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Thursday, January 29, 2004
50 Book Challenge
[via McGee] David Harris writes about the 50 book challenge: "The idea is to read 50 books in a year and, in some versions, blog about them." Interesting. I was thinking a few days ago that I needed to set up a discipline of reading something different and educating myself via a few books for 1-1.5 hours a day. I identified a few areas in which I need to learn more and starting books (and guides): - Psychology: Influence by Cialdini Its almost like doing a semester of learning in school...in this one has to pick the right teachers. Maybe I should take up the challenge... In case you decide to do so too, David has some suggestions:
Wired on Indian Outsourcing
Wired (Daniel Pink) describes how "India became the capital of the computing revolution":
Adds Dana Blankenhorn:
Outsourcing is good for India - but it will only provide a few million jobs at best. What's also needed is for Indians to come up with innovations to raise the incomes of the rest of India - the 700 million in rural India. Only then will India will start to make the transition from an agricultural economy.
Emerging Markets
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I do not think moving away from an agricultural economy is necessary for economic development. With the huge natural & human resources agriculture gives India a comparative advantage. What we should be thinking about is how best to raise the productivity of the agricultural sector (eg remove the dependency on the vagaries of the monsoon) and how to integrate the agricultural economy with global markets. While India does export food grain and certain cash crops (like tea) these are usually in the form of commodities...the lowest end of the value chain. There is no export of fresh produce and packaged food stuff due to poor infrastructure and a food processing industry that remains in perpetual infancy. The task is cut out - first, improve rural infrastructure; roads, electricity, irrigation, logistics and supply chain and second, incentivise food processing industry. Outsourcing can provide employment in the urban and semi-urban areas, but agriculture still remains the best bet to get rural India on a path to progress. Posted by NitinSome of my thoughts on this subject on my blog: ripplesinthemind.blogdrive.com. As Nitin points out, I do not think moving away from agriculture will improve India, but moving away from ruralization will. Agriculture must be taken up as another field of intensive study. Quality of education must be improved from the grass root level, not adding subjects (we already have enough of them with good syllabus) but our idea of examination should change. Exams should encourage a student to think, rather than his brain's memory power. Almost equal importance should be given to all fields, not just the hot ones in demand. Professors in all colleges must be given private firms funding for research and not just be educationalists. Private firms should be given mroe incentives for participating in social causes. Posted by ripplesNitin has raised a topic very close to my heart and so I have responded to it in my blog at http://www.deeshaa.org under the title "Agriculture and Development". Posted by Atanu DeyThe development is not necessarily urbanisation.But unfortunately thats the the way so far things have been moving in the indian context. Most of what Daniel and Dana have said makes sense. But I think it is myopic at best (and downright pretentious at worst) to think that India, China etc only do routine stuff cheaper/faster. Some quotes & factoids: ------------------------------------------------- "In our university in the US, we have what we think of as a large business incubator, which houses about 35 companies. I was in China recently and found out what large really means. One incubator I visited was a building the size of [a really large American building, I forget which one] and hosted 600 high-tech companies. Now THAT'S big!" -- US university professor of entrepreneurship who I spoke to (paraphrased, not an exact quote) The six Indian Institutes of Technology represent the forefront of Indian technical training. Undergraduates are admitted after facing the most competitive admission procedure in the world for engineering schools. The Indian Institutes of Management are even more competitive -- they have the most competitive admission procedure in the world for schools in any discipline. These are just a few things that I remember offhand. There are countless other factoids and opinions supporting the view that innovation and new ideas are present everywhere in the world. For that matter, who would be able to develop great ideas for a particular market better than the domestic players who know that market best? Posted by MurliGratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all others. Posted by Cramer HeatherLies are only a problem when you believe them. Posted by Johnson AndreaHi, nice work, if you have the necessary time, please vistit me, you'll find interesting stuff, articles about men health. Posted by penis enlargement
Business and Innovation
Dave Pollard writes that businesses are once again starting at look at innovation as a way to grow, and discusses a survey by the Boston Consulting Group:
Bus. Std: Say Hello to the Always-On World
My recent column in Business Standard: Imagine a world where access to networks is the norm and not the exception, where information is available and notified in real time, where people are reachable independent of their location, and where objects can talk to other objects. This is a world where pervasive wireless networks create an atmospheric layer of connectedness between people, computers and things. This is the always-on world. It is a world that is being born, creating new applications and opportunities. The 1980s saw the computing revolution, while the 1990s saw the communications revolution - in the form of mobile telephony and the internet. This decade is seeing it all merge into an IP-based wireless and broadband revolution. The cellphones have greater power than the early personal computers, and computers are coming with in-built wireless connectivity. Even as wireless and the ethernet are combining to provide high-speed access to homes and offices in the coming months, optical fibre networks provide the backbone to connect networks. India, too, is starting to see the first glimpses of the always-on world. Telcos have started offering always-on, narrowband internet connectivity at fixed, affordable prices. Code division multiple access and general radio packet switching cellphones offer internet access. Service providers are setting up Wi-Fi hotspots and broadband-enabled cybercafes. Computer prices are falling, driven by a reduction in levies and increased competition. This year will see India add over 30 million cellphones and four million computers. Low-cost "thin" computers have the potential to accelerate the penetration of computing even more. The lack of a legacy installed base means that India can leapfrog directly to the always-on world. The availability of networks and access devices is helping to create the infrastructure for the always-on world. What is missing is the content and applications that can take advantage of this ubiquitous platform. This development in India has so far been hobbled by the lack of a delivery infrastructure and the limited access device base. Suddenly, these limitations of the past are disappearing. What application developers and service providers can expect in the always-on world is a computing and communications platform that is real time, affordable and everywhere. Here are a few examples of solutions that can be created for the new, emerging world: Connected homes: Low-cost terminals can be used to offer e-mail, chat, local information and limited transactions (bill payments, ticketing) for lower middle-class homes, for which the PC may still be too expensive. Services for tiny businesses: Small shops and neighbourhood stores can be provided networked terminals for providing updates on sales and inventory levels to wholesalers, and doing their accounting electronically. This can help bring down inventory costs across the value chain. Sales force automation for SMEs: The mobile workforce in small and medium-sized enterprises can be given wireless-enabled handheld devices which can be used for real-time sales management. Logistics and distribution for large enterprises: There is a need for fleet management applications to track trucks and other delivery vehicles as they move across the country. In the coming years, technologies like radio frequency identification (RFID) will enable individual items also to be tracked as they move across the value chain. IT for education: With the increasing focus on universal primary education, schools can be given graphical terminals with a server for computer and computer-enabled education. Multimedia content can be created by the best teachers and distributed through the network to schools. Today's interactions on the web are in the form of request-response - we type the address of a website (or click on a link), and then are taken to the destination page (or website). We need to drive the interaction. What always-on infrastructure does is create the base for the publish-subscribe-web (PubSubWeb). The PubSubWeb makes possible a new class of information that has the following four attributes: In essence, the PubSubWeb establishes an information stream between information producers (publishers) and consumers (subscribers), making possible a whole range of new applications and services. For example, cricket updates, stock quotes, news alerts can be streamed to interested users in the form of microcontent - just the relevant and incremental snippet that has changed, rather than full pages with a lot of redundant information. On the PubSubWeb, information is syndicated by publishers and subscribed to by users. Weblogs and news aggregators are a good example of what the PubSubWeb makes possible. When a weblog is updated, it notifies a central server of its update, which in turn alerts users who have subscribed to receive the updates. Special software (news aggregators) can now go to the weblog, pick up an XML file, parse it, and make the incremental updates available to readers. This process eliminates the need for readers to keep scanning websites to see what content has changed. Just as HTML powered the request-response web, rich site summary (RSS) will power the PubSubWeb. Think of the PubSubWeb as the next upgrade to the web as we know it today. It is made possible by the always-on infrastructure that is being constructed. The tools and building blocks for the PubSubWeb exist. What is needed is for service providers to aggregate these tools and integrate them in a seamless manner to build a complete information and events refinery. The always-on world will thus bring forth new innovations. It is an idea whose time has come.
GlobalSpec: A Parts Catalog Aggregator
Rafe Needleman writes:
Specialty (vertical) search engines look like the next niche.
TECH TALK: Rethinking Search: The Next Indian Search Engine
As we look at the attributes of the next Indian Search Engine, there are two principles from open-source software development which we should keep in mind: user customisability and distributed collaboration. These two ideas have laid the foundation for the development of Linux and various other software applications by thousands of committed individuals worldwide. We’ll see how we can leverage these ideas to build the Next-generation Indian Search Engine (NISE). Beyond Google: There is no point in trying to replicate what Google has. The goal should be to do what Google is not able to do. So, rather than trying to crawl millions of pages and try and run PageRank-like algorithms, the focus should be on trying to working around Google, not trying to compete with it. Multi-Word Search: This idea stems from the Unix shell and command-line interface. The goal for NISE should be to provide precise results based on what the user wants. For this, the user should be given a single interface which provides a window on other specific websites. For example, a search for “films Not One Directory: The Web has become too big for one directory to hold all the information. Instead, users should be given a platform to create their own directories on topics which they understand. Using OPML, it should be possible to create an infinite network of transcluded distributed directories. Better Visualisation: Amazingly, it is only now that ideas from information visualisation (for example, Groxis) are making their way for viewing of search results. By clustering results and providing visualisation techniques, it should be possible to provide rich interfaces for navigation. Mobile Devices Search: The current search results are best shown on a web browser. Yet, in countries like India, the number of mobile devices outnumber the computers. So, the focus should be on how NISE can provide accurate results for what users want to do in the form of microcontent that can be sent and displayed on mobile devices. Local Focus: NISE needs to have a local focus. Much of our life is spent in neighbourhoods. It is quite hard to find local information – in the vicinity of where we live and work. NISE should focus on providing a platform for local providers to update content which can then be distributed to interested users in the neighbourhood via RSS. Target SMEs: The big set of enterprises which need a vehicle to reach their customers are the SMEs (small- and medium-sized enterprises). NISE must cater to this set of advertisers. They have very few alternatives to reach out to users – yellow pages, local banners, flyers in newspapers. Giving them a cost-effective electronic delivery vehicle for as low as Rs 50-100 a day can provide a win-win service for connecting consumers and local, small businesses. Context: Google’s focus is on providing the same, consistent results irrespective of who does the search. NISE should focus on leveraging context and personalization – by knowing more about the user, it should be possible to provide more accurate information, and not just links to tens of thousands of pages. Tomorrow: The Next Indian Search Engine (continued) Related Entries: [All]
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That Cialdini book is excellent. Here is another one: If you want to write by Brenda Ueland.
Posted by Prakash S"Good sci-fi or fantasy belongs on the list but you won't find 50 good titles anyway."
I seriously beg to differ. Here is the list of Top 100 Sci-Fi books: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Cavern/6113/t100256.txt
Each one is differenct; each one is a classic Sci-Fi Gem.
Cheers,
Posted by DharDhar
"Good sci-fi or fantasy belongs on the list but you won't find 50 good titles anyway."
I seriously beg to differ. Here is the list of Top 100 Sci-Fi books: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Cavern/6113/t100256.txt
Each one is different; each one is a classic Sci-Fi Gem.
Cheers,
Posted by DharDhar
This is food for thought.
You should also look at the website of St. John's College in the US.
From their website...
"St. John's College believes that the way to a liberal education lies through a direct and sustained confrontation with the books in which the greatest minds of our civilization have expressed themselves, and through rigorous exercise in translation, mathematical demonstration, music analysis, and laboratory science. To that end, the College offers a four-year, nonelective program in which students read, discuss, and write about the seminal works that have shaped the world in which we live."
http://www.sjca.edu/college/index.phtml
Posted by yuvarajWith love comes strange currencies.
Posted by Legesse DanBoth dreams and people crash down.
Posted by Fryling Milo