Sunday, January 31, 2016

Playing pacman on a Highway


Photo by Adam Jones
adamjones.freeservers.com
In my last post, I mentioned about the hectic touring around my home town, Madurai and my ancestral places around Karaikudi. This post is about the 'eventful' driving experiences during the vacation. The roads in this part of the country had got a major face lift recently, after the Golden quadrilateral highway project started linking most major cities. Subsequently, several toll roads have been built that makes travelling here quite convenient, atleast until one gets into the village interiors. However, one tends to have more 'adventures' in these new highways, rather than the pot-holed village roads. Tough to believe, but let me relate 2 of the several mad incidents I had to literally 'play pac-man' in.


Game-1:
I was driving at over 100 kmph one late evening in the 4-lane highway NH-45B towards Madurai, when at a sharp bend in the road, I was flummoxed to see over 100 goats crossing the road. The goat-herd was standing on the divider, supposedly unflustered, while the goats were casually crossing the highway which was passing through the grazing fields, to get home at end of the day. I sharply careened the vehicle around the road to avoid the herd that had covered half of the road by then. By an abundant serving of luck, the goats escaped jumping headlong into a plate of biryani, much ahead of their time.


Game-2:
At 9 PM on another night, I was on a different stretch of the same highway, but at similar speeds. With very minimal heavy vehicle traffic, most cars were zipping past each other at 120+ kmph. This time I was closer to the divider when at a slight bend in the road, I noticed an almost ghost-like outline of a scrawny, old man, apparently mentally unsound and in rag clothes. He was moving at a shaky pace, with his feet struggling to stay steady, while he appeared headed straight towards my vehicle. 

Alarmed, but fortunately since there was some distance to cover, I avoided the man by moving to my left and sped past him. Meanwhile, he continued to walk diagonally across the road moving to the centre, perhaps unaware of what was happening around him. Rushing onto the next toll-gate, I reported the incident and asked for help to be sent, hoping the other vehicles would have avoided him as well. While I paused for some breath, the eerie incident I had encountered in Hyderabad less than a month earlier, flashed in front of my eyes.



In a country with dense population, most of our highways have recently sprung up right in the middle of towns or villages. Thanks to Build-Own-Operate-Transfer models, the quality of these toll roads is excellent wherein 120 kmph feels like just 60, and people often test the limits of their cars in these stretches. However, the locals are unaware of the dangers lurking right next to them, while the livestock use these as extended living spaces. When rash-driving incidents kill people in the unlikeliest of places in cities, these highways are recipes for disaster.

Remembering ancestors of 200 years


I was vacationing over the past 10 days, and this involved a series of trips around my hometown attending a marriage in the family and a couple of functions around my native place, near Karaikudi in Tamil Nadu. This was hectic in its own way, with chauffeuring the family around, connecting with friends, baby-sitting two hyper-active kids, apart from routinely trashing my diet-watching with a daily feast thrown on each occasion.

A memorable function that I got an opportunity to participate in was an offering to ancestors,  called 'Padaipu' in local parlance. This was my first-time to such a ritual and it was fascinating to learn about how this was done. Paying homage to ancestors is something that's practiced in several cultures world over and is considered very significant in India as well. However, the ritual and specific customs vary across the country.

I've learnt that the offerings are generally paid to one's parents and in several cases also to ancestors who could be from 3 to 5 generations back, or earlier. This ritual was on my maternal grandfather's side in a village called Nachandupatti, near Trichy in Tamil Nadu. The offering was to 4 ancestors from 4 generations back. The preparations were elaborate, starting with buying new clothes for each of the ancestors, and to their taste. Then, jewels and ornaments, some of which were ancestral and rest from the descendents were collated. Meanwhile, a feast was prepared with customised menu based on culinary preferences of each of the ancestors, while also accounting preference for vegetarian food versus meat. 

Offerings in place for our ancestors


Finally, against the pictures of ancestors or earmarked places (for those who lived in the pre-photography age), the clothes, ornaments and banana leaves were neatly laid out. People took turns to serve the complete menu, with all hospitality accorded to a special guest of the home. Dessert was a rich assortment of fruits including some exotic and imported ones. Unlike the formality of a temple worship, the air was light and cordial with relatives joking about things like moderating the sugar intake in the food to factor in the possibility of diabetic ailments for any of the ancestors!

With the offering consummating in a prayer, the 30 odd members gathered from an approx family count of a few hundred, concluded the ritual and enjoyed the feast. It was interesting to learn about how the ritual and specific steps have been passed down over the generations, including documented manuscripts and drawings of the procedure.

Adaikkammai appathal
While I was in awe of this practice, I heard of another popular offering ritual in the same village for an ancestor, Adaikkammai appathal who lived 4 centuries earlier. With about 10 to 12 generations spanning the 400 years, the total family size can be approximated to roughly over 10,000 members, which would be the size of a large village. This is a once-in-2-years affair, where thousands of descendants and relatives participate in the offering and its celebrated like a mini-festival. Interestingly, this ritual has its own website that documents the history and proceedings, while also having its active social channels!






Thursday, January 28, 2016

Pains of switching over to a Macbook


At work, we had decided to migrate from Windows machines to Macbooks. The excitement and supposed 'coolness' of using a Mac notwithstanding, there was anxiety considering that the Apple ecosystem is a platform I've never been exposed to.

The first day I started setting up the machine, the pain in the transition was evident at multiple levels. I spent a good 30 minutes 'searching' for the Hard Disk and eventually found it by googling for help. My day On Windows machines used to start on the desktop and all activity was driven through 'My-Computer' icon or the Win-E shortcut. Don't believe me on how this query stumps first-time users? Check this Google snapshot on what's searched for most:


Having 'found' the hard disk, the next obstacle was in moving files. For a new user it was frustrating that there is no straightforward way to 'cut-paste'. Googling led me to Apple's discussion forum with several threads on the matter and many experts providing 'easy' ways to copy-paste and cut-paste files! Here is another screen grab showing that this is the top search query for Mac users.


The biggest handicap for Windows users on Mac is the absence of keys like Win, Ctrl, Alt, or the universal SOS combination Ctrl+Alt+Del ! Earlier, when I used to switch between Windows machines of Dell or Lenovo, a minor irritant used to be the changes in location of the Pg-up/Pg-down and other secondary keys. However, a radical change in keystrokes was something that went right against my muscle memory of many years. I'm still getting used to Mac's all powerful 'Cmd' key and the secondary 'ctrl' & 'option' keys, but I guess it will take a while for my fingers to learn that.

These irritants notwithstanding, there were some pleasant surprises that are to-good-to-be-true on Windows machines, for instance the lightning fast 'Spotlight search'. But more about these in a follow-on post. For now, I'm looking at immersing myself in the experience and getting used to the Mac shortcuts and ways of working, for the intent is not to survive but to leverage a lot of the platform's productivity hacks. 

I strongly believe that the first 2 to 3 weeks is a golden period of any transition since it keeps your mind open to explore and learn at an exponential pace. Post this, the learning curve drops steeply and one just gets used to the ways of working learnt by then, even if its inefficient or inconvenient. Surprisingly, I've found this to be true, not just for a new platform, but for new devices or even a new physical location.

Monday, January 11, 2016

My Goodreads Challenge

I have been looking at hitting the "reading" target that I set for myself in 2016. I've noticed that tracking something brings about a good focus and gamification further raises the level of connect. My pace and quality of movie-watching had gone up several notches in the past couple of years, ever since I started using IMDB to track it.

I had stumbled upon a Goodreads challenge and set out to evaluate other 'reading' portals/app available. My evaluation criteria was simple:
  • Should have a good catalog of books, including diverse genres and popular Indian authors
  • Ability to easily create a reading list, track completed ones and maintain favorites
  • Ability to export all the data as a CSV or Excel file at any time
Amongst the sites I skimmed through, Goodreads looked like a clear choice and I went about setting up the account. The initial experience has been great and the site starts offering you recommendations based on your past book ratings. It was a pleasant surprise to notice the integration with Facebook friends and social sharing options.

So, I've taken up a Reading Challenge and signed up to finish 20 books, if not more!