichton for showing me the way. I practically grew up under their able guidance. When I was on a Jeeves spree, my articles resembled Wodehouse style. (Let me make it very clear. I can’t write my name and P G Wodehouse together in a sentence without causing the great man turn in his grave restlessly. I am only talking about the style factor here. At best I could pass off as a Bad Wodehouse Wannabe.) When I was reading O Henry (or William Sydney Porter) my stories had the proverbial and inevitable twist-in-the-tale. My friends used to play a guessing game. They would guess what I was reading the night before, by going through my articles.
What happens if P G Wodehouse is then replaced by Chetan Bhagat and O Henry by Amit of Digital Inspiration? You sound like them – Don’t you? (Again, no offence to Chetan or Amit. It is just that they have a different purpose in literature and life than P G Wodehouse.) It is alright if the article in question is a blog on the internet discussing something technical/political. However if it is a story, Being Amit is not the best approach. In this case, the affiliation or the style inspiration should be P G Wodehouse. By the same yard stick, I wouldn’t want my “Windows 7 First Impressions” blog to sound like P G W. On second thoughts, I think that would be cool. I should try that sometime.
That brings us to the first point in the list above – the drastic change in the environment. I would attribute a major part of my English refining process to the four years that I had spent in the United States. Not that US English is the best of the lot, but it did help me polish my language. The number of opportunities that a person gets to interact in English is far more in the US than in India. At the end of 2002, I sold my Corolla and traveled back to India (The Software Engineer Who Sold His Corolla). I did not get any spiritual insight into the way things worked but I did manage to lose the grip I had so painstakingly developed over the years.
Today, I don’t proofread my articles. I don’t check them for grammar or spelling. In the mad dash to get the article posted on the internet, I don’t even check if the purported central idea is respected throughout the piece of writing. I just start – write – finish and post. And there lies the problem. I am keeping my bar low because I feel that the blogs do not need a fine piece of writing. The posts that I make on the internet do not have to be exquisitely composed. If I am writing a novel or if my blogs are going to be compiled into a book version, I would probably spend more time polishing them.
This is more like a page from my diary. However, I think there is a takeaway or two from this write-up for everyone. Keep your influencing parameters high (Read P G Wodehouse) and don’t ever lower your bar. (Assume you are writing for TIME magazine or The Hindu newspaper.)
For now, I will just go back to my bookshelf, dust the copy of “Life at Blandings” and start reading it again.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
Praja Rajyam in Andhra Pradesh
Found this near Nellore – A great statement (unintended though) for Chiranjeevi’s political party: Praja Rajyam. Elect us and we will give you what you see in this picture. :)
(I am not a supporter of Praja Rajyam. I am neutral as far as politics are concerned. Found this to be interesting. Hence the post.)
Friday, February 06, 2009
Telugu Movie Review: Konchem Ishtam Konchem Kashtam
Back in the days of yore, movies subscribed to a particular format – Rope in a big hero; Four fights; Six Songs; A heroine whose IQ hovers around 35; A big lengthy brawl at the end with some molten metal complete with an insanely complicated pulley and lever arrangement whose sole purpose is invariably to kill the hero’s kith and kin in the most difficult way possible. Oh yes! I forgot about the police jeep arriving into the photo frame on which the beautiful phrase “The End” is eventually printed much to the relief of the patrons.
The nineties saw a different formula. Rope in a big hero (no change here.); Four fights again; However these fights have three important factors that distinguish them from the eighties movies.
1. These fights do not end. Period.
2. There is no room for gravity in this world.
3. The hero is more powerful than Samson and Achilles put together are.
Once the fights are thus conceptualized, rope in the leading women. Remember the golden rule here: there is no upper limit. The more women the better it is. Now plan six songs and place an order for a hundred Tata Sumos of which ninety have nothing much to do except mutely watch the hero deliver punch lines to the villain. The remaining ten Sumos occasionally travel on the road and a select group of these Sumos gets to travel in the air – mostly upwards like rockets but sometimes in a parabola too. Being innovative in the screenplay means the Sumos executing a hyperbolic trajectory.
After a deluge of such movies, we have seen a whip of fresh air – movies that offer something new and where “image” and Sumos do not dictate the screenplay. Frustrated by the macho men of the nineties, audience lapped up these soft subjects. Bommarillu is a case in point. It ushered in a completely new era for Tollywood.
Now, there are two ways to read the message here. One, people do not want to see beaten-to-death formula movies and need fresh subjects. The other, people want Bommarillus.
Sadly, the filmmakers have chosen the latter interpretation. After Bommarillu, an avalanche of such movies has started to hit the marquee. Boy meets girl. They tease each other. They fall in love. They face an obstacle – which has something to do with the upbringing of one or both of them. Being the ideal sons and daughters that they are, they correct the problem – almost always involving the parents on either side. The boy and the girl show an incredible maturity for the age they are and are willing to sacrifice anything and everything for the happiness of their parents. All the characters in the movie are so disbelievingly sweet that it suffocates you. You gasp for breath. You cannot take the sugar anymore. You yearn for some mirchi – something hot – something not so perfect. Hell! You want those flying Sumos again! However, this is the Bommarillu genre. There cannot be any projectiles here. Therefore, at the end of the thirteenth reel, a series of heavy conversations take place in the movie – often sermonizing on the art of parenthood – glycerin flowing freely - and people live happily ever after and you come out of the movie hall with moist eyes and 4 out of 5 rating.
Cinema is an escapist medium I agree. Reality is not picture perfect. We do not want to see the same stuff on the celluloid. However, beyond a certain point, it becomes difficult to accept these beautiful characters that exhibit no shades of grey. The latest Siddhartha Tamanna starrer Konchem Ishtam Konchem Kashtam (KIKK) suffers from the same problem.
KIKK is Bommarillu served in a not so new bottle. You have tasted Thumbs Up; you have tasted some Pepsi as well; now you are served Coca Cola.
It is not a bad movie though. It is superbly shot. Cinematography is the best I have seen in the recent times. The villages and the cities come alive on the screen. The camera angles are great. The background score is fantastic. Songs look great on the screen. I loved the way the song “Abba cha” has been choreographed. Tamanna looks great but has miles to go in the acting department. Siddharth sleepwalks literally. He has been essaying the same role since 2005. Prakash Raj turns in a good performance. My pick of the lot is Ramya Krishna who has underplayed her role to excellent effect. Brahmanandam entertains as Gacchibowli Diwakar.
When the movie ends and you are walking down the hallway towards the exit, a sense of déjà vu engulfs you. Been there; done that. The movie has nothing new to offer.
Rajni might have sung – “Kick YekkelE”. But this KIKK ekkalE.
My rating: 3 out of 5.
