Disclaimers: 1. The views expressed in this blog are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the organization he works for. 2. This site uses cookies from Google and other third-party service providers to deliver its services, to personalize ads and to analyze traffic. Information about your use of this site is shared with Google and other third-party service providers. By using this site, you agree to its use of cookies.
My Facebook homepage is completely flooded with messages from this application as people flock to use it - its like a candy bar from childhood! Or is it?
I suddenly started thinking about why this app was suddenly so popular.
So, what basically is sarahah?
As per this Indiatoday article, the term "sarahah" itself means honesty and the app lets you be "honest" (more on that later) ?! You get to choose an anonymous identity while posting a message to anyone (who has the app) and it supposedly leads to fun and a good amount of guessing!
Suddenly my thoughts went to childhood and a red landline phone that we had. Missed calls were fun! No caller ID, so you could not guess who it is who suddenly remembered you! You could say a lot without saying anything and it was left solely to the perception of the person hearing the missed call.
Perception meant - to each his own.
My mother probably thought - one of those irritating wrong numbers. My father probably thought - a test from the local telephone department and I... I thought - may be 'that girl' was giving me a call? (Smiles) Teenage... I tell ya!
So, after all these years and all (well, almost all) kinds of experiences, when I see people posting messages with this app and reacting strangely, I get a strange feeling. Sometimes the reactions are funny, sometimes silly, sometimes angry... well in short, I get to see almost all kinds of reactions.
But question is, does it really promote honesty? Does honesty imply, you hide your face, say something and then go into hiding again, secretly feeling elated at the reaction of your anonymous post? Sorry, is that honesty or hypocrisy?
I see, why this app can have a dizzying effect on teenagers... yes its the same feeling I had with missed calls (God knows who!), but is it honest? I do not think so! Now all of you are entitled to your own opinion and I would like to hear from you.
I did have a different idea about anonymous blogging. There used to be a platform, but it has been taken down. Anonymous blogging is not targeted at anyone. But sometimes, people just need to say aloud things to no one, not because of the need of being heard but because of the need of expressions.
We may or may not need a ear, but we cannot have our voice stifled. That is worse than death!
How is sarahah (haha!) is different from anonymous blogging?
Sarahah is designed to elicit a reaction.
It is targeted at specific people.
The expected reaction after seeing the message is the prime motivation of the one posting it.
Anonymous blogging is not designed to elicit a reaction.
It is used to vent out, free up the mind, rant.
The motivation to it is simply to be at peace with self.
Disconnection from the whole material world.
Yes it is honest, brutally so!
Anonymous blogging is honest, brutally so! Sarahah is just a passing fad! People will get over it!
Agree? Disagree? Not formed an opinion yet? Come on! Write in comments. Would love to hear from you!
I woke up today and was greeted with a WhatsApp notification. I thought it was Sunday morning and it took a bit of time for me to open up my eyes. With half closed eyes, I unlocked my phone and checked the detail of the notification.
I was greeted with a friend's message - "Happy Friendship Day!"
Throughout the day on numerous channels like Facebook, Twitter, blogs - you name it, this message trended. In fact I checked Indiblogger a while back and saw this message trending as well.
Then I thought where did it generate. We all know about Valentine's Day. But friendship day! Since when and why?
The life of Mr. Hall was pretty inspiring. You may like reading it here.
Although I did not find an older documented chronicle on the advent of friendship day, the history of friendship is arguably as old as the history of civilization. Human beings have forever celebrated friendship in as many ways as we could imagine.
In the age of social networking, a person can have a thousand friends and sometimes even more. However, it conflicts with the theory of Dunbar's number. The number proclaims a cognitive limit of the number of friends a human being can have stable relationship with. As per research conducted by Mr. Dunbar, 150 is the number.
Facebook today threatens this number - at least we think so! Mr Dunbar himself realized this and in 2010 did a study on Facebook.
The interesting thing is that you can have 1,500 friends, but when you actually look at traffic on sites, you see people maintain the same inner circle of around 150 people that we observe in the real world. People obviously like the kudos of having hundreds of friends but the reality is that they're unlikely to be bigger than anyone else's.
Now, this is something each of us can realize and probably tell how much of it is true. But the question remains, commodification of friendship wherein we send greeting cards and call people reminding them of the special day is probably fine. However, if we go beyond and flaunt number of contacts on a social networking site branding all of them as friends, does it align with our basic human abilities? We do not know. Getting a like or a positive comment does add a feel good factor to our psyche and it does provide impetus to our brain's reward center. But does that classify the actions as borne out of friendship? Does it always do that?
That's a question, that I leave to you readers to ponder upon.
I'll close this with this lovely quote by Edgar A Guest.
"I'd like to be the sort of friend that you have been to me. I'd like to be the help that you've been always glad to be; I'd like to mean as much to you each minute of the day, as you have meant, old friend of mine, to me along the way."
I have been thinking of what to write this evening when I started toggling between my JIO and BSNL connectivity and then figured out - well what the heck, lets write on how these two are faring at the moment.
Frankly speaking since the day I got a JIO connection, life has been good. Got a Netflix subscription and am watching movies just like how I did in the USA! Woohoo! The speed usually is pretty okay, barring one or two stops along the way and 1 minute of buffering right when the streaming starts.
Netflix gave me a free one month trial, so all the more reason for rejoicing. I'll write more on that some tome.
But anyway, today evening I noticed that the speed of JIO was little on the slower side than usual and I decided to do a speedtest and post it here.
Note: I have a BSNL UL 950 plan and a JIO per day 1GB plan.
Here are the results conducted via speedtest.net.
BSNL (wifi)
JIO (wifi)
....
The page did not open. Yeah you saw that right. After this famous speed test conducted by Ookla Llc (who owns speedtest.net) where they judged Airtel to have better speed than Jio, apparently a Jio network does not even let anyone test speed using their site.
I went to TRAI's site to see if they had a way for normal users to check speeds.
But they do not currently have a way to do that. They however have pre-populated statistics on average speeds of various internet service providers.
So, in conclusion, I did not get a chance to test JIO's internet speed with the limited means I had.
But should they have blocked speedtest.net even though they did not endorse the method of test conducted? That is a question I leave to you to get opinions on.
PS. The first part of this article was written on a BSNL network and the second part on a JIO WiFi.
So much to observe, always. I make it a point to observe everything around me whenever I travel, specially when solo. Today was no exception. I was waiting patiently at the Baguiati bus stop, when I noticed few interesting situations.
Situation 1:
4 guys, labourers by profession, suddenly begin arguing and 2 of them are almost on the brink of a messy fight, when rest of the guys stop and pacify them. The dialogues were all difficult to make out from a distance.
They say , "Never raise your voice, improve your argument".
Situation 2:
A couple on a motor bike stops near where I stood and begin arguing. The lady seems older than the man, but the relationship is not clear apparently. She suddenly breaks down and shake the guy. Then she sits hopelessly on the nearby footpath. The guy sits next to her. They continue to chat. The lady is still emotionally charged. The guy looks cooler and I understand that he has noticed me observing them. I look away.
Situation 3:
Suddenly it starts raining. Kolkata these days have some good covered rickshaws. I noticed one locked near me. I sneaked in under its shade. The owner was having his tiffin somewhere nearby. He saw me and came back. He then scrutinized me without saying a word as if evaluating if I am capable of stealing his rickshaw. Somehow he seemed convinced that I do not pose a risk and got back to his den.
I thanked him silently for letting me keep my observations going from the temporary shade offered by the rickshaw.
I took a hiatus from blogging in between. You know - work and stuff.
But anyway, 2:39AM IST now and I have been thinking of posting something.
Let me narrate an incident from this evening today.
While returning, I saw an auto rickshaw standing by, with a queue of people there, but curiously no one was ready to board the auto.
I was in a hurry and decided to avail it without looking at who were my co-passengers. The moment I sat inside, I was greeted by my co-passenger.
Co-passenger1: "Ei je dada, apni to sundor uthe boslen.. aar oi dekhun oi lok gulo keu uthlo na! ki hoto bolun to uthle?"
Translated: "Hey brother, see how well you sat beside me and those guys standing in queue.. they were not ready to sit beside me.. come on! what could I have done?"
[The fact was - this guy was drunk - completely, hopelessly drunk. I could smell him no matter how I wished I would not. This guy was apparently very happy with me. In his report card, I had got letter marks already, simply because I chose to sit beside him. Drunk folks identify only two kinds of people - the "my dear" ones, their favourites and the ones they bitterly hate and would kill if given a chance. Anyway, he continued blabbering...]
Co-passenger1: "Ei jodi kono meye bosto, bindaas uthe bosto pashe... chhele to ami! pochhondo holo na..."
Translated: "If I was a girl, anyone there in the queue would have jumped into this seat. I am a guy, that's why they did not like me."
[Meanwhile co-passenger 2 speaks up from the front seat, equally drunk.]
Co-passenger2: "Ki re... meye ra to aageo bosto na, ekhon chhelerao boschhe na... tor ki hobe re?"
Translated: "Hey buddy! Earlier women would avoid you, now even men are avoiding! What will happen to you?" [I heard a snoring sound and figured out that there was another one sitting on the opposite side, probably the worst affected by the ordeal, snoring already.]
Co-passenger1: "Ki re lalu! Oth oth, ese gelo je!"
Translated: "Hey Lalu! Get up buddy, we have almost reached."
[We did reach soon and Lalu had a tough time maintaining his balance and keeping his shoes intact in his feet. I glanced casually and got going.]
In India, unfortunately, I have had bitter experience with RPF (Railway Protection Force) in the year 2000. The nightmares just were refreshed once I read about this news. I recall writing to a prominent daily about the incident as well, but it was not published. Not that I care, as I have this wonderful platform to reach out to the world.
So, it was 16 years back when this incident happened. My parents and I were traveling in Kanchenjunga Express traveling from Sealdah to Farakka. We were traveling in a chair car, reserved seats. The travel started well and we boarded on time. The journey was eventless till the train reached the Bardhaman station.
At the Bardhaman station, there was a sudden rush and many people entered our compartment. It was suddenly too crowded around us. Once the crowd thinned, we suddenly noticed that our main suitcase was gone from the overhead bin! Gone! Disappeared, without a trace! The moment we noticed it, my father and I ran frantically towards the exit trying to see who took it. The people around us did not even care. No one had noticed anything! (Of course!) I even saw few people smiling at our tragedy, which shocked me. One of them was a junior guy from the school where I studied. (I hope he has developed some sense of empathy in all these years. If he is still a moron, all the best to him.)
Anyway, we descended from the train and went to register a complaint with the RPF posted there.
When my father politely narrated the incident to them, their first question was - "Are you making this up?" We said - "No". Then we requested to have the complaint registered, to which they said, "There are no pages left in the complaint book. You have to bring a page and write it down." We got a page and then I asked for a pen. None of the officers had any pen. Would you believe that?
At this point, I am not sure how my father felt, but I was filled with a mix of myriad emotions ranging from anger, disbelief, sadness and anxiety! We understood pretty well that it would not work out as the people we were dealing with were potentially hands in gloves with the criminals.
Our thoughts transcended to the fact that my mother was sitting alone in the train crying her hearts out and the train could get started any moment. We decided to leave the matter and get back in the compartment.
I suddenly remembered the incident thinking if RPF has really changed. I am still filled with disbelief. I have seen the system. I did not like it. Have India progressed in 16 years? Really? Can someone confirm?
Well, 16 years on, dial 182 in case if you face any issues in an Indian train. Consider yourself lucky if someone responds.
Delighted to let you know that I have published my first book on Leanpub.
This is based on the subject of stress management. Although I do not have a formal education in psychology, most of the stuff in the book is based out of my own experience and independent research on the subject.
The book can be purchased absolutely FREE, although if you like it I would appreciate a contribution.
I hope you find it useful.
More than anything else, please let me know how you liked it or if you did not and, if there is something I needed to improve upon.
Your feedback will provide me with the inspiration that I need.
Not that there is a dearth in number of articles on or around India and yet, sometimes it appears, the general population is not much aware of India as they are about some of the other prominent nations in the world. This article is a humble attempt at uncovering some of the mysteries surrounding India by someone like me, who has seen some of the best (and some of the worst) of both worlds!
This is the first part of a series of articles on India and her people.
So, are you some time planning to visit India and not sure what to expect? Let me start with some bullet points on what exactly you should not miss if you are travelling to India.
1. Architecture
Do not miss the ancient architecture in various states. Some prominent ones are provided below:
Taj Mahal, Agra
Taj Mahal was built in 1632 by the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan to house the remains of his cherished wife, the Taj Mahal stands on the southern bank of the Yamuna River in Agra, India. It remains one of the major wonders in the world and has inspired generations throughout history.
Victoria Memorial Hall, Kolkata
On the death of Queen Victoria in January 1901, Lord Curzon, who was then Viceroy of India, placed before the public the question of setting up a fitting memorial to the Queen. He suggested that the most suitable memorial would be a "stately", spacious, monumental and grand building surrounded by an exquisite garden.
The memorial houses a wonderful historical museum and visited by hundreds of people every day. Kolkata, as a city, is well known as the place where the Victoria Memorial is situated.
Konark Sun Temple
Sun Temple of Konark, built in the middle of 13th century, is a massive conception of artistic magnificence and engineering dexterity. King Narasimhadeva I, the great ruler of the Ganga dynasty had built this temple, with the help of 1200 artisans within a period of 12 years (1243-1255 A.D.). Since the ruler used to worship the Sun, the temple was considered as a chariot for the Sun God. Konark Temple was designed in the form of a gorgeously decorated chariot mounted on 24 wheels , each about 10 feet in diameter, and drawn by 7 mighty horses.
The temple at Khajuraho
The temple of Khajuraho is well known for the architectural marvel as well as for many figures inscribed throughtout the architecture - with exquisite details.
Most Khajuraho temples were built between 950 and 1050 CE by the Chandela dynasty.
The Mahabodhi Temple Complex is one of the four holy sites related to the life of the Lord Buddha, and particularly to the attainment of Enlightenment. The first temple was built by Emperor Asoka in the 3rd century B.C., and the present temple dates from the 5th or 6th centuries. It is one of the earliest Buddhist temples built entirely in brick, still standing in India, from the late Gupta period.
While there are hundreds of other architectural marvels to look forward to, this article is merely a first part of a series on India and the others will be covered in due course of time.
2. Culture of India
India is a land as diverse as you can imagine. Here are a few facts for your reference:
As per this Reuters article, India speaks 780 languages, although 220 were lost in the last 50 years!
Although with westernization majority of India (in cities) can be seen in casual wear much like the West, traditional wear is very popular as well. Have a look at some of the regional costumes in India.
Bengali:
Punjabi
Telugu
Gujarati
Kashmiri
Manipuri
Marathi
Tamil
Rajasthani
A kid dancing in traditional attire during a festival in Mewar
There are many many other costumes based on regional identities but since this is just the first part, I shall move on.
3. Food
Indian food is popular throughout the world and each region produces some of the best cuisines you can think of. While it is not possible to include every food here in this article. I shall try to place some of my favorites here and hopefully you get a chance to taste each one. Do not forget to let me know how you liked them.
Snacks / Starters
Samosa - Samosa is a triangular kind of snack that can be either veg or non-veg. It is stuffed inside with tasty spicy fillings while the crust is hardened through deep fry.
Vegetable chop / Egg cutlet: I am covering both with one picture as they both might look similar, but tastes different. Vegetable chop is created mainly with a filling of carrot cooked in spices with a crust created with bread crumbs, flour etc. and fried. Egg cutlet contains an egg filling along with filling of vegetables.
Medu vada: This is a traditional south Indian snack.
Pakoda: Pakoda can be of several kinds and I cannot pick one. They are all delicious. Can be created out of onion, paneer, chicken, mutton, bread, potato, chillies, tomatoes, spinach - well literally anything you can think of!
Main course
Fried Rice: Various ways of preparing it, can be veg as well as non-veg but delicious always
Alu paratha: Delcious to the core. Stuffed with potatoes ('alu' in hindu) fried with a soft crust of flour. Sorry I do not know how to prepare this, only know how to eat. :P
Masala dosa: A south Indian dish - very tasty. It may look like 'paratha' but it is not. It is what it is: delicious dosa!
Biryani: My favorite is the Hyderabadi dum biryani. Based on regions in India flavors and ingredients vary. For example in Kolkata you will also find potato in Biryani (which I like a lot)
Side dishes
Mutton kosha: This is more of a Bengali delicacy, prepared with goat meat. Those who eat this will be ready to forego any other dishes on that day! Thats how popular it is!
Bhapa ilish: If you love fish and know that ilish (also hilsha; scientific name: Tenualosa ilisha ) is the queen of fishes. Found mainly in the fresh water rivers. This is again a bengali delicacy and if someone can challenge mutton kosha above as the most preferred Bengali dish then this is it ! If you are interested here is the recipe. But remember this fish even after cooked has a million micro-bones. Bengalees have somehow learnt to eat fish from cats (joking) so they don't mind!
Paneer butter masala: Tasty Indian cheese curry prepared with butter. This can be mouth-watering!
...TO BE CONTINUED
Well, there are a million other dishes and a milion other stuff to discuss about India and her people, but you will have to wait for part 2 of "India... for the uninitiated". Till then, adieu !
List of references and sources used in this article:
DISCLAIMER: NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENTS INTENDED. SOURCES HAVE BEEN SPECIFIED. THE CURRENT WORK HAS BEEN CREATED FOR NON-COMMERCIAL PURPOSES WITH AN INTENT TO ONLY ENLIGHTEN THE READERS. IN CASE OF ANY CONCERN, KINDLY CONTACT THE BLOG AUTHOR ON THE 'ABOUT ME' PAGE OF THIS BLOG.
Hello everyone, I am here with yet another blog post and this time the topic is rather vast and difficult, if I may say.
So, let me start with this famous quote from Swami Vivekananda - "Education is the manifestation for perfection already in man."
The great philosopher from India assumes that perfection is inherent to mankind and just remains to be realized. This realization is brought about by proper education.
Now, one would think - How different this is from the education an average Indian receives today. Is it just about degrees and diplomas and placements? Where did knowledge go? Without knowledge how self-realization is even possible, let alone perfection.
No, the intent of this article is not to impart philosophical gyan to my esteemed readers. I am aware that most, if not all, of you are immensely knowledgeable, so my humble article does not intend to influence you in any manner.
However, my observation has been - the mode of education is changing thick and fast. I shall try to focus a little bit about education in pre-historic India and then gradually move to modern times.
Prehistoric education [Vedic age - 1500 BC – 500 BC]
We learn from Brittanica that in those days education mainly aimed to "guide children to becoming good members of their tribe or band."
The Brittanica article is immensely informative, so readers are advised to certainly take a look. I shall focus a bit on India here. Well, owing to caste system and division of labor in ancient India, only the brahmins were allowed to study as per Gurukul pratha. [I shall not discuss caste system in this article which has been long abolished in India.]
The boy would leave his father’s house and enter his preceptor’s ashrama, a home situated amid sylvan surroundings. The acarya would treat him as his own child, give him free education, and not charge anything for his boarding and lodging. The pupil had to tend the sacrificial fires, do the household work of his preceptor, and look after his cattle.
The study at this stage consisted of the recitation of the Vedic mantras (“hymns”) and the auxiliary sciences—phonetics, the rules for the performance of the sacrifices, grammar, astronomy, prosody, and etymology. The character of education, however, differed according to the needs of the caste. For a child of the priestly class, there was a definite syllabus of studies. The trayi-vidya, or the knowledge of the three Vedas—the most ancient of Hindu scriptures—was obligatory for him. During the whole course at school, as at college, the student had to observe brahmacharya—that is, wearing simple dress, living on plain food, using a hard bed, and leading a celibate life.
The period of studentship normally extended to 12 years. For those who wanted to continue their studies, there was no age limit. After finishing their education at an ashrama, they would join a higher centre of learning or a university presided over by a kulapati (a founder of a school of thought). Advanced students would also improve their knowledge by taking part in philosophical discussions at a parisad, or “academy.” Education was not denied to women, but normally girls were instructed at home.
The method of instruction differed according to the nature of the subject. The first duty of the student was to memorize the particular Veda of his school, with special emphasis placed on correct pronunciation. In the study of such literary subjects as law, logic, rituals, and prosody, comprehension played a very important role. A third method was the use of parables, which were employed in the personal spiritual teaching relating to the Upanishads, or conclusion of the Vedas. In higher learning, such as in the teaching of Dharma-shastra (“Righteousness Science”), the most popular and useful method was catechism—the pupil asking questions and the teacher discoursing at length on the topics referred to him. Memorization, however, played the greatest role.
Classical period [4th Century CE - 8th Century CE]
The 500 years from the 4th century ce to the close of the 8th, under the Guptas and Harsha and their successors, is a remarkable period in Indian history. It was the age of the universities of Nalanda and Valabhi and of the rise of Indian sciences, mathematics, and astronomy. The university at Nalanda housed a population of several thousand teachers and students, who were maintained out of the revenues from more than 100 villages. Because of its fame, Nalanda attracted students from abroad, but the admission test was so strict that only two or three out of 10 attained admission. More than 1,500 teachers discussed more than 100 different dissertations every day. These covered the Vedas, logic, grammar, Buddhist and Hindu philosophy (Sankhya, Nyaya, and so on), astronomy, and medicine. Other great centres of Buddhist learning of the post-Gupta era were Vikramashila, Odantapuri, and Jagaddala. The achievements in science were no less significant. Aryabhata in the late 5th century was the greatest mathematician of his age. He introduced the concepts of zero and decimals. Varahamihira of the Gupta age was a profound scholar of all the sciences and arts, from botany to astronomy and from military science to civil engineering. There was also considerable development of the medical sciences. According to contemporaries, more than eight branches of medical science, including surgery and pediatrics, were practiced by the physicians.
These were the main developments in education prior to the Muslim invasions, beginning in the 10th century. Nearly every village had its schoolmaster, who was supported from local contributions. The Hindu schools of learning, known as pathasalas in western India and tol in Bengal, were conducted by Brahman acaryas at their residence. Each imparted instruction in an advanced branch of learning and had a student enrollment of not more than 30. Larger or smaller establishments, specially endowed by rajas and other donors for the promotion of learning, also grew in number. The usual centres of learning were either the king’s capital, such as Kanauj, Dhar, Mithila, or Ujjayini, or a holy place, such as Varanasi, Ayodhya, Kanchi, or Nasik. In addition to Buddhist viharas (monasteries), there sprang up Hindu mathas (monks’ residences) and temple colleges in different parts of the country. There were also agrahara villages, which were given in charity to the colonies of learned Brahmans in order to enable them to discharge their scriptural duties, including teaching. Girls were usually educated at home, and vocational education was imparted through a system of apprenticeship.
Now, let me skip the middle portion. Assume that I ride a time machine, have a long journey, a real comfortable sleep and land directly in 2015.
Education today
As per 2012-2013 statistics,
There are 700 degree granting institutions and 35,500 affiliate colleges in India which provide full-time, part-time as well as distance education.
The new trend
Now the trend that I have been noticing is - with the advent of internet, gradually online education is becoming popular. Welcome to virtual education, they say. Now, these do not offer degrees or diplomas. They may or may not even provide certificates. But some salient points about these options are -
You study at your own pace, unless there is a homework to submit
You receive world-class education from renowned universities from the confines of your home.
The credibility of some of these facilitators like EDX, Coursera, Khan Academy, Udemy, Codecademy etc. etc. is gradually being recognized even by various organizations.
Many of the top-notch universities are also providing these programmes directly.
You have to go through the drill. The focus is not on memorizing sentences but on grasping concepts and applying them to real-world situations. The knowledge quotient is high.
So, now, dear readers - Did you ever take such a course? Would like to know your experiences and how it helped you in your career.
Conclusion
Education has evolved a lot over the years - specially, the focus and the importance of subjects of study. One thing, that however has remained unchanged is the importance of knowledge and the way students can apply it in real world situations. The evaluation techniques are also evolving with many courses allowing open book tests. The main focus seem to be on skill building and application of skills acquired. The mode is immaterial, more informal and should I say, smart. Even grading techniques have changed a lot. It remains to be seen how this can evolve further. Hopefully, the purpose of education will continue to stay the same - "...to drive the manifestation for perfection already in man. "
PS. The views expressed in this article are my own and may not reflect the thoughts of the organization I work for. All feedback appreciated.
My last article was written well over a year back. So much has transpired since then...
I sometimes sit and wonder how many different things I have been juggling with, in life. I am not even talking about work here.
My current stimulus to blogging comes from the fact that my better half has created a blog of her own, which I honestly believe is awesome. That blog is supposed to be bi-lingual (languages being Bengali and English) and will (probably) focus on history, the subject she did her masters in.
Anyway, so now that I have started to pen this article. I am wondering what to write about. So many things happened within this last one year, that I do not even know where to start and where to end. Micro-blogging and Facebook have taken up more of my time, I would think, the time I used to allocate to my passion for writing.
Let me think for a moment.
I have been thinking about writing a blog based on my learning and work in analytics and the current trends. I believe it will serve as a good exercise for me and a way to gather feedback from my esteemed readers as well.
Machine learning and big data -
Over the past few days, I explored the topics of machine learning. One of the things that I definitely found exciting was the ability for smart systems to learn over time, gather experience and use that experience to make more accurate predictions after adjusting the underlying algorithms. This is smart, almost as smart as a human could get. As long as the initial set up is accurate and thoroughly tested, the end results could be amazing.
I have been exploring some of the popular machine learning technologies in the market today. I checked out BigML the other day. BigML provides a nice user interface where you can create a free basic account, set up a source, create a dataset, create a model and generate predictions. The user interface is really intuitive and you can play with the data even if you do not have vast knowledge in statistics, although, yes a basic knowledge would be expected.
The other technology that I explored was IBM Watson Analytics, floated by the Big blue. Now, this I felt, is huge. Before I go into what I explored about this, take a look at the video from Jeopardy.
IBM Watson participated in this competition, 'his' competitors being the very smart Ken and Brad. However, Watson triumphed.
From the official IBM site, here is what we know about Watson, in brief -
Since its triumph on the television quiz show Jeopardy! IBM has advanced Watson’s capabilities and made it available via the cloud. Watson now powers new consumer and enterprise services in the health care, financial services, retail and education markets. IBM has also opened the Watson platform to developers and entrepreneurs, enabling them to build and bring to market their own powered by Watson applications for a variety of industries.
So, what I did was I created a basic account on the Watson analytics portal and played a little bit with a sample data set. Although I am not a Watson analytics expert I found it very intuitive and learned new insights about the data. Apart from providing me answers to my own questions, Watson analytics also provided interesting relationship insights between data points. It even allowed me to take a look at the data closely - the quality of the data in the different columns, which ones were good, which ones were not that good, in terms of percentages. So, I was even able to carry out a refinement of the data and that allowed me to get an improved data set which I would again feed into the system and get more accurate insights. I did all of these with a basic account, but I am sure I would have been provided with more options and more detailed capabilities had I had a paid account.
But in summary, did I like it? Yes I did.
I have had an analytics background in the past, having worked with Data Warehousing technologies for well over 9 years and this, I believe, is the next big thing. When you have an intelligent system that is learning from the data and making itself smarter over time, it makes a whole different story than what we have seen in the past. This is the next age - the age of data.
Data is everywhere. Every keystroke I make. Every phone call. Every mobile text. Every tweet. Every word I say. Everything is data and we call this humongous volume of data as Big Data. How we tap into it to gather insight is the science which we have come to know as "Data Science".
The challenge we have here is to tap into this data in order to gain actionable insights. Every company (well almost every company) today have their own Data Warehouse with capabilities to generate analytics in order to further enhance their footprint on the market. But what next ! Predictive analytics is something that will provide the cutting edge to these organizations.
Take a look at this article on how Google monitors us today. In this age of internet and social networking, one is tempted to go out to the world and make connections, be vocal and every little thing you do is tracked. The advertisements that you see on the gmail sidebar will more likely reflect something related to the last item you searched on Google ! And that is just a tiny example of what Google knows about you. In essence every person browsing the internet and using the hallowed search engine probably has some kind of a profile created - habits, likes, dislikes, beliefs - every little detail that probably even your partner is unaware of. Is that scary? Yes, definitely. Can you do anything about it? Probably not.
Sorry for digressing. So that "Google example" I just gave above is also part of analytics and data and big amount of data or big data.
The fact remains - Yes, data is the next best natural resource and if we know how to churn it well, it can make the world a better place. How?
Could we have predicted the way this gunman opened fire on innocents, yes I am referring to the Louisiana shooting. From the news article it looks like it was a planned out act by the person. If so, how did he plan it? What kind of Internet footprints did he leave? What were his facebook updates or his twitter tweets? What did he message? The police will of course find out everything, but we are working on reactive analytics.
Could we have been proactive? Could we have, based on the real time data, predicted that there was a 80% chance (I just put a number as an example) of this person getting violent and contributing to mass genocide? That is exactly where we wish to do with Big Data, with predictive analytics, with machine learning.
All feedback appreciated.
PS. The views expressed in this article are my own and do not necessarily represent the thoughts of the organization I work for.
I stare around me. I see people - faces, emotions, logic, disdain, faith, virtue, anger, happiness, peace and probably everything else you can think of. Sometimes I feel - Did I really sign up for these? Lessons or assignments… Was I meant to be the one to solve this mystery called life? I figure - "Yes ofcourse".
And guess what, I cannot leave this classroom till the assignments are over. How I fare, what I do, how I solve… well, I do not know if it matters. There was a time in childhood, when elders told me - it mattered. But then, there were two view points - few people brought past life into the equation as well. I was like - "what?" Confirm me if I deal with tasks for this life only or are there carry-forwards from the past as well? I doubt if anyone has the answer…
Sometimes I ask myself - how do I feel? And I smile and say - "I am happy…"
"I am happy because life gave me much more than I ever wanted. I am happy because I am more fortunate than a huge chunk of the world's population. I am fortunate that I can vent my views freely. sometimes, I can vent some of my views freely. What is it with me? Am I scared? Am I timid? Scared of what - one might question. Scared of the unknown.
The unknown - Do you ever fear the unknown? Ever? Has it ever occurred to you that what you do not know yet might be the cause for your greatest misery and pain? And the worst part is, you are just helpless. There is absolutely nothing you can do about it. Does it erase my happiness? It does. Does it change my behavior? It does.
Sometimes I feel, if everybody thought the same way, what would happen? Person X thinks like Y and Y thinks like Z and just like that, every living human being thinks and acts identical. This can probably have two implications - either everyone will start fighting or everyone will be at peace and of course, the world would lack variety.
Variety of thoughts essential to make the world click. Thoughts are what make or break us.
Incoherent thoughts like this post of mine, for example, does not add any value. Oh wait, probably it does, it clears up the mind…
Image courtesy: Internet (no copyright infringements intended)
When we do good, we say - its all His blessing.
When we do bad, we say - its all His curse.
When we are inflicted pain, we pray for His mercy and pray for punishment of the perpetrators.
When we inflict pain, we say we are doing justice, as per His wishes.
When we die in conflict, we say we attained immortality and bliss in heaven ruled by Him.
What really happens -
We are actually good at passing the buck at someone, without taking responsibility of our actions. We are weak inside!
When we do good, we have worked hard to achieve whatever we do.
When we do bad, we have actually not done justice to our capabilities.
When we are inflicted pain, we allow those to inflict such pain. We become weak ourselves!
When we inflict pain, we are blinded by rage, by envy, by greed, by ego and we attribute it to a "cause".
When
we die in conflict, we are bruised, hurt, injured before... we are in
pain and yet, it gives a mental satisfaction to think we will have
something better in another world. Ironically, we are imagining a world
that no one alive today has ever seen.
My research and
experiments on past life regression does give ideas on happiness and
peace, but in no way, conforms to the detailed accounts that people
world-over believe in.
Albeit faith is strong, but faith alone is not sufficient...
May the uniform ability of mankind to question scenarios be ignited indefinitely with an end to his blind belief!
Image source: Internet, no copyright infringement intended.
People often ask me about the best ways to achieve optimum privacy on a social networking site like facebook. You know, friends, I am an avid Facebooker and I do get a lot of inspiration from interacting with friends and also from my daily philosophical intake. But there are a few things I feel each one should follow.
What is a profile?
Think of an analogy. Let a Facebook profile be a real image of yourself. You stroll in a market full of strangers. What do the strangers see? You! Your face, how you look, some may notice. Others may not.
Makes sense to give a profile snap. But wait, there is a difference. People who hit your facebook profile are deliberately checking you out without you even knowing it. But in real life, we can sometimes get to know when someone checks us out. So why take chances?
To do -
1. Make sure that the photo is visible to public, but not clickable. Advantages - You are preventing downloads of your photo on someone's personal machine, which further lowers the chances of the photos getting photoshopped or worse, misused.
2. Watch out for posts that you share with "public"... posts like - "I bought a diamond jewellary from zaveri brothers" could be tracked by someone stalking you. Do not take chances! Facebook has wonderful custom setting. If you wish to tell someone something, will you go and shout on a loudspeaker? unless it is an announcement? Probably not... Share stuff only with those who need to know. That way you are minimizing information overload on friends and also refraining from blurting out information to people who could do without it.
Followers?
Hmm... welcome to the age of publicity! That I am writing this post may mean I am expecting some likes? Well, not really, I feel, so I write. If it is helpful to someone, I'll feel good. Off late I have come across non-celebrity profiles followed by thousands of people. I was puzzled by the reason as seriously I did not find any worthwhile "content"... but wait a minute. Two things - 1. The profile belonged to a girl, 2. The profile had attractive snaps! Bingo! Thats the reason for likes! It is understandable that people wish to become leaders. But unless you are a celebrity like Aishwarya or Hrithik, trust me you would not wish for that kind of publicity. The hard fact is - sharing and download is rampant for Facebook photos. Anything you post on internet today stays there forever. Take care of what you post!
To do -
1. It feels good to get some publicity. But it is even better to know why you are famous! If it is looks that people are after you for, well, unless you are pursuing a modelling career, watch out! You are being stalked with thousands recognizing you and following your every movement!
Know your friends
There was a time when I took pride in the number of friends on my friends list - not any more. What matters is quality, not quantity! Unless you know the person in real life or have interacted enough to know that the person is genuine, please do not add him / her. Might feel bad, but you are asking for trouble, otherwise!