A silly fix at the end

20 Jul

I use Thunderbird mail client on a Solaris laptop for connecting to a SMTP mail server. This morning, while playing with the network connections, had a strange issue where thunderbird can no longer fetch my mail. It doesn’t ask for password too, and can’t establish connections to send email. Looked like a dangling cache issue, but couldn’t find how to clean it up.

Blog Censorship?

18 Jul

This article in Economic Times this morning claims that Govt. of India has blocked a few blog sites by instructing the ISPs. This seems unbelievable. Even though blogs help content to be syndicated effectively, putting the same content on a webpage or a bulletin board is not that rocket science. In essence, if Government is blocking these blog sites to reduce impact of terrorists, then they will find another way anyway. Why target a few blog sites that you know of? If the article’s claim is true, then these blog sites did more good than harm during the Mumbai blasts situation, at least based on what we know.

The cost of network access

16 Jul

Just now read an article about France promising PC and network connection for a Euro a day. Well, lets see how the costs workout in India.

Typical rental charges for a decent PC is about Rs 1000 (Indian Rupees One Thousand) a month. I am talking about a PC with 512MB RAM and rest of the accessories. Basic Internet charges are about Rs 250 a month. There will be additional charges of Rs 100 a month, in the form of taxes etc. Combined together, one will get a decent internet connection (128kbps, 0.5G download, which is decent enough in this part of the world) for about Rs 1350 a month. Which amounts to about USD 30.00 a month or E25.00 a month. Close enough for what France promised, without any government intervention.

However, there is a lot in India you can buy with a Euro a day. For people with western food habits, one can by a Chicken McMaharaja at McDonalds for about a Euro. You can buy a couple of low cost, street-side lunches even in the costliest cities like Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai and Delhi. You can buy a week’s intake of vegetables etc. in most of the country.
Most of India’s internet access is taken care of not by home based PCs, but by the popular internet cafes. The prices start from about Rs 10 per hour (little less than a US Quarter and one fifth of a Euro.) Most of these cafes are scaled down versions of outfits like Kinko’s. They offer scanning, internet and laser printing services. For example, I haven’t owned a scanner for quite sometime. How do I scan something? I go to a nearby internet cafe (100 meters from my house) and get the document scanned, emailed to me, for about Rs 15.00. How many times do I scan things? May be once in about 2 months. So that comes with an annual cost of USD 2.0 :-). These outfits are mostly inhabited by students and job seekers, who may not want to invest in a home PC. Here for about a euro a day, you get 5 hours of network connectivity. Good enough for a browsing kind of use, but you may not have the notion of locally stored personal data.
Well, in summary, the cost of network access is very low in most of the urban India. There are some plans for making it much cheaper for rural India. But we may have to wait for a better infrastructure like decent electricity in rural India.

Tough Day

14 Jul

One of the toughest days at work. One of my good coworkers is separating from the company voluntarily. Am going to miss her support.

Also, today is the last day for a couple of our interns, because we don’t have any open positions at this time. Very hard to see people with lots of fresh energy leave.

Anyway, all of them have good positions in offer at other places, so I feel good for them. Wish them all the luck.