Three Books
I took advantage of my wifeless existence in the US to run through three books:The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins, The Undercover Economist
by Tim Harford and Fooled by Randomness
by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Got a like rate of 2 out of 3. Reviews follow soon.
Bad News
Amit has written about this attempt by the Indian government to set up a “second Silicon Valley” in the US. It is of course a bad idea, as government attempts to fund things generally are. But this one puzzled me quite a bit. Apparently, the rationale is that the first Silicon Valley in California, is overcrowded, so they are setting up the second valley to explore new markets in New Jersey and Chicago.
Wait, what? Has software increased so much in bulk that there is now a need to reduce transport costs by producing it close to its point of consumption? Why do they need to set up a second Silicon Valley in New Jersey to explore markets in New Jersey? Reading the article again makes the subterfuge clear. They have not mentioned anywhere that they will be setting up development centres, only “incubation centres”. If I were to guess, what they will be actually doing is to set up marketing offices in those areas. They can’t tell the government: “Give us some money so that we can set up marketing offices”. So they dressed it up as “Give us some money so that we can set up Silicon Valley II”. The government has bought the line and so has the idiot reporter.
New Jersey 23 Sept 07 – 6 Oct 07
Apologies for the lack of posts. I shall be in New Jersey for the next two weeks. I may find a lot of time to post, or I may not. In the former case, the blog will be updated quite often. In the latter case, it will not.
Breaking News
It transpires that a momentous blogospheric event occurred three days back. However, the parties involved being models of maturity and discretion, the public is so far unaware of the news. Unfortunately, I being a model of neither, feel impelled to make an announcement.
You folks might know that the Jagadguru gives liberally of His time and effort towards the endeavour to blog about right wing morons and the deficiencies of the Indian educational system. As there are so many right wing morons and so many deficiencies in India’s educational system, it is a thankless and never ending job. In the midst of His busy schedule, He also used to take time to blog on Blogbharti (the word is a pun). Unfortunately, on 12 September 2007, He decided to discontinue His participation in the noble task. Rather than explain the reasons myself, I shall let the Jagadguru Himself give His two reasons (of which the second is not a reason). He had made the post and then deleted it because, as we have already seen, the Jagadguru is a model of maturity and discretion. Unfortunately, Google reader’s crawler was inexcusably indiscreet.
Dr. Acharya Somuchidonanda Pandey Lights the Path for all Indian Men
A Russian feminist has proposed a solution to the problem of Russia’s falling population – import Indian men as husbands. (via)
K. V. Kamath Wants a Free Market in Banking, for ICICI Bank
Banking is one of the most regulated industries in India. A bank needs RBI approval before opening every single branch. K. V. Kamath, CEO of ICICI Bank wants branch licensing to be liberalised – for his bank of course, not for foreign banks. What did you think?
The Vindication of Aadisht Khanna
Two years back, Aadisht (the smartest human being alive, outsmarted in intelligence only by the Jagadguru who is beyond comparison and, don’t forget, is the most important leftist blogger of our times) had written a post taking issue with Utsa Patnaik’s claim that the poor have less food than before the reforms.
He had pointed out that while they were eating less cereals than before, they were eating more of everything else – i.e. their diet had was getting richer. This is a common phenomenon. As people start affording more, they eat less of bhakri ki roti or ganji and more of vegetables and meat. At that time he got a lot of flak for the claim, and it turned out that he had not actually looked at the data sliced by income levels. Aadisht changed his blogging software after that and his posts are lost to the world, a great loss to humanity.
But nonetheless, it turns out that he was right. The poorest are eating less coarse cereals, more rice and wheat, more fruits and vegetables and more meat, fish and eggs. They are eating more of those things because their incomes have gone up and their tastes have changed. The proof can be found in the notorious free market fundamentalist publication, the Economic and Politcal Weekly (pdf link, will stay good for four months I think. After that, leave me your email and I’ll send you the file.)
These Americans Are Crazy: Part IV
I was in Ohio at a Wal Mart with a colleague. A child, perhaps five years old was standing with his back to me – his parents were a couple of feet away. The child obviously misestimated their location, because he put his arms behind his back and around my legs, evidently taking me for his father or some such. I gently disentangled myself – and when he looked around and saw who I was, the child recoiled. I smiled at the child and tried to pat him on his cheek. This action got me a horrified reaction from my colleague who had spent enough time in the US to know that a man never ever does such things to a child unless he is a glutton for a child abuse lawsuit.
I was reminded of the incident when I read this rather saddening article.
The Punjagutta flyover
The back story to this collapse is that the flyover has been taking forever to construct and is a source of traffic snarls that only Hyderabadis can create. When Chief Minister Rajasekhara Reddy was asked why it wasn’t getting constructed, he promised to “take action” against Gammon India, a fairly reputable firm that was in charge of construction. But almost immediately the bureaucrats began to hush up the matter, because it turned out that Gammon, while nominally in charge, had merely lent its name to the construction, while sub-contracting the actual work to other firms who had got the job only because of their connections to Congress politicians. All this was in the news a couple of months ago.
Does anyone remember that Reddy came to power because Chandrababu Naidu was supposedly not performing? At least Naidu was trying. What an awful Chief Minister this man is turning out to be. Among other things, he wilfully ignored warnings of impending terrorist strikes. He went soft on the Naxalites. He has an utterly cynical approach to government that is scary, but not surprising.
Nitin Pai Should Start a Gurukul
You know, the sort where he has disciples who follow him, hear him talk, hang on to every word and take down notes. It is an incalculable loss to society otherwise. It is terribly inefficient to expect him to write out his ideas in a blog, as I am sure his typing is a bottleneck that chokes the flood of ideas.
Anyway, that was the impression I got when I, along with others met Nitin on Saturday. I also accompanied him to the Gates of Paradise and got a free bottle of orange juice.
Relived: The Broken Life
The following things have suffered breakdowns in my life in the past week or so:
- My cell-phone: Entirely my fault. I was on vacation and sitting at my in-laws. In a fit of joblessness, I started exploring its various features and somehow managed to lock my sim card. Fortunately, that was easily rectified.
- My watch: I was returning from my vacation lugging a heavy bag. While loading it into the bus, the strap of the bag got into a fierce embrace with the strap of my watch and took it down with it.
- My car: I don’t know what’s its excuse. I return from said vacation and I find that the steering is giving me trouble. Haven’t found time to fix it.
- My doorknob: I don’t know how I managed to break the door knob, but I did. Now if I shut the door from inside, I need to spend as much time and burn as much calories as I would if I worked out at the gym.
