Saturday, November 29, 2003
the lost art
Friday, November 28, 2003
A few points on posting
- Avoid using font and marquee tags.
- Instead of b, use strong, and em instead of i.
- When you are including quotations, use the blockquote tag, instead of using align=center.
- Whenever possible, give your post a title and avoid the apostrophe sign
Thursday, November 27, 2003
Experience the joy of doing things the new way
to rini and valli
hobby: (noun) -Considering point no. 4, 5 and 6, can it be presumed that love is a hobby? Any thoughts.
- An activity or interest pursued outside one's regular occupation and engaged in primarily for pleasure;
- an auxiliary activity;
- a subject or plan upon which one is constantly setting off;
- a favorite and ever-recurring theme of discourse, thought, or effort;
- that which occupies one's attention unduly, or to the weariness of others;
- a ruling passion.
Wednesday, November 26, 2003
Rini's blog
my views
"Within this realm of choicelessness, we do choose how we live". - Joseph EpsteinComing back to my opening statement, what are we discussing about, 'Is technology ruining us or helping us?" Can someone tell me? Interestingly Bala also said that "Simple pleasures in life will make a huge difference." I wonder why no one has any comments on that statement. So instead of giving a few examples and explanations on whether technology is ruining our lives, I will speak about simple pleasures in life. There are several such things that can help you a lot. Small things like Rini's newest hobby of collecting pictures of Indian sculptures or Manny's hobby of reading books may seem a waste of your precious time, but they are helpful in your life. I recall a story that I read somewhere, I guess in "The Seven Habits". A new recruit to a group of woodcutters noticed that every couple of hours the woodcutters would stop their work and spend some fifteen to twenty minutes talking and joking. He thought that he should not be wasting that time (roughly one hour everyday). So for the next few days, he did not join the others during thier breaks and instead worked hard. At the end of the day, he felt proud that he had not wasted his day. But he noticed that the others had cut the same amount of wood that he had cut, inspite of them wasting an hour during the day. He couldn't understand it. Watching them keenly during the next couple days, he understood why. During the breaks that the woodcutters took, they sharpened their axes fine. The moral is that you can indulge in pleasures without compromising on anything. I feel that everyone should cultivate a hobby. It can be anything. Anything that you feel is precious to you and worth spending some time on it. BTW, Rini, what happenend to your garden. But I have to confess that I don't have a hobby. A hobby has to pursued with zeal and determination, which I feel I lack. Nowadays, I just go out at night as fast as I can on my vehicle. It is a refreshing experience. Especially with Coimbatore having a wonderful winter climate this year. The best times to go out is after 10 pm with little or no traffic and the fine mist descending to the ground. You should feel the cool wind blowing on your face, a mild shiver passing through your body, your breath forming little clouds in the air. It is an experience to be enjoyed. I guess it is hard to experience a similar feeling in Chennai now, but Bangalore, Lexington (i guess it is around 1 or 2 degrees C there) and Hinckley (what's the weather there, 10-11 degrees C) would provide the right climate for experience what I had described. Waiting to see where the discussion will lead, BTW, Kicha, your closing quote form Lennon was quite apt. But since quite a few people might have heard that song, I am posting the lyrics to the song. It becomes more meaningful.
Imagine there's no heaven, It's easy if you try, No hell below us, Above us only sky, Imagine all the people living for today... Imagine there's no countries, It isn't hard to do, Nothing to kill or die for, No religion too, Imagine all the people living life in peace... Imagine no possesions, I wonder if you can, No need for greed or hunger, A brotherhood of man, Imagine all the people Sharing all the world... You may say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one, I hope some day you'll join us, And the world will live as one.Though this song may seem unrelated to our discussion, I felt that everyone can have a good feel of a world if we can just imagine. I hope you feel inspired by the song.
Having said and read all these about technology and its ill and good effects, I just remember an analogy, which I read from the book Living with Honour ...When somebody throws a dagger towards you, there are two ways to catch that. Either with the blade or with the handle...This is how we should see the technology and its effects and its up to u as to how you handle it....
Cares & Shares
Mahendran Jayavel
Tuesday, November 25, 2003
Of Men and Materials
I am with Honour...
What's Easy to See is Easy to Miss...
Living With Honour
by Shiv Khera
Hi pals,
Yesterday Shiv Khera talked to me!!! enna puriyalaya...I bought a new addition to my book shelf...."Living With Honour" by Shiv Khera...Read few pages in the shop itself out of curiosity (Irukkatha pinna...ranjinyoda voracious listla vanthathula irunthu i became a fierceful reader...ha ha...) nice to read...still going on with my reading...One of the lines in the book which I liked in the first few pages that I read was...
"Often when our conscience tries to call us, the line is too busy..."
Yet to read in full and i dont want to make it in a rush...good book and rest 'bout that in my next blogs...Cares & Shares
Mahendran Jayavel
Hi everyone
Welcome Bala
Monday, November 24, 2003
speaking of photos
Movies and notes
Pulling a CAT out of the hat...
Saturday, November 22, 2003
Venkatramana Govidha Govindha!!!
Friday, November 21, 2003
Hacking...
To Ganja and Sindhu
Thursday, November 20, 2003
A dream to dream...
New design
Interesting things
Wednesday, November 19, 2003
Learning About Life from a Dog
Learning About Life
from a Dog
Hi bloggers, i have been reading all the posts and watching as a silent observer for the past couple of weeks as i did not get any thing to say about philosophy or literatures...may be it takes some more time for me to taste those stuff...(may be after marriage when I may need peace of mind...) and here is a piece of information that i came across while surfing the net for info on dogs...quite interesting and i hope some of u may have read this earlier...even I suppose that I have read this previously...anyhow with respect to rini's words, I want to publish something...ha ha. and thanks rini for adding me too in the list of Fortune (500) Voracious readers...see i have been reading these kind of stuffs related to dogs and all...definitely I deserve a place in this list ma...ha ha.
Dogs have a natural, inborn philosophy toward the life they live. It doesn't matter where they are or who they are living with. You can learn some good attitudes to follow by observing what a dog does and enjoys.
Questions you may have about this are:
- What can I learn from such an animal?
- Can this be applied to business?
- How does that relate to my life?
18 things to do
Observing what dogs do can teaches us how we can lead a better life. The following list of 18 things dogs do--written by an unknown author--points toward attitudes to follow:
- Never pass the opportunity to go for a joy ride
- Allow the experience of fresh air and the wind in your face to be pure ecstasy.
- When loved ones come home, always run to greet them.
- When it is in your best interest, practice obedience.
- Let others know when they have invaded your territory.
- Take naps and then stretch before rising.
- Run, romp and play daily.
- Eat with gusto and enthusiasm.
- Be loyal.
- If what you find lies buried, dig until you finally get it.
- Never pretend to be something you're not.
- When someone else is having a bad day, be silent, sit close and nuzzle gently.
- Thrive on attention and let people touch you.
- Avoid biting when a simple growl will do.
- On hot days, drink lots of water and lie under a shade tree.
- When you're happy, dance around and wag your entire body.
- Delight in the simple joy of a long walk.
- No matter how often you are scolded, don't buy into the guilt and start to pout. Rather, run right back and make friends.
In conclusion
We would all lead happier lives if we followed these 18 principles, taken from observing the way dogs act.
You must lift a leg to do things...ha ha...with Regards, Mahen
blockquotes
my shot at the puzzle...
Who am I?
Hi
Tuesday, November 18, 2003
a very short post
This day last year... PART 2
Monday, November 17, 2003
To Rini
Semiotics can be roughly defined as the study of signs. Semiotics comes from the Greek word, semeîon, meaning 'sign'.In simple terms... For example, the word, 'Open' , when you encounter it on a shop entrance, you come to know that the shop is open and you can go inside to purchase something. The same word, when seen on a button within a lift, lets you know that the lift will open when you press the button. You may also see the word on a cardboard box top, specifying the direction in which the box is to be opened. What did you do now? You encountered a single word, yet the same word prompted you to perform different actions. The study of how a sign, in this case the word 'Open', could take on different meanings to different situations is called semiotics. It is the study of how signs take on thier meaning with respect to their context and surroundings. I could probably give lots of similar examples on how images or sounds, even gestures and objects could have different meanings in different contexts. You might have remembered a similar examples in our Marketing class about cultural differences or linguistical differences a brand can have. On Eco, I don't think that he is too hard to understand. In the excerpt that I had given, the third para speaks about simple maths and the value of pi. Remember no one has still understood how all circular objects are united by this seemingly simple, but complex number. The fourth para speaks on physics and the properties of the pendulum. The fifth one is really a tough one. It contains references to both mythology and geography. I had to read the para more than a couple of times to understand it. One interesting coincidence was that I had thought that Novaya Zemlaya was a mythological place, since I had never heard about it. The next day, I had gone to client's place. At the GM's office, I saw a huge map of the world. While waiting for the client to complete a call, I was looking at the map. I was trying to see if I could locate the places I had read the previous day. And to my surprise, I located Novaya Zemlaya. It is in Russia, very near to the North Pole. Back at the office, I searched for about it to see why it was mentioned. Amazing facts surfaced. For people to go to the Pacific Ocean from the Atlantic Ocean (Europe was located in the northern postion of the Atlantic Ocean) entitled a long and dangerous journey around South America, if you can recall our high school geography. So seamen tried to find ways (north-east and north-west). The North Western passage would go through the North west Atlantic ocean and join the Pacific Ocean at the Bering Straits between Siberian Russia and Alaska. The North Eastern passage passed through the island of Novaya Zemlaya. While a few were successful in finding a path through the Northwest passage, many lost thier lives navigating the northeast passage. This was before aeroplanes came into existence and the railways were in thier infancy. Later on, the railroads across America paved the way for the country to become an advanced industrial nation it is today. Interesting to know how just a small passage can help you understand geography and history a lot. That is one thing I liked about his book. Each page and paragraph was so full of information that Antony Burgess, another great writer, said that."This book needs an index." Interestingly, Avalon mentioned in the excerpt is a mythological place in British myths. Microsoft has chosen the name as a codename for thier user interface in thier upcoming Windows OS Longhorn. Rini, the first page of the book starts with this quote.
Semiotics involves the study not only of what we refer to as 'signs' in everyday speech, but of anything which 'stands for' something else. In a semiotic sense, signs take the form of words, images, sounds, gestures and objects. Semiotics is concerned with everything that can be taken as a sign.
Only for you, children of doctrine and learning, have we written this work. Examine this book, ponder the meaning we have dispersed in various places and gathered again; what we have concealed in one place we have disclosed in another, that it may be understood by your wisdom - Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim, De occulta philosophia, 3, 65In case you are interested in reading this book, I have an electronic version of the book as a text file. If required, I can send it to you. It comes around 1 MB. That's all for today,
Jay Jay - a review
Favourite authors
This day last year... PART - 1
Friday, November 14, 2003
On Eco
Since you have got me interested in Eco, I will be posting more on him later. Maybe after you come back from your tour. Take pictures and put them online. Have a wonderful weeekend. Others, see you tomorrow!That was when I saw the Pendulum.
The sphere, hanging from a long wire set into the ceiling of the choir, swayed back and forth with isochronal majesty.
I knew—but anyone could have sensed it in the magic of that serene breathing—that the period was governed by the square root of the length of the wire and by Π, that number which, however irrational to sublunar minds, through a higher rationality binds the circumference and diameter of all possible circles. The time it took the sphere to swing from end to end was determined by an arcane conspiracy between the most timeless of measures: the singularity of the point of suspension, the duality of the plane’s dimensions, the triadic beginning of π, the secret quadratic nature of the root, and the unnumbered perfection of the circle itself.
I also knew that a magnetic device centered in the floor beneath issued its command to a cylinder hidden in the heart of the sphere, thus assuring continual motion. This device, far from interfering with the law of the Pendulum, in fact permitted its manifestation, for in a vacuum any object hanging from a weightless and unstretchable wire free of air resistance and friction will oscillate for eternity.
The copper sphere gave off pale, shifting glints as it was struck by the last rays of the sun that came through the great stained-glass windows. Were its tip to graze, as it had in the past, a layer of damp sand spread on the floor of the choir, each swing would make a light furrow, and the furrows, changing direction imperceptibly, would widen to form a breach, a groove with radial symmetry—like the outline of a mandala or pentaculum, a star, a mystic rose. No, more a tale recorded on an expanse of desert, in tracks left by countless caravans of nomads, a story of slow, millennial migrations, like those of the people of Atlantis when they left the continent of Mu and roamed, stubbornly, compactly, from Tasmania to Greenland, from Capricorn to Cancer, from Prince Edward Island to the Svalbards. The tip retraced, narrated anew in compressed time what they had done between one ice age and another, and perhaps were doing still, those couriers of die Masters. Perhaps the tip grazed Agarttha, the center of the world, as it journeyed from Samoa to Novaya Zemlya. And I sensed that a single pattern united Avalon, beyond the north wind, to the southern desert where lies the enigma of Ayers Rock.
views
And some modern-day philosophy...
Thursday, November 13, 2003
Project Gutenberg...
Wednesday, November 12, 2003
Jax....
To Ram and Kicha
Hi
Help on the poem
The basic method used in The Waste Land may be described as the application of the principle of complexity. The poet works in terms of surface parallelisms which in reality make ironical contrasts, and in terms of surface contrasts which in reality constitute parallelisms. - Cleanth BrooksSince you wanted a paraphase to the poem, here is the site I was referring to when reading the poem. As said earlier, I was reading a lot about semiotics the day you posted the link to the poem. Was it a coincidence that the poem was a real life example of semiotics. I don't know. If you are wondering what semiotics means, here is a list of definitions from Google. T.S. Eliot was called one of the great poets of the 20th century. I hope you remember the following part of a poem of his.
We shall not cease from explorationHe wrote an entire book about cats. The poem was modified into a musical by Andrew Lloyd Webber and it became a wonderful success. Recently, it was shown in TV.
And the end of all our exploring
Will be to arrive where we started
And know the place for the first time.
Past couple of days
Tuesday, November 11, 2003
Hi
Hi all
Monday, November 10, 2003
reply to jax and reg. pitha magan
Hi
Saturday, November 08, 2003
urban legends...
What lies behind us and what lies ahead of us are tiny matters compared to what lives within us - Oliver Wendell HolmesBye for now.
Friday, November 07, 2003
alert
views and updates
Superstition is to religion what astrology is to astronomy; the mad daughter of a wise mother. - VoltaireThe question that would have to be answered is that "Do you life your life as you wish to live it?" or "Do you live your life as laid by others?" A pragmatic approach to life would be really a wonderful way to live life, but it would also mean that we have to remove traces of humanity within us. A dogmatic way of life also has this side effect of dehumanising us.
When the human race has once acquired a supersitition nothing short of death is ever likely to remove it. - Mark TwainMore on this later...
Thursday, November 06, 2003
Dogmatic vs Pragmatic
An attempt at poetry
to rini
thoughts
Hi
My Identity continues...
Wednesday, November 05, 2003
New blogs!!!
- Keep updating: One problem I faced was keeping the blog updated. Since "All in a day's work!" was constantly kept updated by others, I didn't feel any difficulty. But when I started one individually, I ran into a lot of troubles keeping it updated.
- Stick to a timeline: Decide that you'll update the blog regularly. It can be once a week or once a day or time-permitting, even twice or thrice a day. But stick to it.
- Promote it: It was wonderful to see Manny promoting VVS on msitmmb. Ram's Thoughts is more of a personal blog á la Quod scripsi, scripsi. So you can't expect the latter two to be promoted actively. But promotions will help. By the way, It is also good to see reciprocal links between the blogs.
- Listen to the experts: More important, listen to what the experts say. Get their advice and heed it. Because the next time, I won't be giving free advice. It gonna cost you a little bit.
Ram, Is "mentations" based on Lamentations?
Manny, Still awaiting for my invitation to VVS.
Do you know this...
URL of varuthamilla Vaalibar Sangam
Varuthamilla Vaalibar Sangam
Tuesday, November 04, 2003
Thaaanga mudiyala...
Technical Troubleshooting...
Thanks da
a dream come true
thinkin about it
Kindness Defined and or Explained by Chuck Wall, Ph.D. An act that positively influences the life of both the giver and the receiver is a kindness. It doesn't have to cost money or be difficult to perform. It can be spontaneous (random) or premeditated. It can be as simple as a smile or a thank you, and as complicated as starting a non-profit organization to benefit those in need. Kindness has four working parts: dignity, respect, compassion, and humility, If you have all of these things for yourself, then you will be able to share them with others. If we reach out with dignity, respect, compassion, and humility, we are likely to feel it being returned. Actively seeking out opportunities to assist others will naturally bring a certain amount of warmth and feeling of self-worth to each of us. It feels good to help others and others feel good knowing someone wants them to help. "Consideration" and "helpful" are words often used to describe a kind deed. Kindness is what you define it as, rather than what someone else thinks you should believe it is. I suggest all people actively attempt to live by my phrase, "Today I will commit one random act of senseless kindness. Will You?"Get ready to commit one random act of kindess. But before that, take a moment to read the rules of cricket. I'm still listening to "She". still searching for answers...