2005-11-09T05:56:17-06:00

Nice little checklist from Rajesh Setty's blog "Life beyond Code" 1. Register a domain name with your name and redirect to your blog. My friend Munwar Shariff wanted me to do this for a long time but I kept postponing it. Finally when I got it done, it was amazing to find out how many people were coming to the blog by typing in www.rajeshsetty.com. It costs probably $10 a year but it's worth every penny. 2. Get a "Creative Commons License" Creative Commons makes it easy to assign a license for your online content. I use a license called "Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0" This means (in english) Read more

2005-11-09T02:46:41-06:00

Now for some poetry! Here is beautiful poem from Amrita Pritam, arguably one of the best Punjabi (my Mother Tongue) poet the language has ever seen! I am also of human kind I am the sign of that injury, The symbol of that accident, Which, in the clash of changing times, Inevitably hit my mother's forehead. I am the curse That lies upon man today. I came into being When the stars were falling When the sun had been quenched And the moon darkened. . . . Who can guess How difficult it is To nurse barbarity in one's belly Read more

2005-11-09T01:44:21-06:00

Shahrukh Khan is by far the biggest star right now in Indian Cinema! Here is a blog written by him on Intentblog.. this site is a must read! Thank you for your review of my film, Paheli, on Intentblog. I did read the comments, and it was refreshing to read inputs from the viewers. The film, Paheli, was made by my own production house, Red Chillies... which sounds like a Mexican restaurant, I am told, but nevertheless, a name that we have made a couple of films under. Many times, I hear positive and negative analyses of the films that I make under this production house. Both are welcomed and taken note of...all the time...but then again, I go ahead and make the films that I wish to, and also make the same mistakes that I have perhaps done in the past. The reason for doing this is that I believe in two things when I make a film. First, that it is not going to make me money...and hopefully not make me lose any either. That ends the material aspect of film making in the production house. Then comes the second reason... to tell a story to a lot of people which is extremely entertaining, and at the same time, make the viewer take back home a bit more than the semi- filled popcorn packet. I don't wish them to change their lives after watching the film... I don't want them to learn a new way of being after the viewing, and least of all, I don't wish to ever preach to them what I personally cannot or am unable to practise. Paheli was made with the same intention. A story which lends itself to intrigue, and maybe a bit fairy tale like...as one of the comment suggests. A married woman who falls in love with a ghost. It is based on a folk tale of Rajasthan written some 35 to 40 years ago. A time when we, as a society, were even more unfair to women than we are today... at least, in India. To tell a love story where a woman chose her own "man" seemed to me not only commendable and modern, but even courageous. I am by choice a commercial actor/star or star/actor. I like to believe the former...the critics try to remind me that I am the latter time and again. I am also quite blessed...because by no choice of mine or perhaps by having no power over the choice... been bestowed by God an audience which has appreciated my work for over fifteen years. I am extremely thankful, and extremely used to the idea of being successful. Simply put...i love it. At times, this love makes me weak enough to make choices that I feel will keep this dream to never end. And sometimes, the same love gives me enough courage to take a chance with the viewers, vis a vis the films I make. "Asoka'' and "Paheli" are two films that make me feel the strength of the love that the audience has had for me. I cannot make any tall claims about the virtue of Paheli as a film...that decision i am very clear rests with the audiences... I can only tell a story...not really force anyone to like it. But having said that, I would like to put forth why I, as a producer, decided to make this film. 1. I think being in the position I am, if I don't take chances with the products I make..no one else should or can. I am by nature someone who wants to do things differently...not for the sake of being different, but because I feel the different approach will make a difference to many other film makers to take chances and make films which can say something thought provoking. 2. I have a deep regard for things Indian and for our culture. Unfortunately, I am myself not so culturally aware, and whenever something comes my way which introduces me to a part of our country, I want more people like me to be introduced to it. 3. I have a huge amount of respect for women. I was brought up by a very beautiful woman, my mother, and surrounded in my life by really talented and hard working ladies. Some of them are my actress friends and others in my family, like my sister and wife. Many times, when I hear a story which brings forth any dimension or a problem that a woman faces in her life, I feel compelled to partake in that story. Paheli is about emancipation of women. The right a woman should have in her life...the right to make a choice without being branded as a wrong doer. In our country atrocities against our women are not unknown even in this time and age...and through Paheli, I wanted to bring forth the strength a woman has to muster, even in dealing with very simple issues...like an arranged marriage. ... read more More blogs about bollywood. Read more

2005-11-09T00:55:47-06:00

This 8 year old kid explained the Schrodinger's Equation to go to the University!! Song Yoo-geun, 8, wants to build flying cars, defying Newton's law of gravity, and the physics genius which has made him Korea's youngest university student may very well drive him to that dream. Amid scholastic achievements that have confounded experts, the public spotlight is squarely on the child prodigy and his parents, both 46 and both former teachers. What has made Yoo-geun - born late November 1997 and actually just shy of 8 years old - so special? Read more

2005-11-08T22:33:19-06:00

Remember my post on the opening of the Delhi Akshardham? Here is some info on the facilities it has: Experiential Exhibitions: Spaced around a 300x300 ancient kund are three exhibitions halls, namely Sahajanand Darshan (Hall of values), Neelkanth Darshan (IMAX theatre) and Sanskruti Vihar (boat-ride). Sahajanand Darshan The first exhibition hall takes visitors through the experience of universal human values like, faith, tolerance, honesty, compassion, non-violence depicted through a series of light and sound shows with audio-animatronic figures and panoramic settings, generating a sensory experience. Read more

2005-11-08T22:28:55-06:00

This is the beauty of this guy! He is an ex-missile, nuclear and space scientist... and even after becoming the President.. he takes keen interest in the science discoveries and progress within the country! India will come out with an anti-HIV vaccine in three to five years, President A P J Abdul Kalam said on Tuesday, but asked the medical community to try and complete the job in the next two years. "My feeling is that we will come out with a vaccine in three to five years," the President said in his address during the closing of an India-Africa project partnership conclave here. Read more

2005-11-08T21:09:01-06:00

ANother article on Offshoring and the size of the labor market! The topic of offshoring generates extreme differences of opinion among policy makers, business executives, and thought leaders. Some have argued that nearly all service jobs will eventually move from developed economies to low-wage ones.1 Others say that rising wages in cities such as Bangalore and Prague indicate that the supply of offshore talent is already running thin.2 To a large extent, these disagreements reflect the confusion surrounding the newly integrating and still inefficient global labor market. Much as technology change is making it possible to integrate global capital markets into a single market for savings and investment, so digital communications are giving rise to what is, in effect, a single global market for those jobs that can now, thanks to IT, be performed remotely from customers and colleagues. Read more

2005-11-08T19:25:40-06:00

Here is an interesting article on the supply front! Everyone talks about the cost and the prices.. but no one cares about the supply of human resources.. With a huge supply of low-cost workers, mainland China has fast become the world's manufacturing workshop, supplying everything from textiles to toys to computer chips. Given the country's millions of university graduates, is it set to become a giant in offshore IT and business process services as well? New research from the McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) suggests that this outcome is unlikely. (The full report, The Emerging Global Labor Market, is available free of charge online.) The reason: few of China's vast number of university graduates are capable of working successfully in the services export sector, and the fast-growing domestic economy absorbs most of those who could. Indeed, far from presaging a thriving offshore services sector, our research points to a looming shortage of homegrown talent, with serious implications for the multinationals now in China and for the growing number of Chinese companies with global ambitions. Read more

2005-11-08T19:12:12-06:00

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2005-11-08T15:03:31-06:00

Well.. it seems that the Indian firms are looking seriously at the Latin American continent now... Here Dr. Reddy's has bought the Roche unit in Mexico: One of India’s largest drug makers Hyderabad based Dr. Reddy's Laboratories Ltd. today said it will acquire Roche's active pharmaceutical ingredients business in Mexico for a total of $59 million. It said the acquisition included all 340 employees at the site in Cuernavaca and all its business supply contracts. This business involves the manufacture and sale of APIs including intermediates to Roche and other Innovator Companies. The product portfolio currently comprises about 18 products including mature APIs and a range of intermediates and steroids. This acquisition also adds unique steroids manufacturing capabilities to Dr. Reddy's. The Cuernavaca site at Mexico currently employs nearly 340 people and has been inspected by the U.S. FDA and other international regulatory agencies. Read more

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