Tuesday, August 30, 2005
posted on Tuesday, August 30, 2005 6:08:07 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [24] Trackback
 Saturday, August 27, 2005

I am simply addicted to Google Desktop. I can't find files like I used to before Google Desktop Search.

Now, I just have to remember keywords (which is always easier) and go search. And I land up on that buried email, document or file in seconds.

And now Google Desktop Search has gone to the next level. Here's version 2 with some real cool nifty features: http://desktop.google.com/?pr=hpp-gds-en-v2-3

There is a Google Desktop Search Enterprise Edition too that organizations can deploy for search within Intranet. That means you can search on your file servers, other peer computers and just about everywhere!

The interesting thing is Google has beaten Microsoft to taking up the "sidebar" space. Google Desktop allows you to have a sidebar similar to the proclaimed Longhorn sidebar that is to release with Microsoft Windows Vista. It will be interesting to see what happens if people get used to Google's sidebar. Considering Microsoft still has an year to get Vista to release and then the time it will take for people to adopt, Google sure has an upper hand.

posted on Saturday, August 27, 2005 2:02:17 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
posted on Saturday, August 27, 2005 12:08:09 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Wednesday, August 24, 2005

http://www.google.com/talk/

The long awaited Google messenger is here.

And needless to say, it is awesome!

posted on Wednesday, August 24, 2005 11:37:46 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [3] Trackback
 Monday, August 22, 2005

Back in the United States. Arrived yesterday at San Francisco after 38 hours of flying and waiting to fly.

San Francisco looks like a nice city - not that I've had much time here - but it sure is busier and livelier than Minneapolis/St. Paul (which I visited two months ago).

I'm here for a month and if any of you have any suggestions on what I could explore here, leave me a comment.

You're sure to see more blog entries on things I get to encounter here.

For now, back to work.

posted on Monday, August 22, 2005 10:49:50 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [3] Trackback

Got this email - this is really useful information:

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Careful!!!!! Do not have anything in clipboard when you surf web sites whose authenticity you are not sure about!!!!

This is amazing!!
Just follow these steps here to beleive it yourself
:- > >
1) Copy any text > >

2) Click the Link:
 http://www.friendlycanadian.com/applications/clipboard.htm
3) You will be able to see the text you copied on the Screen.

NOTE: If you are using to save PASSWORDS / Cr. Card#s / IMP Info in clip-board, Read carefully...
Do not keep sensitive data in the clipboard while surfing the web. It is a single line code to extract the text stored in the clipboard. Just look at the following site, it demonstrates how easy it is to steal your sensitive information. Select some text from this mail and Hit Ctrl+C and then check the link. Click the Link:
http://www.friendlycanadian.com/applications/clipboard.htm

Right Click on the Web Page and Click "View Source" to see one line source code of the same. The following is supposed to prevent it:

A work-around for users using Internet Explorer 5.0, is to disable or set-to-prompt the option of "Allow paste operation via script", which is accessible through | Tools \ Internet Options \ Security \ Internet > security zone \ Custom Level \ Scripting \ Allow paste operations via script >

------------------------------------------------------------------------------

posted on Monday, August 22, 2005 10:45:20 PM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Friday, August 05, 2005

An old friend was visiting Bangalore today and I met him for dinner.  During our wide and varied conversations, catching up for all the lost time, he happened to mention that he had the privelege of meeting Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam, the Honourable President of India.

Now, anybody from India will tell you that Dr. APJ Abdul Kalam is one of the most respected citizens and probably the most respected President of India ever. For those who don't already know, he's the brain behind India's missile technology and the man who pioneered India's foray into nuclear capabilities. Apart from that, he is also a perfect gentleman, down to earth and a sincere citizen who believes that education and science can change the grassroots of a nation.

Now, my friend had the opportunity of meeting him and also had the chance to hear him speak. And he said that Dr. Kalam spoke about how India can surpass many nations in the world by imbibing education into the vast population, not literacy.

The thought is really fascinating because it immediately showed me the difference between these two loosely interchanged words. Education is about the culture, the upbringing, about street-smartness, about knowledge - the thirst for it and attaining it.  Literacy is about being able to read and write, being able to gather thoughts from literary works, being able to recognize and appreciate art.

Literacy is good. Great, in fact. Because literates can access reams of knowledge easily. However, it is not enough if somebody can read four languages. Being able to read and utilize what is read is something that I consider a skill, that many a people lack.

Without literacy, people have limited boundaries. But there have been great people who have surpassed these boundaries, crossed them, shunned all qualms and achieved great heights. Simply because they educated themselves from experience and from the way the world chose to orient around themselves.

I have been following the season of the popular TV series The Apprentice. On Indian television, the current season is a duel between two groups - one a set of college graduates called the book-smarts vs. another set of individuals who went on their own and took life in their own hands, called the street-smarts. It is interesting to note that even the street-smarts are pretty bookish when it comes to marketing tasks and campaigns. I think it is the culture in the United States that requires people to be at some level of literacy even to be a street-smart.

Compare that to India. There are hundreds of people who have made it real big and the only thing they can write is their signature. Even that was taught to them by people who found it was necessary that in business they need to sign many of the legal documents. I am not joking or exaggerating. This is the plain truth. These are the real street-smarts. Who did not have a background good enough even for primary education, and went up their own way taking full control of their lives and making paths for themselves. They educated themselves in business, marketing, legal, finance, human resources, project management, and what not - all on their own without a teacher or without the ability to read or write. Of course, these are extraordinary men and women with a gift to think out of the box and sieze opportunities, but it goes to show the importance of education over plain literacy.

So the next time you say literacy is the key to everything, think again. It is education. And there is a subtle difference.

posted on Friday, August 05, 2005 3:48:08 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback
 Tuesday, August 02, 2005

Jayant did 4 blog entries in one night. Read them to know why I commented in the last post that I felt he should blog more often.

New interface, new ideas, food for thought... Great going J. Just keep it going! :)

http://www.jayanthan.com/blog/

PS: And now I can say - thinkingms.com changes lives!

posted on Tuesday, August 02, 2005 2:02:19 AM (India Standard Time, UTC+05:30)  #    Comments [0] Trackback