Glims : a better alternative to Inquisitor

All of a sudden, Inquisitor started barfing some weird messages instead of displaying search links. Suspiciously, only when the search engine used was Google. Pssst… maybe it?s got something to do with its acquisition by Yahoo!. Thankfully, a bunch of kids developed a better alternative to Inquisitor, all while having fun. Called Glims, it does all that Inquisitor used to do and also throws in a bit of functionality that Saft provides – for free.

Bye Inquisitor, Hello Glims.

Google scale computing for the masses

Cloud computing isn’t a new term but until recently it had not really come of age. Amazon has to be credited with bringing it to the mainstream, with the launch of Amazon Web Services (AWS) 3 years ago. Google played catch up with the App Engine, but it’s not been able to gather as much steam as AWS. The technological genius of Amazon is a subject matter of another post, but suffice to say that they have changed computing forever.

AWS basically allows one to deploy computing services (such as storage, messaging, hosting and any software) on infrastructure managed and owned by Amazon. Since all the provisioning for new machine instances, storage etc are through API’s, a system that dynamically scales depending on the load can be engineered. And it’s all pay-as-you-go, so one only pays for what is used and the pricing is very reasonable. There are many case studies of companies saving huge sums after migrating their solutions to AWS.

Yesterday, they unveiled their Elastic Map Reduce service. Map Reduce is a Google invention, and it has been one of the pillars on which various Google services are built. It basically allows a task to be divided among multiple machines simultaneously and collates the results and returns it back. This means that thousands of computers can simultaneously work on a problem and return the results much faster compared to a single computer doing the same work. Google was kind enough to publish the paper on Map Reduce and the Open source community started building a system based on it.

Hadoop, from the Apache Software Foundation, came up as the most popular Map Reduce implementation and Amazon’s Elastic Map Reduce is also based on this.  Now one can make a job, boot up multiple machines and distribute the job to the machines. Elastic Map Reduce will manage all the machines and return the output of the job. All this from the comfort of wherever one is; well, even that’s not required, since even that can be automated.

So why is this so important? Take Google’s example. One of the reasons why they are so successful is because they have engineered solutions to difficult engineering problems – not something that everyone can do. With Elastic Map Reduce, the biggest stumbling block for anyone who wanted to compute huge datasets has been taken away – the hard part is already done. All one needs to ensure is that the job is something that can be equally distributed (not too easy everytime). And suddenly, there is a whole new avenue available to everyone – just because something will take too much computing power is no longer a deterrent. That is what is super cool.

Some hotplay for you?

menuSpotted outside a popular restaurant at Juhu beach. What would you like to eat? I think I’ll go for the Hotplay dry. Well, honestly, I dare not assume what any of these mean.

On design : Indica Vista Anniversary edition

The Anniversary edition Vista, the best looking Indica yet

The Anniversary edition Vista, the best looking Indica yet

It’s the first post I’m writing about automotive design and hopefully it won’t be the last. The subject is unfortunately neither as hot as a Ferrari nor as cool as an Aston Martin, but needs to be spoken about nevertheless. It has actually driven me to write this, since I’ve been postponing this post for a long while now.

The subject is the new Tata Indica Vista. The earlier Indica looked like a mangy cur with enough empty space in each wheel arch to park a vespa, but the new one comes with a very polished suit. I’m going to stick to the exteriors of the car only, because that’s what I’ve experienced till now. Actually, I don’t want to spoil this good thing by actually driving the car.

OK, the design then. Bloody brilliant. And I’ll tell you why. Firstly, let me take a bow to the designer from the I.DE.A design institute who penned this design and also to Tata motors for having the gall to keep the final product as close to the design as possible.

Before I start waxing lyrical about the design discipline, let me put a couple of things out of the way – The grill sucks. I guess that was Tata’s sole final requirement. “We need the smiley face grille because that is our small vehicle corporate identity”. Damn them for that. A grille truer to the design would have made this car much better. And the small wheels. An unfortunate necessity for cost savings, though a redeeming feature is the ability to take 15 inch rims, which will surely enhance the looks. But the rest is just, wow. I know, I know, it’s an Indica, but lets look closely now, at the anniversary edition Vista.

This car is all about lines and creases that continue from one plane to another. It’s wonderful to follow them from plastic to metal to plastic to metal back again. The overall shape is more or less the same as the original Indica, but is squarer compared to its rounded ancestor. Oddly, the front is more rounded compared to the older Indica, which make this look a bit beaver faced.

The creases go all the way from the front around the car

The creases go all the way from the front around the car

Bonnet

The bonnet has 3 sharp creases. Two at the sides and one in the middle. The middle one adds character to the bonnet whereas the side creases are a continuation of the bottom of the grill. These creases go on to become the inside edges of the A pillars and continue all the way on to the back of the car over the roof.

Headlights

The headlights are massive. I think the biggest on any car in the country now in terms of its surface area. The top section houses the trafficators in a wedge shape. The wedge starts from the point where the bonnet meets the bumper and the top and bottom of the wedge flow into the body. The top becomes the door sills and meets the tail lamps at their center and also the center of the hatch, where the glass and metal join together.

So if one were to take a thread and follow this line, they would divide the car into top and bottom starting from the edges of the bonnet. The top part would be the glass house and the bottom metal. The bottom line of the wedge starts a sharp crease that goes from the front into the doors. The crease takes two short hops to become the door handles before meeting the tail lamp, disappearing into the metal and reappearing again to neatly bisect the Tata logo and lettering at the rear. Bravo!

Slick job

Slick job

Side trafficators

Eschewing the current expensive trend of housing the side trafficators within the rear view mirrors, the designer integrates them beautifully in the small triangle made in the front of the mirrors. The 10th anniversary badge sits neatly a small distance below the trafficator. Very classy, and not prone to damage.

Bumpers

The front bumper is neat and clean. The vertical slats follow the side edges from the recessed area for the number plate. Good idea to have recessed areas – it saves the number plate from being broken off by people brushing against the front of the car. The rear bumper is neat and curves at the bottom near the tyres. The bumper also has reflectors that are a good safety touch, but otherwise not as inspiring as the rest of the car.

The lines tell a nice story

The lines tell a nice story

Wheels

Look like something from the Aura stable. Could have been much better.

Roof

Now the interesting bit. The roof is done in black, which doesn’t bode well for the interior temperature during the Indian summers. but looks very sexy. Yes it’s reminiscent of the Mercedes S class roof, or one of the carbon fiber roofs of the M3 or custom cars. Net effect, good character.

The slick side trafficator

The slick side trafficator

Doors

The creased doors have a well balanced layout. The glass area and the metal part have a good ratio going. The side strips on the doors also serve to make the car look shorter than it actually is.

Possible improvements

  1. Just getting the chrome upper lip off the bonnet will make the grill look decidedly better. It’s an Indian market phenomenon, these crome strips above the grill.
  2. Integrated body color mud flaps on the bumpers would have been nice.
  3. Larger wheels would have filled up the arches much better.
  4. A less rounded front end

So all in all, nice car, shame about the grille. Here’s a gallery with larger size images.

A new toy for the superstitious

 

The section near 4 o'clock fills up to signify the unlucky period and slowly empties as the period passes

The section near 4 o'clock fills up to signify the unlucky period and slowly empties as the period passes

An excellent bit of thinking by an upstart Swiss watchmaker named Borgeaud. No, I’m not commenting on the choice of the company name, but their new series of watches. Called the Panchang line, the watches have a unique feature that make it the watch of choice for the overtly superstitious. From the company website -

In addition to functioning as a watch, the Panchang line automatically displays a daily 90-minute sequence called the Rahu Kaal or Rahu period. Important occasions and family functions, the signing of a contract, the conclusion of a deal or an investment, meetings, be they private or public, personal or social, are timed to work around the Rahu period.

Not to my taste, but will appeal strongly to quite a few.

Mac OS X font rendering on Windows

Got a great link from the Lifehacker site that fixes one of my pet peeves with Windows. Yes, I know that a lot of people prefer the Windows font rendering over the Mac OS one (and still more can’t see a difference), but I can’t stand the way fonts look on Windows. In an earlier post, I had pointed out how Safari on Windows painstakingly implemented the Mac OS font rendering method, which had endeared it to me.

Now getting the Mac OS style rendering on Windows is as easy as running a small background app. Called GDI++, the application runs in the system tray and lets you see fonts as their designers had intended. Full instructions available here. Read more and see the before and after examples at the link below.

Lifehacker : GDI++ Adds OS X Font Rendering to Windows

Got Satisfied

I had stumbled across Get Satisfaction before and was a bit puzzled that people were venting there instead of on proper official forums. Reading the 37 signals blog post today, I got the complete picture. The audacity of the Get Satisfaction business is quite shocking, but the funniest part is how the company representatives were tripping over each other to fix things while their asses were on fire due to Jason’s post.

I for one am completely with Jason and I hope other companies also follow suit, or bring forth a legal suit against Get Satisfaction. Read the whole thing here.

The HEN

This is an exercise to document my HEN (Home Entertainment Network) and a blatant attempt at showing off. Firstly, a simple listing of each of the components -

  1. Synology DS-107e
  2. AppleTV Take 2
  3. Squeezebox Duet
  4. Mac mini PPC
  5. Pop Pulse T-amp 77
  6. Klipsch Synergy F1
  7. Airport Extreme
  8. Lousy Samsung LCD TV
  9. iPhone

Synology DS-107e

The Synology box is a Network Attached Storage (NAS) device that has room for a single SATA drive, which I filled with a 750 GB Western Digital HDD. The NAS is attached via USB to a APC 650 VA UPS for automatic shutdown when power becomes low and also has a nice array of ports including 3xUSB, 1xeSATA and Gigabit Ethernet for excellent interconnectivity. The provided software is great and I highly recommend this NAS. The current firmware has an issue and is unfortunately not able to backup to another 750 GB drive I have connected over the eSATA link. Synology is working on a fix for that.

The NAS stores all the digital media – video, audio and all my photos and makes it available on the network via SMB and AFP.

AppleTV Take 2

Yea yea, I knew about the Tvix and the Popcorn hour and all the other Taiwanese and Chinese crap out there. None of them as elegant as the AppleTV. Granted it can’t play Full HD, but nor can my LCD TV. I don’t even have HD content and am quite happy with DVD quality for the time being. The AppleTV’s plus points – great integration with the iTunes store, beautiful interface, hackability and essentially, it’s running MacOS. So I’ve hacked it and got the best media center running on it – Boxee. There’s XBMC and nitoTV too, but I only use Boxee for all my playback requirements. Boxee gets all the content via the network from the NAS.

Squeezebox Duet

I fell in love with the Duet when I saw it the first time and bought it soon after launch. It basically is my music player. I can also play music through both the AppleTV native interface and through Boxee as well, but the sound quality of the Squeezebox is better, and I have a lot of options to control the playback – Squeezebox controller, iPeng on the iPhone and the Squeezecenter web interface. I can also get the music to play on the computer, iPhone, Squeezebox controller and also have these devices playing music independently or in sync with each other. Quite cool and quite liberating. It can also play music off the web and can do quite a bit more.

I store all my music in iTunes, with the iTunes library and the music residing on the NAS. The Squeezecenter software for the Squeezebox is running on the Mac mini and is picking up the music by looking at the iTunes library and the music files on the NAS.

Mac mini

A friend graciously leased me his unused old PPC Mac mini which I’ve provisioned for running Squeezecenter and Transmission. Again, all data on the NAS, mounted at boot on the Mac mini.

Pop Pulse T-amp 77

One of my newer acquisitions, this is a great stereo amplifier based on the Tripath 2022 chip. It replaces the Sonic Impact Gen-2 T-amp that was based on the Tripath 2024 chip. I’ve become a big fan of the Tripath chips – the sound is just mindblowing. The Sonic Impact was weak in the bass department, but the T-amp 77 can thump along quite nicely. The sound is still amazingly transparent and the soundstage is nice and big. Vocals sound brilliant and now even a bass kicking track sounds great on the speakers.

Klipsch Synergy F1

Instead of the Synergy F2′s I was hoping to buy, I managed to get a great deal on the F1. One of the speakers was missing the front grille and I got the pair at a throwaway price of Rs. 13,000. What really struck me during the audition was the amazing soundstage and clarity of the vocals. They can’t take too much power (100w max) but the 10w produced by the Sonic Impact and the 35w produced by the Pop Pulse are more than adequate to make it go really loud at even less than full volume. That’s because the speakers are very efficient (93 dB/w). Really lovely speakers.

Airport Extreme

I wanted to have a speedy network backbone since all of my media was on the NAS. The Apple Airport Extreme was at that time the best 802.11n router. It’s got Gigabit ethernet and 802.11n, which was essential for me. The newer model now has dual-band support for simultaneous 2.4 Ghz and 5 Ghz operation, mine doesn’t. A rock solid performer – no complaints at all. Not missing DD-WRT on my old Linksys WRT54G either.

Samsung LCD TV

A 24 inch LCD TV that I had picked up for my bedroom is now the main TV. Horrible contrast and totally unworthy of the Samsung name. Worst bit in my setup. Planning to stick with this until OLED LCD’s become mainstream and affordable.

iPhone

The iPhone is mentioned here because it becomes a great controller for Boxee (free Boxee remote app), Squeezebox (iPeng plugin) and soon thanks to UIRemote will become the universal remote to control the entire setup. Who needs a netbook when there’s one of these?

Future plans -

Currently I have to manually switch audio sources between the AppleTV and the Squeezebox. This is done through a cheap MX 4 port switch that was made for switching between multiple composite AV sources (but I’m using it for just audio). There’s a switch with a remote available on DealExtreme, but I can live with the current setup. Also, the amplifier needs to be switched on and off manually since its remote doesn’t have that function. I’m worried that leaving it on will consume too much power. I could do something like this. I’m also eagerly awaiting UIRemote so that I can use the iPhone as a universal remote. I guess that’s it!

Music re-taste

All of a sudden my taste in music has careened almost exclusively towards new Bollywood music, thanks to the great soundtracks of Slumdog Millionaire, Delhi 6, Dev D, Rock On!, Jaane Tu Ya Jaane Na, Dostana and Singh is Kinng. I’ve managed to surprise even myself, having gone out and bought all the CD’s. Each CD has been taken out just once, to be ripped into Apple Lossless to be played on the Squeezebox Duet I have at home and for syncing to the iPhone.

Even last.fm reports that I’ve been listening to mostly Bollywood music on my home system -

lastfm

If this fantastic music making goes on, I’ll be buying every new Bollywood music CD that comes out.

Geek Tour China

One of the most interesting things I read recently was about manufacturing in China. Bunnie Huang, one of the guys behind Chumby organized a Geek Tour in Shenzen for people from the MIT media lab and SparkFun Electronics. Needless to say, the stuff they saw was out of a geek’s wet dream. There is a lot of interesting information about China, the manufacturing process and the work ethics. I’m just linking to all of them here, they are all worth a read.

Geek Tour photos, videos and text

Shenzen city and electronics market

Manufacturing in China

About China’s lack of religion

The Mobile phone market

The injection moulding machine

Will update this post with more good info as I get it.