Kiran Jonnalagadda’s Blog
Technology. Media. Culture. Friction.
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Thursday, September 4, 2008
Info-Activism Camp
My friends at the Tactical Technology Collective are organising Info-Activism Camp in February 2009. From their description:
The Info-Activism camp will bring together 120 rights advocates from the global South with technologists, designers and activists for a week long hands-on workshop to share skills, tools and tactics in digital advocacy.
Info-Activism is an approach to advocacy that recognises the artful use of information and communications as a primary tactic in successful campaigns.
The camp provides a space for intensive learning and doing, a structured 'skill-share' environment for experienced advocates that will give them the confidence and know-how to leverage the limited resources they have to create greater impact. During the week, participants will learn how to creatively integrate new technologies in to their advocacy and create long lasting connections with other advocates and tech-activists.
The camp will give rights advocates the practical skills, tools and techniques to use technology to:
- Gather and analyse information and facilitate evidence-based campaigning
- Create and disseminate targeted, accessible and engaging information for advocacy efforts that have impact on targets and mobilise support
- Increase participation from affected communities
- Enable cooperation and coordination with allies
- Minimise security and privacy vulnerabilities
If you’ve been to any of TTC’s earlier Source camps, you’ll know them to be true camps, held away from urbanity in a full time week-long camp, technology driven, and yet focused on practical applications for the activist. These events are great places to meet folks who care about changing society for the better.
The venue is yet to be decided. It is likely to be near Bangalore. Application forms will be available later this month. More information here: Info-Activism Camp - February 2009, India.
Wednesday, September 3, 2008
What a little competition can do to prices

Within the space of just a week, no doubt owing to the Acer Aspire One and MSI Wind becoming available. But for its weight, the Eee PC 1000H is a very compelling selection, with a comfortably sized screen, large keyboard, excellent trackpad and high quality speakers. Staples is selling with the full capacity 6-cell 6600 mAh battery. Earlier Eee PCs including my 701 were sold with a lower spec battery than elsewhere in the world.
Tuesday, September 2, 2008
Getting used to Windows
... is hard after years with a Mac.

I’m using Windows as a way to detox, as a way to get away from dependence on the computer’s storage as data hub and move towards the cloud. I’m tired of lugging a laptop around everywhere and don’t see a solution in a lighter device. My digital life will have to be distributed across multiple special purpose devices with overlapping functions, with my data accessible across them.
Using Windows makes this migration so much easier.
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
The Eee PC rocks!
It’s been two months now with my Eee PC and I’m pleased as punch. This is easily among the most useful gadgets I’ve acquired.
The Eee PC is incredibly small and light. It fits everywhere, even in my camera bag with the camera also in it. Despite the miserly 800x480 resolution, or perhaps because of it, I keep all windows maximised and work distraction free. The screen’s just wide enough for a column of text, which makes it a great ebook reader. OpenOffice with read-only documents defaults into viewer mode, which is great. I no longer have to convert stuff into PDF to make a comfortable reading experience, like I needed to do on the Mac. Vim, with my customised vimrc, works splendidly for editing in reStructuredText, my text markup format of choice.
When I’m not working with documents or code, I’m working with people, and XChat when maximised once again delivers the goods. I can keep the device aside, an eye on the conversation, while I’m working on something else.
Because it’s always in my bag, I can pull it out when waiting at a coffee shop, make a note, read something, or otherwise generally be productive instead of twiddling thumbs. The device is low profile and the keyboard comfortable. The battery life isn’t great, but I’ve managed to stretch it as much as 3:30 hours. It lasts long enough between the average visit to the power socket.
That said, the quibbles:
- The trackpad’s scroll area is way too sensitive. I use a scroll mouse occasionally just for the scrolling comfort.
- The PgUp/PgDn keys are overloaded on the arrow keys. Navigating documents a page at a time is that much less convenient.
- Boot time with Hardy is several seconds longer than it should be, while suspend-to-ram sucks juice.
- I miss Skim. It made reading and annotating PDF on the Mac such a joyous experience. There’s nothing like it on Linux.
All minor. The device overall gets two thumbs up.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Reading business books
Seth Godin shares my take on reading business books. In How to read a business book:
... How to read a business book... it’s not as obvious as it seems.
- Bullet points are not the point.
If you’re reading for the recipe, and just the recipe, you can get through a business book in just a few minutes. But most people who do that get very little out of the experience. Take a look at the widely divergent reviews for The Dip. The people who ‘got it’ understood that it was a book about getting you to change your perspective and thus your behavior. Those that didn’t were looking for bullet points. They wasted their money.
My notes on Twitter:
two kinds of business books: the absolutists who tell you what is good for you, and the relativists who tell you what they experienced. 03:14 PM April 14, 2008
the more i read, the more i prefer adapting from the relativists than kowtowing to the absolutists. 03:14 PM April 14, 2008
I’m currently reading What Management Is by Joan Magretta and totally loving it. Blossom’s in Bangalore has it for Rs 160.
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Impressions after the first few hours with an Eee PC
- Damn, this thing is light.
- Damn, this thing doesn't fit my pocket. It's a computer, not a phone.
- The keyboard's tiny! How will I ever learn to touch type on it?
- This thing is light. It doesn't stay put when I type.
- Where's the keyboard backlight? I'm supposed to adjust ambient light now?
- It froze! Thrice! Ah, the community forums have the answer. Something oddball with the wired network settings seeking a network. Turn it off. Who plugs in anymore anyway?
- Why doesn't this thing just connect to my wireless network when I turn it on, like my Mac does? Why doesn't Apple make this thing?
- It's so tiny, it won't sit on my lap like a laptop. I need new postures.
- Look ma, it's so small, I can hold it with both hands and thumb-type! Just like with my phone!
- I think I can get used to this keyboard. I typed this entire post on the Eee PC itself!
- Eh, why don't my Mac keyboard shortcuts for extended characters work? How do I get smart quotes in this post? Why doesn't Apple make this thing?
- I see major lifestyle changes happening.
Monday, March 24, 2008
ASUS Eee PC vs HCL MiLeap Y
I’m in the market for an ultralight laptop to serve half-way between my cell phone (Nokia E61i; very portable and always on me, but painful for anything more than a few hundred words) and regular laptop (Apple MacBook Pro; all round performer but not a joy to lug around). The primary use will be for email and extended note taking. There appear to be only two suitable candidates available for purchase in Bangalore today.
The MiLeap Y or Eee PC, oh which one will it be?
| Feature | ASUS Eee PC | HCL MiLeap Y | Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Size | 7" | 7" | Match |
| Display | 800×480. Painfully inadequate. The dialog boxes of several apps are too large to fit on screen. | 1024×600. Feels comfortable when apps are maximised. | MiLeap Y |
| Build | Traditional laptop design. Feels solid. | Tablet PC design. Feels like an accidental drop could break it. | Eee PC |
| Finish | Matte. Leaves no smudges. | Glossy. Fingerprint magnet. | Eee PC |
| Weight | 920 grams | 980 grams. The 60 gram difference may seem paltry but is noticeable. | Eee PC |
| Battery Life | 2.5 hours as per reviews. This is pretty much what makes or breaks a device’s usability. ASUS has announced plans for higher capacity batteries. | 2 hours as per reviews. Poor show. (I wouldn’t go with manufacturers’ claims of battery life in idle mode.) No news on better battery availability. | Eee PC |
| Startup Time | 15-22 seconds cold, lesser from suspension | 1:30 minutes cold, 45 seconds from hibernate | Eee PC |
| Power Adapter | Feels like a large cell phone charger. You could tuck it into a pocket and carry the Eee PC like a notebook when moving around. | Brick with cables both ends. Major fashion faux pas to be seen toting one, besides being unwieldy. | Eee PC |
| Storage | 4-8 GB. The 8 GB versions don’t appear to be available in India. | 80 GB. Serious advantage here. Solid state storage’s perceived reliability isn’t so much of a plus point for me as disk crashes aren’t all that common, replacement disks are easy to obtain, and disruptions can be minimised with regular backups. | MiLeap Y |
| Trackpad | Relatively large. Single button with separate left and right sensors. Not possible to press both together. | Relatively small, but with separate left and right buttons. Separate scroll buttons on screen. | MiLeap Y |
| Touch Screen | No | Yes. The touch screen is pressure-based however, and unusable for actually writing on unless you don’t mind scratches. In my testing, it failed to recognise writing unless I pressed hard. High quality write-on screens use a special pen with a conductive coil that requires a very light touch. | MiLeap Y |
| Alternate Form Factor | None | The MiLeap Y in tablet form factor makes a great ebook reader / web browser. The screen’s sides have a fairly usable button mouse, arrow direction pad, scroll buttons and a few extra (hopefully) reprogrammable buttons. | MiLeap Y |
| OS | Linux. You can choose your own distro and UI. Dedicated community providing customisations tailored for the Eee PC. | Windows Vista Home Premium. The UI is still toyish (WinXP’s UI was like a candy factory meltdown) and switching is not an option, as parts of the hardware are unsupported on Linux. | Eee PC |
| Pedigree | ASUS, which is committed to first class Linux support. Everything just works. | Also available as the Kohjinsha SH-series. HCL is a licensee. I wouldn’t expect HCL to build high quality hardware given they have neither the track record nor market presence, so this is good news. The upstream manufacturer, however, appears uninterested in Linux support and HCL’s voice will remain unheard unless they have enough demanding customers. | Eee PC |
| Processing Power | 900 MHz, but underclocked to 630 MHz. | 800 MHz, but Vista’s sluggishness makes it feel slower. | Match |
| Cost | Rs 16-20,000 | Rs 35,000 | Eee PC |
| Obsolescence | Given the rapid pace of improvements in small form factor computers, the Eee PC will be very obsolete in a year. It will, however, have a second life as that little network file server tucked away under the desk. It is also cheap enough to give away. | The MiLeap’s spotty Linux support makes it a less likely server, and far higher cost makes it harder to give away. The touch screen could however mean it’ll turn into some kind of a wall mounted device, although its hard disk won’t survive on a treadmill (which is where I’d want a touch screen). | Eee PC |
| Final Tally | 10 | 5 | Eee PC |
What would you pick and why?
Monday, February 11, 2008
Twittering
My blogging these days is largely confined to Twitter, with the very occasional picture on the moblog.
I’ve long regarded blogging as an outlet for self-expression first, everything else a distant second. My work-related responsibilities and associated communication needs have grown tremendously over the past year, taking away much of the energy otherwise channelled into such expression. Barcamp Bangalore has similarly taken its cut.
What’s left works rather well at crafting an expression in 140 characters.
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
Converting existing authentication databases to OpenID
Earlier this year, I applied to NRC-FOSS for funding for a project to build an open source OpenID Provider wrapper around existing SQL and LDAP-based authentication databases. They haven’t made up their mind yet, but in the meantime I figured I’d release my spec. Here it is.
Gracie and Crowd provide similar functionality, though I’m not sure they serve my exact use case.

