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7月11日

Chat Room

 http://www.meebo.com/rooms
10月14日

Meerut hangman Mamu gets the call for Afzal

 Hilarious Stuff in the last paragraph highlighted
 

"Siddharth Kalhans / M V R RAO -Indian Express

Posted online: Thursday, October 12, 2006 at 0000 hrs IST

LUCKNOW, MEERUT, OCTOBER 11
While a mercy petition for Afzal Guru, the man convicted to hang for the December 13, 2001 attack on Parliament, is pending with the President, the Uttar Pradesh Directorate of Prisons has set in motion the official process to nominate Mamu, a hangman from Meerut, for the job.

Mamu is the son of hangman Kallu who hanged Indira Gandhi's assassins Kehar Singh and Satwant Singh and Ranga and Billa, convicted for the killing of the Chopra children.

Confirming this, State Senior Superintendent of Prisons Suresh Chandra said that Mamu has been asked to be prepared to reach Tihar Jail any time now.

"Mamu has been appointed the jallad to hang Afzal in Tihar," Chandra told The Indian Express today, "and the official communication has been despatched to him."

Asked when the communique was sent to Meerut, Chandra said, "It has been sent this week, we cannot disclose the exact date."

When told that Mamu claims he hasn't received any note, Chandra said: "He is not authorised to disclose these details."

Chandra said the the prison department of the state government will be ready to send Mamu to Tihar for the hanging by October 20. "He will be assisted by a hangman from Punjab," he said.

When contacted, Kunwar Verma, in charge of the Jallad Cell at the Directorate of Prisons, confirmed that "we sought Mamu's availability for he has not hanged anyone for some time." He said Mamu is the "first preference" for Tihar. "



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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月26日

Major concerns for information security in indian firms

Global Continuity reports that "Only half of organizations in India employ the basics such as user passwords, compared with 73 per cent in the rest of the world, according to "Global State of Information Security 2006", a worldwide study by CIO magazine, CSO magazine and PricewaterhouseCoopers. The study says 50 percent admit more than half their users are not in compliance with their information."

9月23日

GAID Meeting to be charied by Kofi Annan

UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan will open the first-ever meeting at the United Nations of the newly formed Global Alliance for Information and Communication Technologies and Development (GAID) on September 27. Chairing discussion of Alliance strategic goals will be Intel board chairman Craig Barrett.

ICT4D Update

India does well in bridging digital divide.According to LIRNEasia, India was ranked 119 among 180 countries in the global digital opportunity index (DOI). The DOI - which was decided upon by stakeholders participating in the 2nd World Summit on Information Society held in Tunisia last year - identified 11 indicators across three broad categories such as opportunity, infrastructure and utilisation as yardsticks for the ranking exercise. However, based on historical data gathered for 2001-2005, India ranked first in terms of being able to bridge the domestic digital divide. While India did well on this score, the country performed poorly as the lack of competition in the fixed telephony sector impacted the rollout of basic infrastructure and Internet access.
 
New Zealand's State Services Commission wants to procure new hardware and software for its e-government initiative. The system to replace is just 3 years old.
9月21日

Now Digital Cameras promise a slimmer you

"With the slimming feature, anyone can appear more slender—instantly."
Hewlett Packard advertises on its site for cameras that flatter. No need to diet, just aim and shoot with the slim filter on.
9月20日

Indicators as governmentality

World Bank launches Governance indicators: As we know the World Bank is more than a bank. It is an powerful instituion which generates a lot of "knowledge" which forms the basis of policy - not only its loan policy but also the policy of the receipients. Indicators are currently in vogue at the Bank. A variety of indices with loft sounding names such as Knowledge Economy Index etc. are being promoted. They are polite stick with which policy visions, ideas and ideologies are imposed on governments in the third world. Indicators from the bank rarely give a correct picture of actual situation. They are only as good as the methodology which informs them.World bank has launched governance indicators for 213 countires covering 1996-2005. This data will be used for forecasting studies, planning and policymaking. The six dimensions are: for six dimensions of governance included are: Voice and Accountability; Political Stability and Absence of Violence; Government Effectiveness; Regulatory Quality; Rule of Law; Control of Corruption.

9月19日

Infrastructure Yes. Labour Reforms later

India needs reform, infrastructure for growth - OECD
"India needs to invest more to improve its infrastructure, reform rigid labour laws and ease business regulations to secure faster economic growth in the coming years, a senior OECD official said on Monday."
 
Any visitor to India will tell you that it desparately needs infrastructure. More importantly it needs a good administration of the infrastructure that is already there and that is being developed. Reform of labour laws and business regulations is a can of worms which should be left for later on. The country should not keep economic growth as an imperative to be achieved at all costs - the whole reform business needs to be balanced and gradually paced.

Optimism & Lies: Excerpts from two punjabi poems

Najam Hussain Syed

(translated from Punjabi by Irfan Malik and Jennifer Barber)

Khial

There have always been
sparrows, and will always be.
After the eagles' and hawks'
threatening bodies have taken
their assigned corners in museums
and the peacock's magic
is a handful of feathers
in an empty tomb,
the sparrows will remain.
They'll descend from the trees
branch by branch, gathering
like the girls of simple ways
who, with their laughter,
say whatever they please.


From a Poem by MIAN IJAZ UL HASSAN

Silken lies howso'ver uncouth
Are always more endearing than truth
to speak one's mind is like from the hind
You would let out in company an audible sound,
Truth is like a wart on a painted face
A fly in the ointment
Lipstick on the collar
A dog without a leash.
9月17日

Get the picture?

www.nyt.com Mobile Phone Proliferates, A Hallmark Of New India  By SARITHA RAI  15 September 2006
 
"India has become the fastest-growing cellular market in the world, adding a net 5.9 million cellular subscribers in August, the Cellular Operators Association of India said this week. The gain outstripped China's increase of 5.19 million subscribers........
 
''Everybody can afford it,'' said T. V. Ramachandran, director general of the Cellular Operators Association -- ''the teawallah, the dhobi and the sabsiwallah,'' conjuring up the traditional tea vendor, launderer and vegetable seller....
 
"Callers are increasingly faced with the frustrations of dealing with dropped calls and recorded messages like ''The network is busy, please try later'' or ''The mobile you are trying to reach is currently unavailable.''  


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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月16日

 What Is Meant by the Knowledge-Based Economy: An analysis of KBE on the Panjab.org.uk website

Knowledge: The MSN Live Search Macro-based engine

My own knowledge policy concepts related search engine at MSN Live Search

You can also use it by adding macro:grewalbs.knowledge to a query in any Live Search box.

Search operators like "", ( ), AND, NOT, OR, intitle:, inurl:, hasfeed:, has:, -, |, etc. are supported

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Posted by Baljit Grewal

RFID is the new craze in e-government infrastructure projects

i4donline reports that US government has joined the bandwagon. Japanese government has been thinking along these lines for a few years now specially under their u-Japan policy.

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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月15日

Google Personalised Homapage (ig) has a new "Tab" feature

Following Pageflakes and other services google personalised home page has answered the prayers of a lot of users by introducing the new "Add a Tab" feature.
 


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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月14日

Bush Tells Group He Sees a 'Third Awakening'

*Bush Tells Group He Sees a 'Third Awakening'
<http://letters.washingtonpost.com/W8RH03AFF903FA142F17F33E9171C0 >*
President Bush said yesterday that he senses a "Third Awakening" of
religious devotion in the United States that has coincided with the
nation's struggle with international terrorists, a war that he depicted
as "a confrontation between good and evil."
(By Peter Baker, The Washington Post

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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月12日

US and the Real Terrorism

US makes such a hue and cry about being a victim of terrorism. In actual fact it doesn't even feature in the "Top Ten" list of countries with terrorism incidents (see table). Its own role in violence in some of these countries is noteworthy. It has displaced terrorism on its home ground to other places. The war on terror is a garb to pursue long-standing policy goals in the strategically important areas of the world.
Graphic Source: Foreign Policy Sept/Oct 06
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Posted by Baljit Grewal

Hockey World Cup: India beaten 2-1 by Korea, to fight for 9-12 place now

India has lost another match in the Hockey World Cup. Before the start of the tounament, KPS Gill the IHF chief prmised INR 1 Crore for the team for winning the cup. Going by current form they deserve not to be paid. No wonder Indians like to watch cricket more than Hockey. Indian hockey sux!   - a sad state of affairs for a once great tradition.
 
 
India beaten 2-1 by Korea, to fight for 9-12 place now
Monchengladbach, Sep 11 (UNI) A listless India's humiliation was complete as they squandered the lead and went down 1-2 to Korea in their fourth league match of the hockey World Cup here today.

Playing for a pride, the Indians failed to salvage it as they conceded two goals in the last stages of the match to remain winless after six days of the championship..... Read More


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Posted by Baljit Grewal
9月11日

[From Google Reader] Word matters: Multicultural perspectives on information societies - by Alain Ambrosi, Valérie Peugeot, & Daniel Pimienta

This item was sent to you by baljit@gmail.com from Google Reader. Word matters: Multicultural perspectives on information societies - by Alain Ambrosi, Valérie Peugeot, & Daniel Pimienta Journal of Communication Volume 56, Issue 3, Page 627-628, Sep 2006. ... Source: http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1460-2466.2006.00305.x?ai=6kng6&af=R If you no longer wish to receive message like this, please contact the sender. Try Google Reader today: http://www.google.com/reader/
9月8日

Pentagon's New Map by Thomas Barnett




 

PNM Map

 




"By popular demand and direct from the book, The Pentagon's New Map, the digital version of the map by Thomas P.M. Barnett is now available for free download. The map illustrates his cutting-edge approach to globalization, which combines security, economic, political, and cultural factors to do no less than predict and explain the nature of war and peace in the twenty-first century.

The map divides the world into two parts: "the functioning core" and the "non-integrated gap."

The core consists of economically advanced or growing countries that are linked to the global economy and bound to the rule-sets of international trade.  The rest of the world is the non-integrated gap – outside the global economy, not bound to the rule-sets of international trade." visit barnett's site

Greed by Julian Edney

GREED

by Julian Edney (1)

 

 


Sign the tab in certain Midtown eateries and your neighbors' eyes slide over. Is that a $48,000 Michel Perchin pen? What's on your wrist – a $300,000 Breguet watch?

In Palm Springs and Bel Air, $100,000 twin-turbo Porsches and $225,000 Ferraris buzz the warm streets. In New York at an exclusive Morell & Company auction last May, a single magnum of Dom Perignon champagne was sold for $5,750. And there are the paintings of course - one evening at auction two Monets sold for $43 million (2). Hotel rooms, anyone, at $10,000 a night?  Estate agents in suburbs of Dallas and Palm Beach have advertised baronial homes for sale at over $40 million (3).

These are prices paid by the exceptionally wealthy, the folks who skim the pages of the Robb Report (average annual salary of subscribers: $1.2 million) in whose glossy pages are reviewed the best of everything. In a recent issue a southern plantation is advertised, "everybody's dream," at $8.5 million.

Robert Reich points out that the superrich live in a parallel universe to the rest of the country: much of the time we don't see them because they live in walled estates, travel in private limousines and use different airports from the rest of us (4). There's lots of them. There are now more than 200 billionaires. Some five percent of American households have assets over $1 million. And we're back to levels of extravagant consumption not seen for 100 years (5).

By historical accounts this is a nation of persistent and resilient people with an unshakable mission: the pursuit of happiness. This idea of happiness is largely connected with wealth (and this connection has long philosophic roots). It is a nation of ambitious people with notions of unfettered future growth, a nation that celebrates abundance. There seems to be no reason anyone should be deprived of luxury, if he works hard. Indeed with this country's aggregate wealth, there should be no reason anyone should ever go hungry or suffer.

People are going hungry in America. A Los Angeles survey found more than a quarter of low income residents, many working, are not getting enough food to meet basic nutritional needs. And 10% are experiencing hunger(6).

Estimates are that 3 out of 10 Americans will face poverty sometime in their lives (7).

Misery is a word seldom applied to the contemporary scene. Like wretchedness it seems antique, an Old World term. But many Americans live in cold, dank slums; many do not earn enough for shelter, many sleep outside. In America's inner cities and at its lowest levels, under freeway bridges and in tubercular alleys, in stained and broken rooming houses and in torn-apart schools, misery exists and persists. All our largest cities contain neighborhoods where some people live day to day in apartments that could be mistaken for closets, some fearing to leave home on gang-terrorized streets, some sharing bus seats with people with drug-scarred arms. Every great metropolis has its skid row mired in fecal gutters, where whole blocks are awash in narcotics and violence, its inhabitants despised and flatly abandoned.

America is once again a nation of extremes. ...... Read More