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June 19, 2006

Krugle

As a geek, technology evangelism is what comes easy to me. But too much of “thought leadership” and excessive reading, leads to information fatigue or a repetitive stress syndrome of the mind. And mostly the mind is captivated by the same lazy thoughts, as there are no emperical feedback mechanisms, attributed mainly to the lack of time to implement those thoughts. Let me quote Albert Einstein here,

“Reading, after a certain age, diverts the mind too much from its creative pursuits. Any man who reads too much and uses his own brain too little falls into lazy habits of thinking.”

Luckily, for the past few months, I have been using Krugle with a beta support invitation, now I think they have opened up their beta for the general audience. Check them out here and a demo here.

If you need to do some rapid prototyping and unwind your mind via action more than thought, providing for some refreshing creativity, maybe Krugle is a good start.

June 8, 2006

Pept(alk)

Ok. After nearly 8 years I drove a two-wheeler on Indian roads. Thanks to a colleague, who bought this moped today. It was quite thrilling to drive around this 90 cc bike, on the busy roads of Bangalore.

Scooty Pept

Did someone say good things always come in small packages. Agreed. Also, once in a while its always fun to think, act and behave like a teenager. Now that I am in this teenage zone, i am sharing with you what I received later in the day from a friend of mine on SMS. Reproducing “Coding Karma” below.

Code to mohmaya hai!!!
Aaj tum coding karte ho,
Kal koi aur karega.

Bug hi is jeevan ka satya hai
Woh kal bhi tha, aaj bhi hai,
Aur hamesha rahega.

Tum sochte ho ki tumne bug theek kar diya
To galat sochte ho, Woh nirantar HAI,
Naya naye roop mein tumhare saamne aata rahega.

Isiliye CODE KARTE JAO, BUG KI CHINTA MAT KARO.
“Hurry Home!”

Did, i see a smile on your face ?. Good the Pep talk just worked !

June 5, 2006

Medical Guesswork

Last week, we had to rush our Dad to the hospital, where he ended up spending the next 5 days. Well, he is diabetic and has to monitor his blood-sugar regularly, unfortunately for the second time, we did not do a good job in keeping his blood sugar at moderate levels, and early Friday morning we found him unconscious on his bed due to low-sugar.

He also has developed other complications with his kidney, so has to undergo medication simultaneously for that as well. I have always been highly suspicious of how most of the medications that doctors prescribe is based on their “gut feeling” or “intutive analysis” of the complications that a patient is living with.

So, this time I decided I will have a conversation with the Physician treating my Dad and asked him some simple questions on how they arrive at concluding that the prescription might work well for the patient. And noticed that he pretty much conceded that that there was no mathematical formula for arriving at such conclusions.

This prompted me to find out if complications in Diabetic patients with heart problems, kidney problems, and other ailments have a standardized or mathematical treatment. And while exploring for an answer, I found this.

Its highly interesting to note the work of Dr. Eddy, I totally agree with his theory that most of it is Medical Guesswork, we definitely need to find a more formal model, whose outcome we should be as sure as some laws of Physics. Also, its just another coincidence that Dr. Eddy has also chosen Diabetic patients for one of his experiments called Archimedes.

Read on, I have saved a pdf verion of the same article for future reference.