Fri, 21 Nov 2008 17:59:32 GMT
Nek Chand rock garden - Chandigarh, India
When I was in Chandigarh, I visited the Nek Chand rock garden. The place has a lot of art (mostly sculpture) built out of a large amount of household and other waste. The park has sections of arrays of similar sculptures of all kind. This rock garden was the pet project of one Mr. Nek Chand which city authorities discovered a few years after he starting it.
While most of the park is very interesting and beautiful, it looks like the authorities also expanded the original creations with quite a few things that Mr. Nek Chand certainly did not build himself. A few pictures:
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Tue, 14 Oct 2008 06:24:04 GMT
Proud to be an official part of Debian
I am proud to be officially a part of what is quite possibly the largest free software project on the planet. To all the people (few of you don't even use Debian - you know who you are) who have been motivating and helping me, and some that actually spent time working in past few days/weeks towards making this happen: hazaar thanks!
Sun, 12 Oct 2008 05:12:59 GMT
te_IN translation for Debian Installer
My parents found it strange that I spend considerable time in the night doing "some Linux thing", so the other day I explained to them what Free software is and we talked about copyright and licensing. I was very happy that they were able to appreciate it. I also gave a Debian Installer demo.
While there are a bunch of Indian languages supported in the Debian Installer, ?????? (Telugu) isn't one of them. They noticed it and motivated me to work on te_IN translation for d-i and promised to help me. So the three of us have been discussing translation strings. I have been committing changes slowly and intend to complete this activity in a few months.
Lack of interest in translation meant that I never gave much thought to it but I see that translating software is rather difficult and it is an activity that would benefit a lot from two or three people doing it together. I found a glossary at swecha.org but there are a bunch of problems
I am using these simple guidelines for translation:
A few resources that I have been using:
I will have to find a good quality comprehensive Telugu general knowledge book or an official A.P. govt. document to translate ISO 3166 codes etc. The Manorama yearbook would've been great, unfortunately Telugu is not one of the few languages it is published in. I will also bring my copy of Sankaranarayan's dictionary from my next month Hyderabad visit.
If you have suggestions on any of these (pointers to guidelines, resources that are DFSG free and I could copy from etc.) that would make doing this easy for me, please do let me know.
Naidu does good one-off Telugu string translations in Launchpad (so does
praveenkumarg, btw), and Naidu has promised to do some of the work as well as review. If all goes well, I will try and create a debian-10n-telugu sometime in the future.
Sat, 04 Oct 2008 10:19:05 GMT
One for revealingerrors.com
This one derives inspiration from revealing errors site that Benjamin Mako Hill runs.
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Mon, 29 Sep 2008 07:27:38 GMT
BOSS Distribution
I came across a news item in The Hindu business section written by a Corporate Reporter about BOSS GNU/Linux 3.0. The piece said that BOSS is a linux based operating system (OS) in 18 Indian languages, but the main features were described saying
The OS is endowed with Bluetooth for short range communications along with salient features such as RSS feed reader and PDF viewer to edit documents.I would've expected better from The Hindu.
Sun, 14 Sep 2008 09:33:12 GMT
/whois appaji
Since the past few months I've been getting a lot of email at gmail.com not intended for me. Initially I thought it was spam but I realised that people have been inadvertently sending me mail thinking appaji is somebody else. So I get:
Obviously, I also get mail that sometimes says "I did not get your response". I've often tried responding explaining to the senders that I am not who they think I am, but there is no use. There is a LOT of personal or otherwise important information like addresses, phone numbers, financial transactions, passwords to some web-service accounts, domain transfer authorisation keys etc. in these emails. This makes me very uncomfortable.
Fri, 06 Jun 2008 19:53:18 GMT
It had to be a UFO
I just got back from Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, a movie in which Steven Spielberg takes his obsession with the extra terrestrial to the next level.
Please watch it if you feel that times goes too fast, the two hours that you are watching the movie will seem like two years.
And it had to be a UFO in the end :)
Update: I should have kept the spoiler under lj-cut, but now that I think of it, that wouldn't help people aggregating the posts. I suppose I will avoid posting spoilers.
Fri, 30 May 2008 18:43:57 GMT
Alumni mail service moves to Hotmail
I knew better when I neither advertised nor used my IITG Alumni forwarding email address, and I suppose I'll not do that, ever.
For one, the ID given was ridiculous, connected to my name in a rather weird fashion with a number thrown into it and nobody bothered to reply when I asked if I could change it. And now the domain-name part of the email ID has been changed forcing people to tell all their contacts about the change, but this takes the cake -- the service has been moved to Hotmail with 2GB free space.
Huh! Thanks but no thanks.
I really disapprove of such widespread services (which should really not have a commercial angle to them) being taken over by the Googles, Ciscos and the Microsofts of the world.
Wed, 28 May 2008 08:27:26 GMT
What should be NEW?
For some reason, I was under the impression that uploading a new upstream release would place the package in the NEW queue. I was proved wrong because I was able to upload ELinks 0.12~20080527-1 to experimental yesterday and I am a DM who can't upload NEW packages.
To me, this did not make a whole lot of sense. NEW exists to keep the Debian archive legal and to prevent serious QA issues. Uploading a new upstream release of a package pushes a _new_ orig.tar.gz file to the archive and could contain potentially DFSG non-free material which is an issue if the package is being uploaded to main.
What is a bit ironic here is that a DM can't upload an updated package that is essentially the same except that it creates new debugging-symbols packages from the same source package. To a very large extent, these -dbg packages should neither be of questionable legality nor have serious QA issues. What I don't know is if it is necessary that these go to NEW because the FTP masters add overrides manually.
Tue, 20 May 2008 08:59:33 GMT
In the Valley of Elah
A brilliant commentary on how the mindless war in Iraq has been effecting the lives of people in the USA, In the Valley of Elah says a lot without speaking much. By the end of the movie, a father -- the same who tells his disturbed soldier-son over the phone: "it is your nerves speaking" -- hangs the US flag upside down.
A full week of high fever kept me down and even the "low hanging fruit" of life went undone. Then, another few days of blood-red eyes, thanks to some stiff antibiotics that I was on. The cause for this recurring fever seems to be an infection of the throat and tonsils, so it looks like I might have to consider getting my tonsils removed. To some extent, In the Valley of Elah shook me out of my moroseness. H says that Charlize Theron is a very cerebral actress and I must agree.
On a related note, I was pointed to this neat article titled Why Do They Hate Us? in which Mohsin Hamid says that the question that US-o-American's should be asking is Why do they love us?.
Fri, 18 Apr 2008 21:44:57 GMT
Harmandir Sahib
Harmandir Sahib (Popularly known as the Golden Temple).

Sun, 13 Apr 2008 18:22:06 GMT
Five fine movies
Five Six exceptional movies that I saw over the past few weeks:
Perfume: The Story of a Murderer: The rise and fall of Jean-Baptiste Grenouille, a genius perfume maker who scripts his own end.
The Illusionist: The story of a magician who returns after 15 years to do what his childhood sweetheart wants him to (make them disappear together).
The Black Dahlia: Based on James Ellroy's novel with the same name, the movie gives the unsolved-in-real-life mystery a plausible end.
The Lives of Others: Art moves, and changes people and every single action makes a difference. Stasi Hauptmann Gerd Wiesler (HGW) was _fantabulos_.
Infamous: A beautifully made movie about Truman Capote and his life while he is researching for his book In Cold Blood.
The Kite Runner: In which Aamir redeems himself -- of his guilt of being a coward and not helping his childhood friend Hassan, when he is raped -- by saving Hassan's son from the Taliban.
Links to the corresponding Wikipedia articles are rather unimaginative, but I am in no mood for a lot of text.
Sun, 13 Apr 2008 07:54:33 GMT
Remembering the Jallianwala Bagh massacre
Remembering the Jallianwala Bagh massacre. Exactly 89 years ago this day (the 13th of April 1919), people were shot at from here:
A group of 90IndianBritish Indian Army soldiers marched to the park accompanied by two armoured cars. The vehicles were unable to enter the Bagh through the narrow entrance.
The Jallianwala Bagh, or garden, was bounded on all sides by houses and buildings and had few narrow entrances, most of which were kept permanently locked. Since there was only one open exit except for the one already blocked by the troops, people desperately tried to climb the walls of the park. Many jumped into a well inside the compound to escape from the bullets. A plaque in the monument says that 120 bodies were plucked out of the well.
As a result of the firing, hundreds of people were killed and thousands were injured. Official records put the figures at 379 killed (337 men, 41 boys and a six-week-old baby) and 200 injured, though the actual figure is hotly disputed to this day. The wounded could not be moved from where they had fallen, as a curfew had been declared.Few more pictures from the memorial:
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Fri, 11 Apr 2008 12:56:58 GMT
Gimme space!
You've always apt-get installed a whole lot of packages, used them once -- if at all, now want your hard disk space back. So which packages on your machine consume the most of disk space, and can be removed?
The following tell you just that:
$ /usr/bin/grep-status -FStatus -sInstalled-Size,Package -n "install ok installed" | paste -sd " \n" | sort -n
[snip...]
40796 gnome-applets-data
45924 valgrind
54148 linux-image-2.6.24-1-686
65380 sun-java5-bin
$ /usr/sbin/popcon-largest-unused
65376 sun-java5-bin
54148 linux-image-2.6.24-1-686
45924 valgrind
40796 gnome-applets-data
[snip...]
$
Now go ahead and aptitude / apt-get remove those that you don't want to keep around, and then repeatedly do ...
$ aptitude (or apt-get) remove `deborphan`
... till you see no more packages being removed.
PS: /usr/sbin/popcon-largest-unused is from the popularity-contest package which you should install and submit usage data (it is anonymous) if you want Debian to get better. /usr/bin/grep-status is from dctrl-tools, a very useful bunch of tools (despite their quirky syntax) if you are interested in Debian development.
Tue, 08 Apr 2008 10:37:03 GMT
First NMU
My first Non-maintainer upload (for reportbug. Thanks Thomas Viehmann for uploading the modified package), and the package hit the archive the other day.
On a related note, an excuse people often have when contributing to Debian (or for that matter any free software project) is that all the important stuff is being done by others already. This is not really true, there is a ton of things that need to be done and it is just a matter of going ahead and doing it. The reportbug package is important (Priority: standard) in Debian and it could do with some more love.
Thu, 13 Mar 2008 11:21:55 GMT
ELinks packages in experimental
I uploaded ELinks packages to Debian experimental (based on upstream 0.12 GIT snapshot as on 2008-01-27) and sent out a call for testing. Please test the packages and report issues to the Debian BTS in case you find some bugs or if you don't like the way something works.
0.12 uses UTF-8 as terminal charset and has support for browsing SMB/CIFS shares via libsmbclient. I also enabled Javascript and support for a bunch of scripting languages in these builds. The packages have been compiled in debug mode (builtin assertions, extra sanity checks etc.).
Sat, 26 Jan 2008 06:05:39 GMT
Night at the Harmandir Sahib
I happened to be in Amritsar on the night of Guru Nanak Dev Jayanthi. When I first realised that it was an important occasion, I thought to myself: "I am sooo dead, the Golden teample would be a sea of people". But I was pleasantly (and very much) surprised that everything was very calm and peaceful. Everybody behaved and seemed to do so very naturally. This is one place of worship that is truly amazing. Pictures from the night (I missed the annual display of fireworks by an hour or so).
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Both the pictures are best viewed large but neither does justice to the real sight. Few more in the Harmandar Sahib - Guru Nanak Jayanthi set of pictures.
Fri, 25 Jan 2008 13:47:18 GMT
Life update -- Actually, a Debian update
The past many weeks were exciting and a lot of things kept me busy, work for one. Part of the excitement was about a trip to Punjab (pictures on their way). And after a long period of lurking on mailing lists, reading policy manuals and the once-in-a-while bug report with a patch, I decided to get a little more active in Debian.
Even though there wasn't a whole lot of software I was using regularly but not present in Debian (which is what a lot of people seem to look to package), there _is_ plenty of software that one uses and has Debian package maintainers, but could probably do with a few more hands at its maintenance.
I took the plunge when I stumbled upon a few orphaned packages and took up their maintenance. Here is what I did to them that I should say I am proud of as a beginner in Debian package maintenance.
Update: Despite the above, I am not happy about an upload that I requested of xxdiff. But then that was my first upload and everybody is allowed mistakes to correct ;). The Debian xxdiff SVN is seeing fixes slowly but surely though, so standby for a much better package.
And a few others too. All these packages are maintained in Subversion (except ELinks, for which I am using GIT like upstream) and I will be very happy if I can get people to come forward as co-maintainers.
Hack away!
Wed, 22 Aug 2007 08:03:29 GMT
Orphaned Packages?
Since today's XKCD comic is about Debian, I couldn't resist re-posting it here :)
Now you know why the WNPP orphaned list is growing in size ;)
PS: XKCD is a cool geek comic.
xkcd_rss if you want to follow it on Livejournal.
Tue, 21 Aug 2007 10:52:47 GMT
Chak de
What one really needs, to feel good after a week of terrible put-downing bout of sickness is a top-quality entertainer.
Chak de India is just that, and more.
Fri, 10 Aug 2007 13:48:55 GMT
DFSG Freeness of The Open Group Test Suite License
I was trying to apply the Debian Free Software Guidelines (DFSG) to The Open Group Test Suite License and it looks like the license would be considered non-free.
You may charge a reasonable copying fee for any distribution of this Package. You may charge any fee you choose for support of this Package. You may not charge a fee for this Package itself.
rename any non-standard executables and testcases so the names do not conflict with standard executables and testcases, which must also be provided, and provide a separate manual page for each non-standard executable and testcase that clearly documents how it differs from the Standard Version.and in clause 4:
accompany any non-standard executables and testcases with their corresponding Standard Version executables and testcases, giving the non-standard executables and testcases non-standard names, and clearly documenting the differences in manual pages (or equivalent), together with instructions on where to get the Standard Version.So, even though integrity can be ensured by renaming non-standard executables and testcases, the license mandates distribution of the Standard Version executables and testcases. This probably make this license non-free (Note: See the reason I consider this to be a non-free clause).
Sun, 22 Jul 2007 07:45:27 GMT
Potter on the move
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Apparenty people have been queuing up at the bookstores as early as 5:00 in the morning for a copy. Here is one of those Potter-book fans trying to finish reading the book, determined not to give his friends at school a chance to throw a spoiler at him.
Mon, 28 May 2007 11:00:14 GMT
Music and Copyright
Talking to Hindustan Times, music composer A.R. Rahman says that has a new policy for composing music:
I just want to push for the financial rights of composers and lyricists, even producers. It's not as though I'm saying I want to be the sole proprietor of the songs I compose. But I want a share. There's nothing wrong with that. I can't run to music companies like T Series and Sa Re Ga Ma every time I need to use my own song.What is interesting about the article is this quote of his:
Music companies must recognise the changing ground reality. Today the conventional outlets for music sales are drying up. Soon all music will be free while the performers and performances will be paid for.Record companies advertising against illegal music often talk about artists in the music industry, much like people that support patents talk about the starving genius-inventor. Rahman's recent experiences seem to suggest that these companies don't put their money where their mouth is.
Wed, 16 May 2007 04:59:26 GMT
The search for a webhost
Mohit Jaggi, a senior of mine at university and I were debating whether we should be hosting the IITG alumni mailboxes with Google Apps. The free-of-cost offer from Google was quite attractive but I am still not very comfortable with the idea for various reasons:
Hello, Thank you for writing to Yahoo! Groups. Yahoo! may, in appropriate circumstances and in its sole discretion, terminate Groups that appear to have violated the Yahoo! Terms of Service (TOS). In some cases, Groups may be deleted by an Owner or Moderator. You may want to contact the owner or moderator(s) regarding your concern. Please feel free to visit the Yahoo! Terms of Service at: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ Thank you again for contacting Yahoo! Customer Care. Regards, Katewhich wasn't very helpful. Just the kind of thing that I thought about earlier too.
Tue, 15 May 2007 11:43:31 GMT
The Complete Bootleg Woodstock 69 - ID3 (ID3v2) tags
A few weeks ago, I was searching for ID3 (ID3v2) tags for The Complete Bootleg Woodstock 69 collection for a friend of mine. I was able to find them at FreeDB but: