Archive for category Technology
Why iPad does not interest me?
Posted by veetrag in Technology on January 28, 2010
Apple today announced its much hyped product iPad. Steve Jobs introduced the product as something in between iPhone and McBook. When he explained this, it made perfect sense to me and by the time presentation ended I wanted to get one. Price point for 16 GB device is $499 and it seems reasonable for a multi touch device with sharp OLED display, Apple A4 processor and wifi connectivity. A flurry of application that seems to attract you at once are incorporated in the device and many more better applications and games would be developed in future. Most attractive application would be iBook which makes iPad direct competitor to Kindle.
Here are the two main reasons that made me change my mind:
Do I really need a device between iPod touch (which I own) and a laptop? I looked for its usage and tried to see which all situations I will need an iPad. When I am commuting I use my iPod to listen to music/podcast etc. When I am in cafe, college etc I use iPod to browse and do normal internet work. For all complex tasks I use my laptop. Where does iPad fit? I can’t use it to listen to music, so I will have to carry iPod and I can’t work on some essential software if I use iPad. An argument can be made about web applications taking over desktop applications but I still prefer my old style keyboard to be used. iPad has a dockable keyboard but is it easy to carry it all the time and when at home why not use laptop?
Many people called it Kindle killer but I don’t see that happening. Undoubtedly reading books on a colored screen would be pleasure but it will cause significant strain on eye. OLED is good for shorter reading periods but prolonged usage will cause serious strain. Kindle not only will provide E Ink based display which is much more pleasant to eyes. Kindle despite being black and white, and with poor UI will score better. Adding to that would be Kindle’s content deals with publishers and recently released SDK that will help developers come up with better tools.
I am happy that device came up, it will not revolutionize the industry but will push industry to come up with better devices. We will have a surge of eBook readers soon in market as well as help in raising standards for Netbook. Another added benefit would be that Kindle’s prices will come down and I am waiting for that day.
Life Changing Habit – Podcasts
Posted by veetrag in Technology on January 4, 2010
Four years back I bought a Sony Ericsson w700i and along with that I adopted a habit that changed a lot of things in my life. That habit is listening to podcasts and I started with the best tech podcast of all time – This Week in Tech (TWiT) by Leo Laporte. I got hooked to it so much that these days I listen to at least 2 hours of audio, either in form of podcast or audio books. Listening to podcasts have not only helped me gain knowledge but helps me while running on treadmill or otherwise, makes me walk to and fro college rather than taking bus, and provides sufficient humor and keeps up to date with world.
This year I got addicted to a new tech podcast – Buzz Out Loud (BOL) and listened to all 1,100 episodes. The combination of BOL on weekdays and TWiT on weekends completes the cycle. And its not just tech news but expert analysis helps one achieve a new perspective of things. Complex topics like net neutrality, Google book lawsuit, Iran protests, etc were talked at length and helped me better understand it from different perspectives.
Here is a list of top 5 podcasts
- TWiT – This Week in Tech is the best podcast ever. Leo Laporte with along his wide range of guests dissects every issue as well as provide a good deal of ‘geek humor’.
- BOL – Buzz Out Loud provides daily analysis of news. Hosts Tom Merritt and Jason Howell along with panel of Molly Wood, Natali Del Conte, Brian Tsong and others make this one of the top podcasts.
- This Week in Google – Another one from Leo’s empire. Expert hosts Gina Trapani, and Jeff Jarvis help analyze Google news/tools/services etc along with expert guests. Must listen for all Google lovers.
- GDGT – Two best experts on gadgets Ryan Block and Peter Rojas talk about gadgets and much more. Their analysis and review is unmatched. Must listen for gadget lovers.
- This Week in Photography – One more from Leo’s empire, as name suggests it is a podcast from photographers. It provides all the information that one needs for photography.
How Facebook Quizzes are risk to privacy?
I found out about this quiz from American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) on This Week in Tech (TWiT) and thought sharing this information is important. This quiz (yep, its a quiz to demonstrate how harmful they can be) tells you the data accessible to third party applications when you give these small quizzes. Worst part about this is, you do not just give your information but also provide information about all your friends. Even all the private information like political view, birth year, preferences, current location about your friends is accessible to these third party applications. To prove the point ACLU displays some information as you can see on the screenshot below.
As you notice private information about my friends is accessible to them and these third parties can be anyone, not have to be a reputable organization. That’s why These quizzes should be avoided. Even Facebook does not have control (as of now) on how this information can be used/misused.
Update: here is an article on how to secure some of your data after recent FB policy changes.
Update:
Facebook has added the privacy settings option so one can select what his/her friends can share about him/her. This setting can be found under ‘Privacy settings > Applications and Website > What your friends can share about you‘

Interplanetary Internet – Vint Cerf
Posted by veetrag in Technology, Web on December 10, 2009
Part II of The Unfinished Internet. Here Vint Cerf discusses the new challenge, how to extend Internet to different planets and what are the issues associated with TCP/IP that does now allow that.
Interplanetary Internet – Vint Cerf from Kumar Veetrag on Vimeo.
‘The Unfinished Internet’ by Vint Cerf
Posted by veetrag in Live, Technology, Web on December 7, 2009
10:51 AM – Vint Cerf is already here, presentation is up and hall is almost full.
11:01 AM – Introduced by someone from Computer Science department. Widely recognized as father of internet because of his contribution to TCP/IP. Currently holds position of Chief Internet Evangelist at Google. Pioneering work in packeting technology and won many awards,. I believe all information about this is on Wikipedia.
The Unfinished Internet – Vint Cerf, Google from Kumar Veetrag on Vimeo.
Why Facebook is not attractive anymore?
Earlier this year I did a podcast on Facebook platform and why it is attractive. But since then I am losing interest in Facebook’s capabilities and thus this blog post. In that podcast we discussed how Facebook connect/Google connect are going to be used as openIDs and would help build communities around external sites. Those things have not changed but my understanding of social communication had changed.
Everyone indulges in few types of communication – private, public, official and collaborative. As I see, I have better tools for everything that I mentioned. For private communication IM suits perfectly, a one on one real time communication. Public communication can be achieved via Twitter, especially its capabilities have enhanced with excellent clients like Tweetdeck and Seesmic. Twitter also changed the default settings of ‘replies’ going to all your followers, and that has helped in improving twitter experience. Official communication can be achieved via emails and collaboration via Groove, Google docs or Wave. These all makes you wonder the importance of Facebook?
I use Facebook for three purposes – Photo sharing, Social calendar and Social games (yes, I used to play Farmville). Facebook has grown to be the biggest photo sharing site, since it has advantage of tagging people it is attractive but one cannot upload hi-res photos and that’s what bothers me. Secondly, how many photos one wants to share, I think I have hit my limit (not FB’s limit). Social calendar has been a really cool feature and I used it a lot too, but integration of Google Calendar, Gmail and iPhone calendar has worked much better for me. This combination does not tell me who is attending or not attending an event, but if I care about that I can always use email/IM. No comments about social games, they are addictive but scandalous.
My usage of Facebook has reduced drastically, they tried to bring together the experience of IM, but its broken; email, but it has limited capabilities – no forwarding/adding of new recipients, just reply not reply-all, no attachments; calendar, but its not open to exchange (microsoft or other formats); real time updates, but not as efficient as twitter. This does not mean that Google or Twitter has taken market share, it just means that Facebook is losing its capabilities in keeping people at hand. We cannot see it now as it has reached critical mass and growing rapidly, but as I see, people will start (or have started) losing interest in Facebook. Its main strength was to bring people back to site but that seems to be weakening, combined with the advertising fraud, no proper source of revenue, I see Facebook will have to come up with a plan to keep in this business or they will be the Friendster of 2010.
The Way They Think!
Posted by veetrag in Technology on June 30, 2009
This post is (exactly) not about GDGT podcast, but about their
founders Peter Rojas and Ryan Block. I have been following them since Peter used to work at Gizmodo and when they started Engadget.
I like the way they think and kind of perspective they bring to the table. In the gadget world which moves too fast and it’s very hard to predict what customer want, they have done excellent job not only reviewing products but figuring out what’s best for consumers. Testimonial for that is the open letter to Palm they wrote few years back asking them to add certain features people would like. Palm followed some of their advice as we see in the response from Palm and in the release of Pre we see most of the suggestions have been taken care of. It is not hard to make a list of suggestion but to have realistic suggestions based on consumer behavior and predicting what people would like to have, is hard and they succeeded in that.
Most of the time when I review product we miss few details or I just see it from few perspectives. Sometimes I am a fanboy and overlook things that I should not have. But these guys view it from different levels, understand the maturity of market, analyze market segments, government regulations, competitions, technological barriers, complexity of implementation and provide us a complete picture. The picture informing us how, when and why about the gadget rather than just praising or ranting about it.
I believe one should have an understanding like that if he wants to talk about that subject. That makes one the best in the business. That is why engadget is my favorite blog and now gdgt appears to be top podcast. Even if you are not interested in gadgets listen to gdgt once, just to understand how analysis of any topic should be done.
And if you are technically inclined you should listen to these three podcasts – This Week in Tech, GDGT and Buzz Out Loud.
Windows Server 2003 needs Floppy for RAID
Posted by veetrag in Technology on June 20, 2009
I faced a unique problem yesterday, while installing RAID drivers for Windows Server 2003. I have setup RAID on many Linux distributions but this was my first chance with Windows Server.
As we know, the option is to press ‘F6′ as soon as the windows setup starts and we will get a prompt at later stage to provide RAID drivers. I tried that option and was surprised to find that it asked me to provide a floppy with drivers. I was rubbing my eyes to see if I have read it properly or not, but it was written clearly – No floppy drive found, please install floppy drive or F3 to quit or ESC to install OEM drivers. I thought ESC was the best option but that gives a BSOD in few minutes with error code 0x0000007B. Googling it I figured out a lot of people have faced similar issue.
To solve this problem, one needs to find a floppy drive and fit into the system. Then comes the challenging task of finding a floppy which works properly and does not ask to format every time you insert it in. If you are trying to install Intel Matrix Storage system, you can find the instructions here (PDF). After preparing floppy, it will give few more options and installation will continue in general fashion.
My question to Microsoft is – Why in a advanced server system would you put only floppy as a medium to install drivers? What purpose does that solve? Even if we say it was in 2002 you build that OS, why don’t give other medium to install or provide a patch that will fix the issue and we won’t face a problem in 2009. At what blood alcohol concentration level MS developers work?

source (XKCD – http://xkcd.com/323/)
Simulating Twitter groups
A set of tweets in a language I don’t understand made me think of about the problem of twitter groups. Many a when I tweet I face the problem that I am going to annoy my followers who are not interested in certain topics such as F1, Cricket or Web2 technologies. Since we have been waiting for long about Twitter groups, we have come up with hashtags and clients such as Tweetdeck to resolve most of the problems. But last month twitter turned on the feature where a ‘reply’ would be visible on your timeline only if your follow the person who the ‘reply’ is addressed to. So, here is the idea how we can harness that to simulate group feature.
I will demonstrate this idea with an example: I am interested in formula1 and own the account ‘fakeF1’. People, who need to see tweets from me about F1, should follow ‘fakeF1’ because whenever I want to post a tweet, I would be replying to ‘fakeF1’. So, none of my followers who are not interested in F1 will get my F1 related posts till them come to my specific page (which is very rare). For people who do not follow me but just ‘fakeF1’ should put a search filter in their clients to get all the details about F1. We can have handles like CricketTweets, WCT20, OnlyFootball, GeekTalk etc.
Only one person has to create a dummy twitter id and it would resolve problems of many. I believe in wisdom of crowds and think this id can work brilliantly.
Twitter Suspends ‘F1′
Twitter suspended the account ‘F1‘ 3 weeks back and after I lodged a complaint I got a auto-generated response 2 weeks later. I filed my request again today like this:
I own the Twitter account @f1 for more than 2 years and have 4000+ followers. I have been using it for broadcasting Formula1 related news and manually broadcasting updates during the Formula1 race. I have been following every follower in the account and we engage in a meaningful conversation. These conversation include sports related details, comments, clarification, humor etc.
I am not violating any Trademark as F1 does not hold any trademark. Please refer to link here for court case ruling that- “Formula One Losses Trademark Fight“. I am not breaking any issues related to copyright, because mainly I collect information from sources such as Formula1 website, BBC F1 site and other popular F1 blogs and tweet the links for the followers. I also tweet updates during the race, but those fall under Fair Use.
I am also not trying to impersonate any person or team at F1, Formula1, FIA, or FOM. I give link to my blog instead of of Formula1.com in bio. Please look into the issue and check back the replies at @f1, where F1 fans have been requesting to un-suspend the account.
Regards
Kumar Veetrag
Twitter has suspended some other sports related account and TechCrunch has reported it here. Fan followers can follow me at FakeF1 till I get my account back.
Any suggestion how to approach Twitter and get this issue resolved as early as possible are welcome.
![8696943_b29837838d[1] 8696943_b29837838d[1]](http://veetrag.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/8696943_b29837838d1.jpg)