Sunday, November 23, 2008

The "Saahas" to eliminate plastic bag use

Note: This post is targeted at people living in residential complexes in Bangalore. Most of it might apply to you regardless of which city or country you live in.

We had Ms Hema Ramana from Saahas visit our apartment complex today to talk about our waste management.
A few people attended the session. I have uploaded an edited version of the session that I videotaped. Its about 10 minutes and captures the main points that were communicated.



Saahas works in the solid waste management space. While there are a lot of things that can be done, for now Saahas is asking us to actively participate in their Less Plastic for me initiative.
We are being asked to eliminate our use of plastic bags. If you wonder why plastic bags are bad, a quick look at this website will tell you why.
I did take a look today and it is a very short website (wont take more than 10 minutes, but communicates the problem very clearly). There is also an accompanying blog if you want more information and news about this issue.

What can we all do immediately:
  1. Start carrying our own bags to grocery stores and other shops. Refuse plastic bags at shops wherever possible. Hema has left a few bags with Gowda (our apartment manager). Small ones for Rs. 30 each and large ones for Rs. 150 each.
  2. Stop giving our garbage in plastic bags. Use two dustbins. Empty one and immediately wash it and dry it. Use the other one for the day while the first one dries up.

These arent easy things and will require a change in our habits. This evening I was out and while returning I decided to stop and get some groceries. Then I realized, I didnt have any of my own bags and would be forced to accept plastic bags at the store.
I could have driven back home, carried my own shopping bag and gone back to the store. But I was short on time and ended up making the compromise. I felt guilty and the least I could do was combine all my shopping in a single plastic bag.
What I am going to do now is just keep a couple of cloth bags in the trunk of my car, so I'll always have them handy if I do happen to just stop by at the store. I am sure you all can do the same.

The second item of not using plastic bags to dispose off garbage is even tougher and I am not even sure I want to do it from a hygiene perspective. What do you think? There have to be better alternatives than washing and drying dustbins daily. Hema was talking about some company selling bio-degradable garbage bags, but I do not have information about availability or cost.

What we can do in the medium term in other areas of solid waste management:
  1. If everyone in the apartment complex agrees, then we can segregate waste right at home. We will just be asked to separate dry and wet waste. Saahas will train our housekeeping staff in the building to collect it separate and keep it separate. They will then further train our housekeeping staff to segregate dry waste further.
    Saahas will help us collect dry and wet waste separately and ensure it is properly handled and not mixed up after it is picked up from our apartment. This will need some space in our apartment complex to do the secondary segregation.
  2. If we do have plastic bags and we will inevitably have some even if we reduce our usage, someone in the apartment will need to collect them and drop all the plastic bags in the facility that Saahas has in Jayanagar. (This will need one of us to volunteer)

What we can do in the long term and potentially earn revenue through our waste:

  1. A compost facility or waste processing machine located within our apartment complex or feed our wet waste into other compost facilities in HSR. (whenever they are setup).

Friday, October 31, 2008

Vote for the term "cloudworker"

Venkatesh Rao, a blogger at ribbonfarm.com who I read regularly, coined the term "cloudworker" and entered it in a contest, run by Plantronics, to update the obsolete term "telecommuter." The term is one of the 10 finalists out of over 500, and I really think it deserves to win, since it captures how remote workers today use cloud-based technology to work anywhere/anytime.

The winner will be selected by popular vote, so please go towww.plantronics.com/telewho and vote for "cloudworker". You can vote once a day between Oct 30 and Nov 7, so it'd be great if you could bookmark the link and remember to vote multiple times.

You might like Venkat's ongoing series of posts on cloudworkers:

http://www.ribbonfarm.com/2008/10/23/the-cloudworkers-creed/

Please forward this to any of your friends who are interested in 'future of work' stuff.

Friday, August 22, 2008

Ode to Bandipur Jungle

We recorded a song inspired by the sights and sounds of Bandipur Jungle


Ode to Bandipur Jungle
- By Lakshmi Javadekar and Jayesh Kapoor

Bandipur Jungle
Where the peacocks have fun
And the spotted deer run
If you wanna see
The land in harmony
This is where you come

Sambar,
Cheetal, Langoor, Bison
Drinking to their freedom
Little do they see
The tiger by the tree
Thinking Aaah !! There's lunch!

Roaaaaaaar !!

(Western style music depicting scene of desolation after the tiger has had its meal !!)

Monday, June 23, 2008

San Bruno Mountain Wildfire from up close

This evening we drove out to get some groceries from Trader Joe's and then just decided to drive around a little bit. I wanted to see the Bay side of South San Francisco and we just drove up on Oyster Point Blvd. till we reached the Genentech campus and related areas. While driving up, we noticed a small cloud of what looked like fog, but that is not too uncommon on the San Bruno Mountain. It just appeared a little pinkish and we thought that was just some kind of sunset effect.



Just 15 minutes later and it became clear that this was indeed some kind of fire. It was clearly originating from the mountain, although it seemed to come from the Brisbane side of it.



A little while later the smoke had started drifting over the Bay and it looked like it was almost reaching San Mateo Bridge. We decided to get back home soon in case the air quality got bad. While driving up on Sister Cities Blvd, we were able to actually see the flames from relatively up close.





We were able to see helicopters trying to douse the hills with water scooped up from the Bay. It really hits you how fast these fires can spread. It looked like the Brisbane side of the Mountain would have been hit worse, but as you can see from the photos, the fire had started advancing downhill on the South San Francisco side.

Last we saw in the news, they were lighting up control burns from the downside of the hill to try and starve the fires advancing from above.

Monday, January 14, 2008

Fog in Bangalore these days


This is unusual. I do not remember having seen fog this heavy in Bangalore in the past few years. I could barely see the road from my balcony

Monday, December 10, 2007

Malvika's blog

Malvika decided to enter the blogosphere.
All !! Raise your glasses and lets toast to this new kid on the blogshire block !!

Monday, September 10, 2007

Time lapse video of San Francisco evening

Taken through one full hour with photographs taken every 30 seconds, this was from the hill next to Randall museum in San Francisco.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Pramod's Chairman's Award Treat

Pramod, my close friend and colleague, recently received the Chairman's Award at MindTree. The songs and masti were during a treat given by him at Tiger Trail.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Indigo Acoustic - Acoustic college band competition

http://www.radioindigo.fm/indigo_events/Acousticcampus.htm

Will check this out today. This will be a respite from the general college rock scene (which is mostly just death metal) that I have seen around.

Thursday, September 07, 2006

My own sketch (from a photograph on Nandi hills)


The faces are difficult to do even if you are tracing on a real photograph!

Malvika's sketch (from a photograph)


The sketch was done using GIMP and is a trace on a real photograph :)

Sunday, January 01, 2006

Dinner, Stories and Games with Prashant Mehra


December 16th, 2005
We had a very nice get-together of Elance junta with Prashant at my residence. We had lots of gyaan from Prashant, some cool DumCs and over-ordering of food. Also memorable were Pramod's introductions :)
Seen in the photo standing from left to right:
Smita, Priya, Shubha, Manjiri, Murali, Pramod, Pallavi, Rajiv, Goudhaman (half standing)
Seen in the photo at the next level starting from left:
Saurabh Gupta, JP, Prashant, Shivarudrupa
Sitting at the lowest level starting from left:
Myself focused on Saurabh's cake :D, Vamsi (between Prashant and Shiva), Payal and Prashant K

Monday, December 26, 2005

My first painting using ArtRage



Created using ArtRage, a wonderful painting program that is built for painting. The most fun is using oil paints, but it also has crayons, sketch pencils, felt pens, etc. For beginners, there is a feature where you can trace over any image and it automatically chooses the brush color based on where you start your stroke. Perfect for people like me, who like coloring, but cant really get the right proportions and ratios in their images :)

Monday, June 13, 2005

Swaminomics (Evolution or Dilution)

 
"People define themselves in terms of group identities, including religion. People think of themselves in terms of religion, ethnicity, region, caste, class, and other such group characteristics. Politicians cannot ignore this. So secularists find they have to appeal to identity politics of some sort, and communal parties find they have to appeal to secularism of some sort."
 
This is scary, but you cannot argue against it. It is just idealistic to say that religion and politics cannot mix. The sad fact is that as long as people identify themselves as part of a group, politicians will use that group identity as a political lever. The only way to separate religion and politics is when people no longer care about their religious identities. Sure....like that is ever going to happen!!

Wednesday, June 01, 2005

My sister is visiting.

My sister, Bhavna Narula, is visiting me these days. I am having a gala time with her.

Thursday, May 12, 2005

Self-Replicating Robots!!

LinuxInsider carried an article about self-replicating robots. Haven't these guys seen The Matrix? Just kidding!
 
The article says that this self-replication is pretty simplistic compared to biological self-replication. In my opinion, it may be simplistic in terms of scale, but conceptually it carries a lot of the properties of biological self-replication.
  • "These robots are made up of a series of modular cubes called " molecules," each containing identical machinery and the complete computer program for replication. " That is analogous to each of our cells carrying our entire genetic code.
  • "The new robots in Lipson's lab are very dependent on their environment. They draw power through contacts on the surface of the table" We too are very dependent on our environment. We need a very specific environment to draw our power. We need the right temperature. We need the energy of the sun that gets converted through complex mechanisms to glucose burning in our cells. One could imagine if these individual cells could take solar energy and go smaller in size (if laptops and cell phones and mp3 players can, so can these cubes), we wouldn't be too far from replicating simple biological structures.
  • "They cannot replicate unless the experimenters "feed" them by supplying additional modules." Even we need a very protected environment when we replicate (or are in the early phases of replication).

In short, if these "molecules" get smaller, can derive their energy from their environment (solar?, heat?), and if one mega structure has the master-print for each of these molecules and can manufacture it from say (sand), a Matrix-like scenario isn't too far off. Half a century, what say!!

Monday, May 09, 2005

Article on Fundamentalism in The Times of India

The Times Of India carried an interview of Salman Akhtar on Fundamentalism. His views on religion resonated a lot with my own views. It was interesting to read about the six problems to cope with for being sane. Here is my take on each of these problems.
  1. Factual Uncertainty: Accepting that we cannot know what will happen in the future.
    I guess I follow a different religion here ;) called determinism. I somehow believe that given the current state of the universe, it is possible to know the future. I know about Heisenberg's uncertainty principle. I also know that the human will may not be bound to the universal calculator. As a good friend of mine, Gaurav Bhajpai, tells me "Mother Nature does not owe it to us to be explicable". However, in my most inner gut I still hold this belief that we can calculate the future. We just dont know how to today. Since this is blind faith, I call it my religion :)
  2. Conceptual Complexity: All feelings, thoughts and acts are determined by many factors
    If it were really very simple, wouldnt life be boring? I, for one, am thankful for having this problem.
  3. Moral Ambiguity: Morality changes with time and context
    If only more people accepted this, we wouldnt have so much conflict. Morality has a purpose. That purpose is to make sure that we humans lead a secure, blissful existence. Any moral law is valid as long as it fulfills this purpose. When external context changes such that a moral law no longer serves this purpose, it is obsolete and needs to be discarded.
  4. Cultural Impurity: Reality is always hybrid and there is no such thing as purity
    Purity may not exist in reality, but I do believe it is a conceptual state that one can strive towards. Purity in music, purity of emotion, pure unadulterated water, etc. etc. Nature maximizes entropy. Human efforts for organization go against this natural law. Purity in anything requires the utmost of human efforts against this natural law.
  5. Accepting personal responsibility for one's actions
    No excuses. This is a tough one. It is very easy to give excuses or cite circumstances. Even tougher to accept all of one's natural instincts as natural.
  6. Total Mortality: You are born as parental fantasies and die as your grand-children's memories.
    Not if you have a blog and google stays around for some time :) There is always a desire to leave behind something timeless. I hope this blog is fulfilling some of that atleast. But yaa.....I dont buy reincarnation or after-life.
I guess I am not a fundamentalist because I dont have too much of a problem with the problems of being sane. Good for me!!
 
But I do believe that religion has brought about a lot of "moral" behaviour in this world and I cant think of a better alternative to enforce "morality" across the masses.
 

Saturday, April 02, 2005

nandi_hills_sky


nandi_hills_sky
Originally uploaded by kapsio.
The bluest sky I ever saw in the Bangalore area. It was extremely windy and the beautiful wisps of white clouds made a painting across the sky.
You never see such blue skies in cities these days. This photo was taken during a Nandi Hills trip with Tim Rechin and JP.

Wednesday, March 30, 2005

REVA - India's First Electric Car...

It is too hot in Bangalore. Too hot to think straight! Maybe that is why I felt a deep urge to buy this miniscule electric car that can go only 80 km on a single charge! (65 km if the AC is on...and you better have it on in this weather)

My line of thinking goes like this...."Why is it so hot in Bangalore? Probably because of all these vehicles spewing out smoke and heat. Ghosh!! I drive one of these vehicles. I must do something about this situation. I must buy an electric car"

So I called up the Reva dealer on Lavelle Road. Here are some random facts from the conversation:
  • The cool looking Zephyr convertible is not yet available. It will be commercialized in 3-4 years!!! Why did they have to tempt me with the picture of the convertible when it wasnt ready? I was happy with the knowledge that there is no convertible.
  • The base model without the AC costs Rs. 2,54,000/-. The one with the AC costs Rs. 2,94,000/-. The "Classe" one with all the cool features costs Rs. 3,24,000/-. Seems quite expensive considering that a Maruti 800 is available for about 2 lakhs. However, if you were facing the heat in Bangalore today, you wouldnt really have such considerations.
  • Starting April 1, all these cars will cost Rs. 30,000/- more because of some new tax. I thought the government was supposed to encourage the use of electric cars (pollution free, energy efficient and what not). Bottom line - I need to buy one either today or tomorrow to save 30,000/-
Signing off for now. Maybe the next time I'll write, I will be posting pictures of my brand new Reva.

Saturday, January 29, 2005

Unmaad IIMB - Indian Ocean and Strings Unity concert

Last night I was at IIM Bangalore's Unmaad festival. There was a concert of Indian Ocean and Pakistani band Strings (couldnt find any website on google).

The venue was a large flat muddy ground in the IIM campus. Reaching there was a nightmare. Bannerughatta Road has got to be the worst road in Bangalore. After breathing in dust and smoke on the way, the campus itself feels like heaven. Tickets were still available plenty. I was quite impressed and relieved when I saw that they were confiscating cigarettes during the security check.

Indian Ocean was a really good act. This band takes folk tunes from all over the country and has their own unique rendition. There is a drummer who also plays the flute. He also played a strange instrument called the Gabgubi. There was a tabalji who also had a couple of dholaks in his instrument set. The lead vocalist also manned a five-string bass. The fourth person was an acoustic guitarist who was pretty good with hindustani-classical style lead riffs. All the four members of the band sing, but the bass guitarist and the tabalji seem to be the main vocalists. Some of their songs almost sounded like bhajans. The combination of drums, bass, acoustic guitar, tabla and trance-like vocals and melodies was surprisingly powerful. It was good to see a band able to pack a lot of punch without the use of the distorted guitar sound. (although I did miss the wailing lead sound .....I almost thought the Junoon lead guitarist would have done great in this setting :) ) The band played a song they recently composed and recorded a song for the controversial movie "Black Friday". The crowd was constantly asking for "Kandisa", which I guess is their most popular song. Overall, their performance was great and I will definitely buy their CDs. (should be available on http://www.indianoceanmusic.com)

"Strings" was a biiiiiiig flop-show. The show started with three guys coming on stage. One vocalist and the other two were guitarists. I was just wondering where the bass guitarist and drummer were when I realized they were going to have bass and drums on a pre-recorded track. That was soooo lame!! We didnt go over all the way to IIMB to hear recorded sound !!
The vocalist was quite low energy. I did like what the lead guitarist was doing though. The band apparently has a song in the soundtrack of "SpiderMan 2". They played that song, but even that song did not really catch my fancy. Their songs were extremely zeneraaaal and were just standing on the basis of catchy pop-style phrases. The last straw was when the band started doing a medley on Bollywood songs like "Om Shanti Om" and "Koi Kahe Kehta Rahe". Thats it!! We couldnt take it anymore. As Buntoo said "Whats next!! Are they now going to read out the news?" We didnt have the heart to wait till both the bands got together. Dinner seemed like a much better idea.