Saturday, February 21, 2009

hv world affairs council






I was listening to Haviland smith earlier today. By the time his talk was over, I had started building hopes for a better foreign policy. The talk didn't demonstrate his great oratory abilities nor did it have any rhetoric or ideology that he was vouching for.

Haviland's was merely an introspection into the foreign policy of US in the past 8 years. He was neither like those liberals who think we should do nothing but charity in rest of the world, nor like the republicans he constantly called horribly incorrect. At one time he called the Islamic society as repressive and inherently different from the Western democracies. He was thinking of a solution along those lines.



He said something that I had been dying to listen to from someone more mature than me -that language is important. He condemned the use of words like war-against-terror or rogue-nations. Avoiding such jingoism in language would only help a foreign policy.

He questioned the assertion, both of media and administration that Muslims essentially hate the West. He actually said that Arabs have hardly ever expressed much hatred for America ; them being the core of Islamic world.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

money in new york

Despite having had a small town, third-world background I think I have unconsciously so, got acclimatized to the city-life. Slowly I see that it is more than just acclimatization that has happened over this decade that I spent in the city. I see things differently now, very different from how I would have when I first moved here.


A thing about the big city that bothered me a great deal when I was a kid was the comfort with which city folks set money to be the most important goal in their lives, or judge everything on grounds of money. I used to think that dreaming of big money is really a lot about being superficial.

Looking back I think it could have been because of having been brought up in a culture where I was not encouraged to aspire. I was made to choose one amongst the few jobs that were offered to me. Success was achieved by adaptability, not through working to make one's dreams come true.

I still feel sometimes that I wasn't encouraged enough to be doing what I absolutely loved to do. Through years of subjugation and colonial exploitation, it was actually discouraged in my circles if someone broke free of norms and started anything with a fresh perspective. When I came to the city, I couldn't help but notice that people were not doing anything halfheartedly. If you were into something then it is so because you absolutely love it or at least convinced yourself that you do. Nobody chases money as such. Everyone is doing what they absolutely love to do. Money is only a measure of how good oneself is. It was surprising to see that dreaming to make money in the city is not at all about being superficial. It was actually quite the opposite.
It was difficult for me to choose what I wanted to do. At the point where I was I felt that I hadn't have enough opportunities or didn't feel confidence about myself to take charge of things - mostly because of personality and partly because of the background. Those two factors might not have been completely unrelated. But with time, I had chosen a way and was willing to make sacrifices for choosing what I loved to do.

I remember having loved analysis a lot. When I talked about things they were abstract things - things that most people were not ready to grasp. People didn't like that. I still loved it. A human being rooted in his history and ready to understand his aspirations. I felt a sense of bliss in being that way. I swayed from being a conservative to being a liberal and sometimes a moderate, but all this while I think I maintained a sense of honest curiosity, something that I was made to develop by training in science.

An education in science does give you quite a bit of money, but not a whole lot. No matter how good you are at something you have to be entrepreneurial after one point. I don't seem to have the opportunity, but if I am positive, I might grab an opportunity if I see one. But being extremely analytical makes you a cynic and somewhat of a pessimist, mostly because you can't connect with many people.

I love this energy and vigor of the city, but because of my very nature I can't lie to people that I don't like making so much money. That usually hinders the process of adaptation to the city life and I think that is where I am at this point.



Tuesday, November 25, 2008

A friendly Map

I have been working on this idea that I haven't found enough devlopers for. The development is thus quite slow and of course, I haven't been able to get any investments either.

But here is the idea anyways. When you visit a new city (for purely tourist purposes) you have little idea of where your favorite places can be. Of course, it takes time to find out what your favorites are. But what if a friend could tell you where you should go, a friend who has known you for years and understands what kind of places you would be really interested in. If you are an art-lover like me, the friend would've told you about the museums and ongoing exhibition in the city, or may be a journey to the house of a famous architect outside the city followed by relaxing in a neighborhood bar where mostly artists hang out.

Well the idea is to have a website do that for you. networking websites like facebook, orkut already know a lot about you. They know what kind of a person are you and what kind of people you would share your interests with. Even if they don't a little survey can tell a lot about your personality, objectively.

I came up with a clustering algorithm, in order to organize people in different categories. There are no rankings of parameters in the whole algorithms. Everything is based on the distance from individuals. In other words, the algorithm doesn't try to calculate how much you like something but instead it only purports how far are you from a museum lover or a party animal (a distance metric based on the feature vector in the clustering).

One the algorithm discovers your personality - it suggests you what places you should go, fetches schedules from the museum sites and tells you what train to take. If the trains are not running, it tells you what other means you can take. It calculates fare as much as you can and adjusts the costs that you have already given to you. It even takes the weather forecasts and asks you not to go to the park when its raining... and a lot more.

Tell me which real friend would do that much for you..

The opposing argument is one that favors uncertainty. Of course, there is fun in serendipity. Nothing takes away the joy of discovering things that you hadn't planned. But i mean, you can't plan for accidental discoveries and that doesn't make planning worthless.

Sunday, November 09, 2008

Saturday, November 08, 2008

Izaura

A woman that sings in João Gilberto's sounds - Izaura - sounds like someone striking a glass gently. If I close my eyes I can see her wavy hairs, deep dark eyes, thin lips, a beatifully carved nose all that.. from just the very deep soothing voice. Wonder how the song tells all that to me.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Bengali and Eastern Hindi

Inspired by Language Log (and at times, being disappointed with its content too) I have started to log my own observations in South Asian languages.

My first observation is a simple one. I remember from my times in Varanasi, that the local dialects used "man karna" a lot. man kare to kar lo, man nahin kar rahaa. I was listening to an excerpt from Sunil Gangopadhyaya's ShreshTha galpa. I found that the same phrase is used a lot in Bangla too. The dialects in Bihar are quite similar to Bangla, but I wasn't aware that effects are reflected into far as Varanasi. The haven't heard this phrase being used in most of the khadi boli dialects and frankly not very frequently in literature either.

Urdu speakers hardly seem to use this phrase. I might theorize that man is not suited to Islamic metaphysics, but that is merely a speculation even though man is a Sanskrit word and has not much in common with Persian counterparts either.

Of course, usually one would find the official Hindi using an excessive lot of loan words from Bengali. In the excerpt itself, words like 'vastutaH','vyApAr','jal','nadi teere' that I hear in spoken bangla a lot, are reserved for official Hindi and are never used by Hindi speakers in their regular language (spoken Hindi would be replete with Urdu equivalents instead).

Monday, October 27, 2008

sanskrit dictionary

A great project. Finally we have a sanskrit dictionary that is really usable.

http://spokensanskrit.de/

A list of other interesting projects:

http://www.sanskrit-lexicon.uni-koeln.de/
http://sanskritdocuments.org/doc_z_misc_subhaashita/