About the TiE-ISB Event

These days power availability has deteriorated significantly in Pune. Where I live, power is not available for about seven hours every day, including Sundays. The peak power shortage robs people of an essential resource during the most productive part of the day. If this is the situation in a major metro city like Pune, it is easy to imagine how hard life must be in most of India, especially for the 800 million who have to subsist on less than $2 a day, most of whom live in rural India.
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Links for Nov 10th, 2008

Sandeep seriously considers why the Pope gets Gandhi’s message wrong:

Benedict’s interpretation of Gandhi’s message of non-violence is false. Gandhi’s non-violence doesn’t stand for a cowardly acceptance of injustice and unprovoked violence. Gandhi viewed proselytisation as cultural invasion and a hindrance to peace.

Andrew Sullivan writing for The Atlantic on why he blogs.

From the first few days of using the form, I was hooked. The simple experience of being able to directly broadcast my own words to readers was an exhilarating literary liberation. Unlike the current generation of writers, who have only ever blogged, I knew firsthand what the alternative meant. I’d edited a weekly print magazine, The New Republic, for five years, and written countless columns and essays for a variety of traditional outlets. And in all this, I’d often chafed, as most writers do, at the endless delays, revisions, office politics, editorial fights, and last-minute cuts for space that dead-tree publishing entails. Blogging—even to an audience of a few hundred in the early days—was intoxicatingly free in comparison. Like taking a narcotic.

More on Raj Thackeray

I heard from several people in response to my 30th October post on Mr Raj Thackeray. A close friend wrote to me thus:

You have previously argued that one has to obey the law of the land or suffer the consequences. That is a sound position.

But I got a feeling that you let Raj Thackeray off too lightly from this yardstick. So okay, I agree Blue Turban is a bastard, but RajT is a violent goon. Goons belong in jail.

He felt that I was being inconsistent. I replied saying I do not ever want to suggest that Raj T should not be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and that it should be done ASAP, if not sooner. I explained that what I meant was that his emergence is not the least unexpected or shocking to a population which has grown accustomed to much greater criminals. He is merely following the path blazed forth by the more daring and more innovative.

So that there is no confusion on where I stand, I am not defending Raj Thackeray at all. Anyone who incites violence against others must be locked up — period. I just want that those who are doing the locking up should be themselves scrutinized to see if they are guilty of greater or similar crimes. It’s the brazen hypocrisy of those who are protesting Raj Thackeray’s hate campaign against “the other” that makes me feel a little sick.

Hi from the ISB

Are we there yet? Not really. The airlines and travel industry have miles to go before arriving at systems that are not obviously deficient. The e-ticket I printed out last evening listed my Mumbai-Hyderabad flight 163 on Kingfisher airlines as departing at 10:40 AM today. At the check-in counter at 10 AM, I was told that the flight was closed. Why? Because the flight departs at 10:10 AM.
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A solar energy conversation with CJ

As I will be talking about energy on panel on energy at the ISB on Friday, I looked into the archives to see what my position on energy is. It would save me time because otherwise I will have to reason from the basics and reach my conclusions. I hardly ever remember the conclusions — I just know the basics and then have to derive the results in a series of logical steps, so to speak. It is good to have the blog archives to help avoid having to derive stuff.

Reading the energy archives was nice but the post that I really liked was “The Future of Energy.” (September 2005).

A good one, even if I say so myself. Take a peek if you have a moment or two.

Traveling for a bit

So here begins a bit of travel. I will be in Mumbai tomorrow and in Hyderabad at the TiE-ISB Wednesday through Friday. Saturday 8th I will be back in good old Pune but only for a short while. Back to Mumbai on Friday the 14th of Nov and go to the US on 15th of Nov.

I expect to be in back home in the SF Bay area on the 15th itself. A couple of weeks there. Which means that I will be celebrating Thanksgiving (Nov 27th) with friends in the Silicon Valley.

Then I head off to the East Coast for a week. I will be in Edison NJ, Philadelphia PA, and NY NY. Then a week in Toronto Canada and then back to the Bay Area and stay a week or so and return by end of December.

I am very excited as I have not done any serious traveling since June. Let’s meet up if possible.

TiE-ISB Connect 2008

I will be at the Indian School of Business in Hyderabad for the TiE-ISB Connect 2008.

India’s most exciting annual networking event for entrepreneurs and investors, the TiE-ISB Connect ’08 will be held on November 5th, 6th and 7th, 2008 at the ISB campus in Hyderabad. Organized by the TiE, Hyderabad Chapter and the Wadhwani Centre for Entrepreneurship Development (WCED), ISB, TiE-ISB Connect enables interaction of aspiring entrepreneurs, early-stage ventures, and growth-stage ventures with potential investors, successful entrepreneurs and mentors.

I will be a panelist on the session “Next 800 Million: Challenges & Opportunities” on the 6th of Nov and chair the panel on “Energy” on 7th Nov. Here’s the schedule.

So I expect to write a few posts on the conference.