Monday, April 12, 2004
Tracking News

Dan Gillmor has been publishing chapters of his book "Making the News" on his blog to get feedback. Chapter 8 is entitled "The Future Just Started." An excerpt:


The [new] technologies will be part of the architecture of tomorrow's news. They'll help us do something essential: keep better track of conversations. Here's an example. I would like to be able to track news of, say, innovative applications for my Treo smartphone. The news includes conversations among people I respect, not just standard journalists. If someone in the group I trust posts an item about the Treo, I want to know about it, of course. But I also want to know what others in that group -- and people they designate as trustworthy or well-informed -- are saying about this news. I want software that tracks not just the top-level item, which in this case could be a news story or blog posting or SMS response, but how the conversation then takes shape about the item across a variety of media. Now imagine having the same ability to track conversations about local, national, or international issues. Today, this is impossible except in a laborious and time-wasting way. Web services will eventually make it possible.

Among the missing components in this hierarchy is a way to evaluate a person’s reputation beyond the crude systems in place today. A reliable reputation system would allow us to verify people and judge the veracity of the things they say based, in part, on what people we trust say about them. In a sense, Google is already a reputation system: Google my name and you’ll discover a lot about me, including where I work, what I’ve written, and a lot about what I think about various issues -- and what some other people think of me (not all flattering by any means). So is Technorati; the more people linking to you, the more "authority" you have. But it's important to note that the majority of blogs tracked by Technorati have nobody linking to them. This doesn't mean the blogs lack value, because no doubt there are people close to the bloggers who trust them. No matter who you are, you probably know something about some topic that's worth paying attention to.

Someday, a person who is interested in news about the local school system, which rarely rates more than a brief item in the newspaper except to cover some extraordinary event, will be able to get a far more detailed view of that vital public body. Any topic you can name will be more easily tracked this way. Just in the political sphere, the range will go beyond school governance to city councils to state and federal government to international affairs. Now multiply the potential throughout other fields of interest, professional and otherwise. And when audio and video become an integral part of these conversations -- it's already starting to happen as developers connect disparate media applications -- the richness of the conversations will deepen.

BlogStreet | PermaLink | Comments (1)

Hi, nice work, if you have the necessary time, please vistit me, you'll find interesting stuff, articles about men health.

Posted by penis enlargement
Particpatory Panopticon

[via Smart Mobs] Jamais Cascio asks: "What happens when you combine mobile communications, always-on cameras, and commonplace wireless networks?" and answers:


Mobile phones and PDAs with cameras are increasingly common; one in six phones sold in 2003 had a camera in it, and last year cameraphones actually out-sold other digital cameras...Within a decade, your phone will likely be able to take pictures at least as good as your present-day digital camera.

The bigger change will come from an entirely-new class of hardware -- what I call the "personal memory assistant." Both Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft have built test versions of wearable cameras designed to record the world around you as you go about your day (the HP wearable always-on camera is the illustration at the top of this post). Nokia and HP are working on the software required to make such cameras usable. If you've seen or used a TiVo, imagine a TiVo for your day-to-day life. If you don't think that's revolutionary, consider that human memory is notoriously faulty; what happens when a person can have perfect recall?

There is no reason why wearable personal memory assistants wouldn't be linked to wireless networks. There are good reasons why they would be, in fact: to let others see what you're seeing (so that they can help you); to access greater computing power for image-recognition (including, eventually, facial-recognition routines so that you never forget a face); and for off-site storage of what you're recording, giving you far greater capacity than what you could have on-camera (and keeping the images safe if the unit was lost or damaged). I suspect that nearly all of these systems, once they come to market, will have wireless communication built-in.

Mobile systems combined with GPS and GIS and social software and RFIDs and "smart dust"... These are tools to reshape your relationship with your environment, other people, and even your sense of self.

I offer up this scenario in order to ask: if we know these devices are on their way, are really already here in crude form, how can we use them as tools for good? Are these systems the harbingers of a Transparent Society, or are they the makings of a Panopticon Singularity? Does the sousveillance concept make sense, a world where we are all have the ability -- and responsibility -- to "watch the watchmen?" Would these be the perfect tools for corporate whistleblowers and anti-corruption activists?

Emerging Technologies | PermaLink | Comments (4)

Maintaining a record of everything that happens in one's life is a mixed blessing, really. It would be great to be able to confront jerks with what they had said and later denied ever saying. But we can also be haunted by our past and hope like Shakespear's Hamlet

"Yea, from the table of my memory
I'll wipe away all trivial fond records,
All saws of books, all forms, all pressures past
That youth and observation copied there,
And thy commandment all alone shall live
Within the book and volume of my brain,
Unmixed with baser matter."

To forget is a blessing indeed. From Shakespeare again, here is a plea to a doctor on behalf of Macbeth:

"Canst thou not minister to a mind diseas'd,
Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow,
Raze out the written troubles of the brain,
And with some sweet oblivious antidote
Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff
Which weighs upon the heart?"

I realize of course that an extended external memory will have the advantage that erasing stuff will be trivial. I recall (indeed) Bob Shaw's sci-fi novel "Other Days, Other Eyes" where 'slow glass' captures everything that happens everywhere and can potentially be retrieved for any purpose.

Caution, there be monsters.

Posted by Atanu Dey

One thing is for sure. If this ever comes up, its gunna attract a lot of privacy seeking groups which have gathered a lot of movement these past years. Infact, camera phones were even banned (and should be) from some Hotel's rest rooms.

Privacy is anyone's right and anything which doesn't allow a person to select being in or out of it, certainly is debatable.

Posted by Kshitij Chandan

Hi, nice work, if you have the necessary time, please vistit me, you'll find interesting stuff, articles about men health.

Posted by penis enlargement

Cialis - Erectile Dysfunction Cialis
About Cialis About Cialis
Generic Cialis Generic Cialis

Posted by Tadalafil
Information Management

Diego Doval writes:


what I was thinking about was that no topics with any degree of depth can be properly discussed in one or two pages no matter how good you are and how much care you put into your writing; there just isn't space enough to do things justice.

This made me wonder about more complex and consequential matters, which also get alloted similar amounts of space, and it reminds me that when I see an article on which I know the background, I can make a different judgment, but what about articles where there can be no background because it is evolving news? Until time passes, there is no other source of information on what's going on aside from 1,500 word articles and 5-minute news clips. Overtime you get books, documentaries, etc, and more and more we've got weblogs to cover part of the picture. But the reality is that, for the most part, we're still subject to the vision provided us by those brief news items. And that's not enough.

I have a habit, which is to keep track of threads within newspapers and across them. I don't do this formally (not that obsessive :)) but I do it. So what I was thinking was whether this idea of reading of "trails" of news on given topics is something that could be formalized in some way, and what would be the requirements. In true blog fashion, and since I have to get other things done, I will simply ask a bunch of questions, provide few if any answers, and then cart off riding my faithful donkey into the sunset, with my extra large sombrero, laptop in one hand, bottle of tequila--worm and all--in the other, under the fading desert sun.


Dann Sheridan thinks of Outlook as the information hub: "Numerous tools are coming together to make Outlook the application through which all of your information will flow. From RSS feeds (Newsgator) to publishing to your weblog (OutlookMT and Newsgator Plugins). My migration to MoveableType will make this all possible. I already have all of my faxes and voicemails coming into Outlook. Outside of RSS feeds and my weblog, the only other information streams I have are my Onfolio collections, which should be published as RSS feeds, exportable to OPML, and integrated into Outlook. A lot of people may ask why Outlook? Because that is where the major of my information – email – already resides. I want a single application through which I can control my world of information. It is the same reason why network operation centers, emergency response teams, and command! and control centers all what a single interface for their operators and staff: it keeps people focused."

As I read both these, my thoughts went back to the Memex series I had written about a year ago. I think we really ought to think about getting it done...its what we need to manage the information flows.

Software | PermaLink | Comments (2)

Diego Doval gets it absolutely right when he says that "no topics with any degree of depth can be properly discussed in one or two pages no matter how good you are and how much care you put into your writing; there just isn't space enough to do things justice."

I feel that one has to not only have input but also process that input internally. Both require "CPU" time and too much input can overload the CPU and produce garbage in the memory instead of a structured knowledge base.

Check out Bill McKibben's "The Age of Missing Information" for an interesting take on the subject. That book was written in the early '90s. It is even more relevant in today's world of information overload.

Posted by Atanu Dey

Well there is something I want the feeds to implement. I want the look and feel of the text along with media (photos, videos-links) attached to the content when delivered on an application like Outlook.

I too had tried out Outlook as an assembler, but I found the most weirdest reason to dislike the world coming to my door - Look and Feel. When I go through Emergic, CNET and many other blogs, its the pleasantness of the fonts, the calming effects of the color blends and the "thousand words worthy" associated pictures that add to the experience of reading.

I think that the stylesheets have to be carried on with the content too, if someone wishes to read things in a more colorful manner.

Posted by Kshitij Chandan
A Manifesto for Collaborative Tools

Eugene Eric Kim writes:


Improving collaborative tools boils down to this: We must be people-centric when designing and building applications, and we must work with other developers to make our tools more interoperable.

These are the steps for improving collaborative tools:

  • Be people-centric. This applies both to how we design our tools, and how we market them.
  • Be willing to collaborate. We all belong to a community of like-minded tool developers, whether or not we are aware of it. Working together will both strengthen this community and improve our tools.
  • Create shared language. Our tools share more similarities than we may think. Conversing with our fellow tool builders will help reveal those similarities; creating a shared language will make those similarities apparent to all. As a shared language evolves, a shared conceptual framework for collaborative tools will emerge, revealing opportunities for improving the interoperability of our tools.
  • Keep improving. Improvement is an ongoing process. Introducing new efficiencies will change the way we collaborate, which in turn will create new opportunities to improve our tools.

    Finally, never forget Doug Engelbart's fundamental tenet: Computers should help us become smarter and work together better. Remembering this will keep us on the right track.

  • Local Search

    Gus Venditto writes:


    For consumers, local search will be a time saver, in the house and in the car. But for businesses, it will represent a shift in buying habits that may give the local storefront a chance to regain the ground it ceded to online stores.

    The first impact is sure to be Web development for small business. Right now, it's estimated by the Kelsey Group and ConStat's Local Commerce Monitor that only 48 percent of small business who advertise have a Web site. Lester Chu, vice president of marketing and strategic planning at Verizon, believes that 60 percent of all businesses don't have a Web site.

    Today, many of those Web-unaware businesses are able to keep their online base covered by buying listings through the Yellow Page directories. For a few extra dollars, 1.4 million businesses who advertise in print Yellow Pages have the option of buying online listings that appear at SuperPages, Yahoo and other portals. And if it weren't for Google, all local businesses would compete on a level playing field, because they would all have an equal chance to buy their way into the same online directories.

    Google's impact could be seismic because it will rank the pages, and that will re-define the meaning of a good retail location. A small store on a remote side street can build more foot traffic with a good Web site than it could with a busy corner location. All the lower-rent store needs is a better education in the intricacies of search engine rankings.

    At the global level, brand marketers will need to pay attention to how the new patterns affect product selection. Online stores allow consumers to select the exact brand and model they want instead of settling for what they found on the shelves. Will local search turn consumers into precision shoppers within the neighborhood? A national brand manager will have to do more than help franchises and regional chain stores buy co-op ads and regional radio. They'll need to do a better job at helping local dealers show up in online catalogs that are optimized for local searching.

    Search Engines | PermaLink | Comments (1)

    Hi, nice work, if you have the necessary time, please vistit me, you'll find interesting stuff, articles about men health.

    Posted by penis enlargement
    Mirror of our Lives

    Esther Dyson writes:


    According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, of which I'm on the advisory board, more than 53 million Americans -- or 44 percent of U.S. Internet users -- have contributed some kind of digital content beyond private e-mail to the online world. Of those, 21 percent have posted photos, 17 percent have posted text (on a message board or via consumer-feedback mechanisms like that at Amazon), and 13 percent maintain their own Web sites.

    The implications for businesses are broad, starting with relatively reduced demand for "asymmetrical" bandwidth, such as cable or satellite, where there's lots of communication capacity to download content but not much to upload it. People aren't just downloading music; they're uploading their own creative efforts.

    Aside from communication, this is a whole new source of competition for consumers' attention.

    The trick for businesses is not to compete with user-generated content, but to co-opt it, by becoming the platform where users can post their content and invite their friends to see it. For example, instead of e-mailing my Estonia photos to my mom and friends, I can just send them a link to some provider's site. And then, of course, if the business model works, more and more of my friends will start sharing and annotating the photos at the same site.

    As we live more and more of our lives online, it makes sense that we'd want to decorate our virtual space with photos, just as we decorate our living rooms. From the business point of view, the challenge is to be the real estate that people want to decorate. In real life, that usually requires good schools. Online, it requires good tools.

    Of course, there's always a delicate tension: People want to build online nests in spaces as individual as they are -- but they want the validation, and the more broadly shared experience, of a brand name.

    AOL, Yahoo! and probably Google (spreading out from its Orkut social network platform) are all vying to support the online neighborhoods of choice.

    TECH TALK: As India Develops: Distribution Hubs (Part 2)

    RISC (Rural Infrastructure and Services Commons) is an economic model for the transformation of Rural India, proposed by Atanu Dey. According to Atanu: “Fundamentally, the specific market failure that RISC addresses is that of coordination failure. RISC is designed to coordinate the activities of a host of entities-commercial, governmental, NGOs. It synchronizes investment decisions so as to reduce risk. It essentially acts as a catalyst that starts off a virtuous cycle of introducing efficient modern technology to improve productivity that increases incomes and thus the ability of users to pay for the services, and so on. It creates a mechanism that reduces transaction costs and therefore improves the functions of markets.”

    Atanu and Vinod Khosla co-authored a paper on RISC in August 2003. The monograph outlines the challenges in dealing with rural India and a framework to solve the many inter-linked problems to build a new “urbanised” rural India.


    The economic development of India’s 700 million strong rural population presents formidable challenges and also great opportunities. A model called RISC – Rural Infrastructural & Services Commons – is presented that has the potential for achieving the multi-faceted goals of sustainable economic development through more efficient utilization of available resources by focusing them into a minimum viable economic size. Five thousand such rural centers, built around existing infrastructure like railway stations, “haats” (informal weekly markets currently in operation in rural India), or Tier III/IV towns could place most of the rural population within a bicycle commute of ACCESS to many modern resources (like power, communications and education). The model calls for concentrating existing and ongoing investments into critical mass population chunks rather than spreading them out into individual villages in uneconomic sizes and at exorbitant cost. Then it allows the “invisible hand” of markets, not planned activities or industries, to drive growth, and direct resource usage on an economic basis.

    The basic premise of this model is that markets can be “enabled” or made far more efficient in rural India. The set of activities for these markets and the capabilities are different from those of the national or global economies. Local development matched to the skills, resources, capabilities and infrastructure of rural India and it’s local markets is the first stepping stone to participation in the national and global economies.

    Fundamentally, the model focuses on all investments in critical mass chunks (minimum economic size) in scale and diversity, and allows for the use of these resources by the highest economic use, while providing most rural Indians with ACCESS to facilities they need rather than spreading them out into individual villages in uneconomic sizes and at exorbitant cost. It essentially acts as a catalyst that starts off a virtuous cycle of introducing efficient modern technology and aggregating demand to create markets and to improve product diversity, competitiveness and productivity that increases incomes and thus the ability of users to pay for the services. It creates a mechanism that reduces product costs, transaction costs, improves information and knowledge and therefore improves the functions of markets. An efficient market with sufficient scale and product and services diversity will make the economic system “autocatalytic”.

    Revolutions in the information and communications technologies have the potential to remove the information asymmetries that are impeding the working of markets that are critical for economic growth. The forces of globalization have created opportunities for the integration of rural populations in a larger marketplace than was ever available to them before, and more importantly, in the rural context of local markets, local product needs, using local skills. In this context it allows for a gradual increase in skills and market and production efficiency mechanisms like information, knowledge, education, specialization, scale etc. Full participation in the global economy is not required or necessary in our view, in one step. Rural economic activity can access and make selective contributions to the global economic products and services.


    Tomorrow: Distribution Hubs (continued)

    Related Entries:  [All]

    Tech Talk | PermaLink | Comments (1)

    Hi, nice work, if you have the necessary time, please vistit me, you'll find interesting stuff, articles about men health.

    Posted by penis enlargement
    Me
    Entrepreneur, Mumbai, India, Emergic, Netcore, Internet, IndiaWorld, Sify, IIT-Bombay, ColumbiaUniv ... More [Write to Me]

    - MyToday
    - Emergic Ecosystem
    - Netcore
    - Emergic MailServ: Enterprise Messaging
    - Emergic CleanMail: Anti-Virus, Anti-Spam
    - BlogStreet: Blog Profiles, RSS Ecosystem
    - Novatium: Network Computers
    - SEraja: The EventWeb
    - Rajshri Media: Broadband Portal
    - Newsweek on Novatium (Feb 2007)
    - Knowledge@Wharton Interview (Oct 2006)
    - TIME Asia (Mar 2000)

    Free SMS Updates
    Indian mobile users can sms START EMERGIC to 9845398453 to get free daily updates on new additions. [To unsubscribe, sms STOP EMERGIC to 9845398453.]
    My Writings
    Affordable Computing and ICT for Development
    India's Digital Infrastructure (May 2007)
    Envisioning Tomorrow's World (Mar 2007)
    Computing for the Next Billion (Jun 2006)
    City Wi-Fi Networks (Apr 2006)
    Microsoft Live (Nov 2005)
    Internet Tea Leaves (Sep 2005)
    Next-Generation Networks (Jul 2005)
    Disruptions (Jul 2005)
    The Mobile Phone Platform (Feb 2005)
    Microsoft, Bandwidth and Centralised Computing (Jan 2005)
    Computing for Broadband 101 (Jan 2005)
    Tomorrow's World (Nov 2004)
    CommPuting Grid (Nov 2004)
    Massputers, Redux (Oct 2004)
    The Network Computer (Oct 2004)
    Reinventing Computing (Aug 2004)
    Tech Trends (Jul 2004)
    Letter to Arun Shourie (Apr 2004)
    As India Develops (Mar 2004)
    My Mental Model (Dec 2003)
    The Next Billion (Sep 2003)
    Transforming Rural India 2 (Jul 2003)
    The Discovery of India (Jun 2003)
    Transforming Rural India (Mar 2003)
    The Rs 5,000 PC Ecosystem (Jan 2003)
    Disruptive Bridges (Nov 2002)
    India Post: Ideas for Tomorrow (Nov 2002)
    Technology's Next Markets (Oct 2002)
    Server-based Computing (Jul 2002)
    India's Next Decade (Apr 2002)
    The Digital Divide (Apr 2002)
    The Real Wireless Revolution (Mar 2002)
    Envisioning a New India (Jan 2002)
    Emerging Technologies, Emerging Markets (Jan 2002)
    The Indianised Linux Desktop (Nov 2001)
    Mass Market Internet (Nov 2000)

    Enterprise Software and SMEs
    The Coming Age of ASPs (May 2005)
    SMEs and Technology (Oct 2003)
    The Death and Rebirth of Email (Aug 2003)
    IT's Future (Aug 2003)
    Rethinking the Desktop (Sep 2002)
    Rethinking Enterprise Software (Jun 2002)
    Emerging Enterprises and Emergent Networks (Mar 2002)
    Web Services (Nov 2001)
    Alt.Software (Oct 2001)
    The Intelligent, Real-Time Enterprise (June 2001)
    Enterprise Software (Mar 2001)
    SME Tech Utility (Feb 2001)
    Software and SMEs (Jan 2001)
    The Intelligent Enterprise: Integrating CRM, SCM and EIP (Jan 2001)

    Information Management
    The Emerging Internet (May 2007)
    The Now-New-Near Web (Sep 2006)
    Mobile Internet (Aug 2006)
    Video on the Internet (Jun 2006)
    India Internet and Mobile (Feb 2006)
    Rethinking Newspapers (Jan 2006)
    Web 2.0 (Oct 2005)
    The Future of Search (Mar 2005)
    Web 2.0 Conference (Oct 2004)
    Thinking A New Food Portal (Sep 2004)
    Rethinking Search (Jan 2004)
    India.com 2.0 (Jan 2004)
    The Publish-Subscribe Web (Jun 2003)
    Constructing the Memex (May 2003)
    RSS, Blogs and Beyond (Feb 2003)
    Blogging (Feb 2002)
    Harnessing Information (Oct 2001)
    News Refinery (May 2001)

    Entrepreneurship
    When Bad Things Happen (Jan 2007)
    Ventures and Capital (Dec 2006)
    15 Years as an Entrepreneur (Nov 2006)
    Of Blue Oceans and Black Swans (May 2006)
    Let's Build a Business (Apr 2006)
    The Value of Vision (Mar 2006)
    Vision and Worries (Oct 2005)
    Bootstrapping a Business (Oct 2005)
    India Needs More Entrepreneurs (Aug 2005)
    Dotcom Nostalgia (Jun 2005)
    When Things Go Wrong (Apr 2005)
    My Life as an Entrepreneur (Nov 2004)
    An Entrepreneur's Growth Challenge (Sep 2004)
    Creating Options (Sep 2004)
    From Employee to Entrepreneur (Aug 2004)
    A Tale of Two Summers (Aug 2004)
    Crucible Experiences (May 2004)
    The Company (May 2004)
    An Entrepreneur's Attributes (Nov 2003)
    An Entrepreneur's Early Days (Sep 2003)
    Reflections on Ideas and Entrepreneurship (Jul 2003)
    Entrepreneur's Enigmas (Jan 2003)
    The Entrepreneur's Delights (Sep 2002)
    Life as an Entrepreneur (Oct 2001)
    Leadership Lessons from Lagaan (Aug 2001)
    Entrepreneurial Learnings (July 2001)
    Entrepreneurship (Mar 2001)
    The IndiaWorld Story (1997-8)

    Abhishek (my son)
    Photos
    Letter to a Two-Year-Old (Apr 2007)
    Father to Son (Apr 2006)
    Letter to a 2005 Baby (Jun 2005)
    The Making of Abhishek (Jul 2005)

    Moreover
    Facebook (May 2007)
    Doing Education Right (May 2007)
    Reflections from a Dubai Trip (Apr 2007)
    Creating India's New Cities (Apr 2007)
    India's Challenges (Mar 2007)
    3GSM 2007 (Feb 2007)
    Demo 2007 (Feb 2007)
    A Tale of Two Covers (Feb 2007)
    3GSM Mumbai (Feb 2007)
    2007 Tech Trends (Jan 2007)
    The Best of 2006 (Dec 2006)
    Best of Tech Talk 2006 (Dec 2006)
    Cyworld (Nov 2006)
    Two 2.0 Events (Nov 2006)
    Two-Sided Markets (Nov 2006)
    The Rise of YouTube (Oct 2006)
    Gandhigiri (Oct 2006)
    Education and Reservation (May 2006)
    Four Blog Years (May 2006)
    Fooled by Randomness (May 2006)
    Blue Ocean Strategy (May 2006)
    Revolution on the Roads (Apr 2006)
    The MySpace Story (Mar 2006)
    A Presentation at PC Forum (Mar 2006)
    Extreme Competition (Mar 2006)
    3GSM World Congress 2006 (Feb 2006)
    DEMO 2006 (Feb 2006)
    India Rising (Jan 2006)
    2006 Tech Trends (Jan 2006)
    The Best of Tech Talk 2005 (Dec 2005)
    The Best of 2005 (Dec 2005)
    Trains, Planes and Mobiles (Dec 2005)
    Peter Drucker: Management's Newton (Nov 2005)
    India Empowered (Oct 2005)
    Rajasthan Ruminations 2 (Sep 2005)
    Building a Better India (Sep 2005)
    South Korea's IT839 (Jul 2005)
    Shift-Ctrl (Jul 2005)
    Best of Future Tech (Feb 2005)
    Multi-Model Minds (Feb 2005)
    The Best of 2004 (Jan 2005)
    On Watching Swades (Jan 2005)
    The Best of Tech Talk 2004 (Dec 2004)
    India Trends (Dec 2004)
    An American Journey (Aug 2004)
    Black Swans (Aug 2004)
    A Train Journey (Jun 2004)
    An Agenda for the Next Government (May 2004)
    Two Blog Years (May 2004)
    Rajasthan Ruminations (Feb 2004)
    Technology and the Indian Elections (Feb 2004)
    2003-04 (Dec 2003)
    Random Musings (Sep 2003)
    Useful Concepts (July 2003)
    Dear Non-Resident Indian (July 2003)
    Tech's 10X Tsunamis (July 2002)
    An Indian in China (Mar 2002)
    Disruptive Technologies (Aug 2001)
    Innovation (Aug 2001)
    Good Books

    - My Business Standard columns
    - More columns at Tech Samachar

    Presentations
    - TiE Bangalore (Dec 2004)
    - BangaloreIT.com (Nov 2004)
    - CIT 2004 (Jan 2004)
    - BangaloreIT.com (Nov 2003)
    - Pune CSI Open-Source Workshop (Sep 2003)
    - Sydney ICT Workshop (Jul 2003)
    - Netcore (Mar 2003)
    - Emergent Democracy (MP Govt, Feb 2003)
    - Vision for Digitally Bridged India (Dec 2002)
    - India Post (Nov 2002)
    - Open-Source for eGovernance (Oct 2002)
    Recent Entries
    Archives
    BlogStreet
    Syndicate
    Powered by
    Movable Type 2.21


    Main - Feedback
    © Rajesh Jain