Theo Jansen’s kinetic sculptures in a BMW ad

August 27th, 2006 by gaurav

What mad(?) art. First look have a look at the ad., then marvel at what the guy creates and finally read more about the man in this Wired article from last year.

via kotteke.org

Why Veronica Mars, you are a warrior

August 26th, 2006 by gaurav

Meet Veronica Mars – gutsy crime fighter, loving daughter, purveyour of smart aleck comments and a class warrior. If you have not watched it yet go get the DVD right away. It’s one of the most interesting shows made in the recent times and is in it’s third season. One of the things that I enjoy the most (apart from the well written storylines and characters) are the snappy conversations between Veronica and her father, played by Enrico Colantoni.

via TPM via In These Times.

Of Poincaré conjecture and maths

August 25th, 2006 by gaurav

Poincaré conjecture is a mathematics problem that (as I understood it) deals with the structure, nature and properties of the three dimensional space that we live in. This region of three dimensional space is referred to as a 3-manifold. The fundamental structure of the shape we live in is a difficult thing to determine and comprehend because we are situated in the space. Henry Poincaré was a French mathematician who, nearly a 100 years ago, proposed a way to understand how space would look from the outside, looking in this three dimensional space. The problem can be restated as trying to determine the shape of very large object in relation to a human, say trying to determine whether or not earth is flat or to trying to define what a hole is. The absence of matter surrounded by matter would probably be an inadequate mathematical answer for the latter!

His approach, as explained by Keith Devlin in a recent broadcast of Forum[1], was as follows. Assume that you start from some arbitrary point in the universe and travel for a very long time taking arbitrary turns, leaving a string in your wake all this while. After this rather long travel, where you were leaving a snake trail of string all the while, you proceed to return to the point you started from. You then proceed to pull the string together tight, holding both the ends of the string, trying to close the loop formed by holding both ends of the string in your hand. If you are able to pull this string till there is no loop and end up with a point then we can determine that the space that covered during the course of the travel is really, well, as unremarkable as it looks from the inside. It essentially has no definable characteristic shape in three dimensions. If, however, we are not able to tie the string to get a point, it’s whole different story altogether and the space you covered would look different from the outside and would have a definable shape. It’s almost like if were living in doughnut shaped planet, had traveled over the ring of the doughnut and then trying to close the loop. We would not be able to tie the string to a point in that case. This was the idea that Poincaré thought would help determine how space looks from the outside. So Poincarés conjecture would help answer question on the shape and nature of this space. Questions like what is the simplest 3-dimensional space, what are their properties, among others. Poincaré’s conjecture was in the news recently because a Russian mathematician named Grigory Perelman recently got awarded a very prestigious award in mathematics called the Fields Medal for providing a proof for this conjecture. A proof that essentially says that Poincaré’s idea was indeed correct and would work to determine the nature of 3-dimensional spaces.

What made this story very interesting was the human drama leading to Perelman getting the award. It involves a whole cast actors, among whom is a prominent scientist of Chinese origin, Shing-Tung Yau. Proving such a theorem is not a discrete step. There are a lot of intermediate steps involved, one research playing into the other, one insight being built upon and used by the other to come to the final conclusion etc. The latest edition of the New Yorker magazine has a lengthy feature on the events and the people involved in this story. Yau make a claim of playing a much larger role in the development of the solution, if not the claim of being the sole person solving it. His almost militant interest to get credit stems in large part due to his desire to cement his status as the leading scientist in his native China. Perelman himself is a rather singular character. He fits the stereotype of the obsessed scientist to the tee. He is ultra reclusive, lives in Russia with his mother and refuses to accept the award because he does not find any significance in it, purity of purpose being the only ideal. There is, however, near universal recognition of Perelman’s contribution in developing new and profound mathematical constructs that form the essential tools to construct and understand the proof.

Keith Devlin mentions that often its these mathematical constructs and insights that are probably as important, if not more so, as solving the actual problem itself. Consequences resulting from Poincaré conjecture have already been studied from all points so finally knowing that the theory does indeed hold, is not all that important. He says that the constructs developed by Perelman will prove to be invaluable in solving equations in physics that “develop singularities” when applied locally to small areas. (I cannot claim to understand what these are so here’s a link that talks about them). His constructs will help physicists in controlling these singularities. The steps involved in solving a problem of this nature are as important as the result itself. They lead to development of ideas, constructs and tools which themselves reveal hidden structures and truths that not only help evaluate a theory, but also lead to significant and possibly hidden truths and relationships.

To elaborate on this point, Douglas Hofstadter (who was the other guest on the program with Keith Devlin and who wrote that mind-bending book Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid which is a potential subject of a post in itself) gave the example of prime numbers. Prime numbers are an oddity because they do not seem to fit any particular pattern. The existence of primes has been known for thousands of years. You can divide prime number in different classes in many different ways. Besides 2, all the prime numbers are odd numbers. Now, there are two types of odd primes. Those that are 1 greater than a multiple of 4 e.g. 41 which is 40 + 1, 40 being a multiple of 4, and those that are 1 below a multiple of 4 e.g. 43 which is 44-1, 44 again being a multiple of 4. Although there are infinitely many numbers in both classes, these two classes of primes have a fundamentally different nature. There is a very interesting connection that can be drawn between these two classes of primes and squares. It turns out that primes of the former class can always be represented as the sum of two squares. Taking the example of 41, the square would be 25 (5 squared) and 16 (4 squared). What’s more, they will always be exactly one pair of squares that will add up to this prime! And what about the other latter class? Well, for that class there is no pair of squares that will add up to the primes in that class. So there turns out to be this unexpected connection between squares, which are easy to think about and are predictable, and prime numbers which are so very irregular. In nature too there are so many patterns that we come across everyday, but rarely realize how they are so closely related with mathematical symmetries and relationships. The petals of some flowers are arranged in fibonacci symmetry, earth is the perfect shape for minimising the pull of gravity on its outer edges – a sphere (although centrifugal force from its spin actually makes it an oblate spheroid, flattened at top and bottom)[2], bees construct the beehive made up Hexagons because a hexagon fits most closely together without any gaps which maximise the use of space[2] and so on.

[1]. KQED Forum Fri, Aug 25, 2006. What Mathematicians Do
[2]. abc.net.au. Maths in Nature; Photos.

Goodbye pluto

August 24th, 2006 by gaurav

The International Astronomical Union has voted through a new definition criterion for what qualifies to be called a “planet” (I was talking about it a couple of days back). The result of this exercise is that we now cannot call Pluto a planet.

What that means is that a) course books all over the world will have to incorporate the change, and b) include the new more rigid definition of a planet. It would be fun to see how they do that because the new definition is such that the footnote caveats section reads as long as the definition itself. To the IAU has decided to seed the set with eight planets; Mercury, Venus, Earth, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. They will work from there, newly discovered objects will be included in the set if they satisfy the new rule. The beeb had this to say on the news item.

Magic mushrooms

August 24th, 2006 by gaurav

The latest issue of Scientific American has a small half-page article about a study done at the John Hopkins University on Psychedelic mushrooms and their effects. According to the article:

One third of volunteers given psilocybin, the mushroom’s active compound, described it as the most spiritually meaningful experience of their lives, and about two thirds rated it in their top five.

I might add the study group consisted of (only) 26 “spiritually active” volunteers. The article goes on to say the following about the mental state of participants some time after the experiments were conducted:

Two months later 79 percent reported moderately or greatly increased well-being or life satisfaction compared with those given a placebo.

Hmmm.. so getting high might really be showing the influenced mysteries of the universe then. So says Mark Morford of the San Francisco Chronicle in this humorous article.

9 planets?

August 22nd, 2006 by gaurav

So you thought that there were nine planets in the solar system? If a current (rather controversial) proposal by the IAU (International Astronomical Union) gets adopted, there would be at least three new planets added to our solar system. The change would occur because the definition of what exactly a “planet” is, would be redone. According to the new definition (via. space.com),

A planet is a celestial body that (a) has sufficient mass for its self-gravity to overcome rigid body forces so that it assumes a hydrostatic equilibrium (nearly round) shape, and (b) is in orbit around a star, and is neither a star nor a satellite of a planet.

There are other rules apart from the basic definition above. This is still a proposal and the IAU is going to vote on it on August the 24th. If it goes through we might end up getting not just 3, but possibly many more planets to call as part of our solar system.

It’s funny when you read about this. When we come across a line that says “there are nine planets in the solar system”, a lot us would just accept that at face value, or maybe not exactly bother to ask what qualifies a celestial body as a “planet”. But now it appears there never really was a scientific definition of what exactly a planet was in the first place.

Animator vs. Animation

August 20th, 2006 by gaurav

Creative, engaging and fun flash animation.

Animator vs. Animation by *alanbecker on deviantART

The tallest quadruped

August 20th, 2006 by gaurav

Giraffe

The Great Indian Hornbill

August 20th, 2006 by gaurav

Great Indian Hornbill Pic 1

Great Indian Hornbill Pic 2

Warren Buffett on Charlie Rose.

August 19th, 2006 by gaurav

Here are 3 archived interviews made available for free on Google Video.

And just for kicks just have a look at the Berkshire Hathway website. It’s surprising how ‘no-frills’ it is! Much like the man himself I guess.

PS: Thanks to my friend Madhu for the tip.

Inflation in Zimbabwe

August 18th, 2006 by gaurav

… has reached 1000%. Yes you read that right. It’s the highest rate of inflation in any country in the world today. According to the BBC,

A loaf of bread now costs between Z$80,000 – Z$110,000 (79 US cents – $1.08) up from about Z$7,500 last year

Just imagine it. People would always need to carry wads of cash. And god help you if you need to to do your groceries. You need a sack then. The NYT says,

For untold numbers of Zimbabweans, toilet paper — and bread, margarine, meat, even the once ubiquitous morning cup of tea — have become unimaginable luxuries. All are casualties of the hyperinflation that is roaring toward 1,000 percent a year, a rate usually seen only in war zones.

Zimbabwe has been tormented this entire decade by both deep recession and high inflation, but in recent months the economy seems to have abandoned whatever moorings it had left. The national budget for 2006 has already been largely spent. Government services have started to crumble.

More from NYT here.

Microsoft Access Dragon and j-say scripts

August 17th, 2006 by pranav

At long last, I have added j-say support to Microsoft Access 2003. This project originated in response to a request on the j-say list. Check it out!

Note:
If you need assistance with importing the commands, see the help in the command browser.

Finally, these scripts work with DNS pro v8.1 and Jaws For Windows v7.0.

You can download the commands from here.

Wal-Mart profits decline

August 16th, 2006 by gaurav

Wal-Mart is like a whirlpool. It seems to suck the life out of mom-and-pop shops and small vendors in whatever neighborhoods it decides to land. That might very well be free-market economics in all it’s glory, people demand low prices, people get low prices, but it sure is not pretty. The ungentle giant, which merits an active and exclusive detractor website, saw it’s profits decline according to the quarterly report released by the company. It looks like a combination of factors. Pulling out of foreign markets like Germany (where one of the reasons identified was that Wal-Mart clerks were seen to smile a little too much) and Korea, high cost of oil, and “costly overhauls of their marketing, merchandising, and staffing” being the chief among them. This at the same time when it announces it’s supposed to be *cough* going green. Let’s see how green Wal-Mart gets and how and who they squeeze in this process.

Under Construction.

August 13th, 2006 by gaurav

Hi there. Major re-construction is underway at the moment. On acccount of a ~6 month anniversary of this site, I decided to completely re-do the backend and the layout! The very challenging tasks in progress is extracting posts from the previous platform and putting them under this new one. In any case, the work should be complete in a couple of days so be back after that time. See your around.

Drink Heineken … cobrastyle

August 10th, 2006 by gaurav

Whether or not you like their beer, Heineken, like Budweiser, manages to put out some wonderful ads. Remember the Budweiser frogs and the WHAAAAAZAAA series? Here’s one that I came across today and found it delightful.

Did you watch what they kept doing to their ears? No? Ok watch it again then. The Ad was done by a guy called David Bernal who is an artist following a dance style called Popping. You can watch him bend all the bones in his body here. The snazzy song the Ad is set to is called CobraStyle and its by a Swedish group called Teddybears. Its getting a lot of airplay on KCRW these days and can be got for free from the link below.

Download:
Teddybears – Cobrastyle

PS: I am not a 100% sure of song copyright and all that, so if someone finds it objectionable, let me know.