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[Book Review] Jasmine Builds on Shifting Sands: A Self-help Fiction

  I recently bought this book copy for a read and review. Name: [Book Review] Jasmine Builds on Shifting Sands: A Self-help Fiction Auth...

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Hard Core Gaming Minus the Hardware


Is it possible??

Yes, first things first. This is no rhetoric, but a plausible question. Is it possible to play top-end games without upgrading your hardware considering that it has already started looking old, if not obsolete?

Latest consoles, latest graphics processors and CPUs are the things that immediately come to mind when we start thinking about the newest game launches. For as long as I can remember, It's been a maxim of the gaming world that you need the latest console or the most up-to-date gaming PC in order to play the newest and most graphics-heavy game titles.

That's all getting ready to change, as a new, revolutionary technology enters the gaming arena. As far as my latest ‘technology’ readings is concerned this is very much within the reach.

Is this the future of the software gaming industry?

OnLive, a new company started by entrepreneur Steve Perlman, promises to deliver on similar lines. OnLive's technology essentially creates a new category of cloud gaming for play to be possible on computers and TVs. It has uses a new video compression system developed by OnLive. In plain terms it means that the company's servers can host all the gaming technology like rendering, storage,etc. All that the gamer would be required to do is log on and start playing. The company is promising no lag time on its streams.

OnLive says that its technology will support both PCs and Macs. But, like everything else there are no free lunches here too. All gaming enthusiasts will need to buy a paperback book-sized mini-console and accompanying controller if they want to play games in 720p HD on their big-screen TVs. No prices have been announced yet.

Yep you are not in ‘Wonderland’ and you heard it correctly; nothing but streaming and player responses to deal with, at the console level.

This technology aims to remove all hardware restrictions at the console level. It also takes the edge out of pricey consoles and hardware, discs, etc. Its centralized theme also ensures certain death to piracy, if not immediately , then at least in the long run.

It may take some time for this technology to develop and mature, but this is the perfect start. If priced and advertised correctly, this will be a huge success. It is something that will help put the gaming industry on Internet time, says Rob Enderle, principal analyst of the Enderle Group.

Watch out for this one Guyz! I for one will surely do.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The White Tiger –Aravind Adiga Reviewed


About the author

Aravind Adiga was born in Madras in 1974 and was raised partly in Australia. He studied at Columbia and Oxford Universities. He was a former correspondent in India with TIME magazine. He has published articles in publications like The Financial Times, The Independent, and The Sunday Times.

He lives in Mumbai and claims to travel in overcrowded Mumbai trains and stands in queues, etc. And this, he says has given him the insight into the miseries of the average Indian.

Dissection Box:

Aravind Adiga has written a very incisive and at times controversial book. This book came to me as a curiously inauthentic description of the ideologies, mindsets and situations as faced by Indian people. It seemed to me as a novel from an outsider(a non-Indian), presenting cynical anthropologies to an audience that was never meant to be Indian.

The Book:

This is the first novel by Aravind Adiga. Balram Halwai, is the chief protagonist and the narrator of Aravind Adiga’s first novel, “The White Tiger,”.

The White Tiger is a tale of two Indias. On one hand it is the tale of rural India where the life (read misery) of people is compared with animals (buffalo, cows, dogs, even pigs to be precise). The misery portrayed here is so absolute and without hope. It is strife with continuous struggle to come to terms with the harsh realities of life.

On the other hand it is the story of urban India, which is teeming with opportunities and where money is aplenty. A place where people will do anything and everything for money.

The book starts in the background of a village in Gaya, Bihar and portrays the journey of its protagonist from darkness of village life to the light of entrepreneurial success.

Balram Halwaai – The White Tiger

This novel talks about a person who’s born in a village in heartland India. The son of a rickshaw puller, Balram is taken out of school by his family and put to work in a teashop.

The inspector pointed his cane straight at me. “You, young man, are an intelligent, honest, vivacious fellow in this crowd of thugs and idiots. In any jungle, what is the rarest of animals - the creature that comes along only once in a generation?”

I thought about it and said:

“The white tiger.”

“That’s what you are, in this jungle.”

- from The White Tiger, page 30 -

As he crushes coals and wipes tables, he nurses a dream of escape – of breaking away from the banks of Mother Ganga, into whose depths have seeped the remains of a hundred generations.

Aravind has described his created character Balram, as “a man of action and change,” “a thinking man,” “an entrepreneur,” “a man who sees tomorrow,” and a “murderer.

As the character of Balram gradually reveals, I found it distressingly amoral and an object of sympathy.

The Narration:

Balram’s narrative progresses in the form of a series of letters to Wen Jiabao, premier of China. This is both innovative and gives a question and answer format to the whole book. But, this form of narration is spewed with pitfalls. For starters it lacks the flow and the reader may tend to get bored if he doesn’t find the questions appealing.

The White Tiger claims to gives us an insight into the rapidly changing India. It is a mix of a cautionary tale which is full of contradictions. Infact, I found on nearly every page a witty observation or a fine phrase, and on nearly every page inevitably something that sounded false. I was so disappointed at one stage that I stopped reading the book at page 71.

But, then with great effort I got back to reading and I must say that it took a lot of effort to finish this book off.

My Verdict:

“The White Tiger” is a penetrating piece of social commentary, attuned to the inequalities that persist despite India’s new prosperity. I am not sure if it correctly identifies — and deflates — middle-class India’s collective euphoria.

This book is full of satires. But, it is certainly a pleasant read. It is about the India that we don’t want to see. Although it has tried to portray India in true light, but instead has come up with an India that does not hold promise. And where everyone is a conman who is waiting to rip your wallet off and if you are unlucky enough then your life as well.

His detailed descriptions of various vile aspects of Indian life are relentless — and ultimately a little monotonous. Every moment, it seems, is bleak, pervaded by “the Darkness.” Every scene, every phrase, is a blunt instrument, wielded to remind Adiga’s readers of his country’s cruelty.

The story is utterly amoral, brilliantly irreverent, deeply endearing and altogether forgettable.

5.5/10

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

The Reader's Bill of Rights

Everyone has the right to read. Here's The Reader's Bill of Rights to help you make the most of that right: Readers have:

  1. The right to not read.
  2. The right to skip pages.
  3. The right to not finish.
  4. The right to reread.
  5. The right to read anything.
  6. The right to escapism.
  7. The right to read anywhere.
  8. The right to browse.
  9. The right to read out loud.
  10. The right not to defend your tastes.

—Pennac, Daniel, Better Than Life, Coach House Press, 1996.

I came across this while browsing through web. I really liked it and hence this post.