Archive for

December 2009

A Tale of Two Cities Through Skywalks

I came across the Bandra skywalk, which is the first (pilot project) in an ambitious program of building 50 such skywalks at a cost of Rs 600 crore (USD 129 million). The cab driver, when asked if people use it, was quick to assure me that they will, once the police start fining those who walk on the street.

Separately, the Mumbai High Court rejected a petition by Vile Parle residents and shopkeepers who argued that a skywalk was unnecessary, expensive, aesthetically bad and would result in old growth trees being cut down (and also cut down their business). 

Bandra SkywalkSkywalk from Cheung Kong Centre over Garden Road, Central

Over in Hong Kong, I ended up using several skywalks, all of which are designed to funnel pedestrian traffic out of MTR stations, across busy roads and into various malls and shopping centers. The skywalks there seem to work in tandem with business interests while providing a real benefit to traffic-weary pedestrians. 

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On Calendars

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To what extent Julius Caesar did this after becoming Pontifex Maximus in 63 BC isn’t clear, but 17 years later, in 46 BC, Caesar reformed the calendar, taking the power to define the year away from the position. The Julian reform declared that the Roman Republic would use a 365 day calendar with an extra day every 4 years. (Sound familiar?) In other words, the year was approximated at 365 1/4 days. To align the new calendar with the equinox, though, he had to add another two months to the already extended year, making 46 BC 445 days long. Cicero called this “the last year of confusion”.

Interesting facts about the origin and adjustments of calendars. Not surprisingly, ambitious emperors in India would routinely start their own calendars as Shakakarta marking the beginning of their Epoch.

Many programmers would probably remember that the programming epoch begins with time 0 for Unix as 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970.

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Going to America: A Ponzi scheme that works | The Economist

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From the Good Shepherd.

Joseph Palmi: Let me ask you something... we Italians, we got our families, and we got the church; the Irish, they have the homeland, Jews their tradition; even the niggers, they got their music. What about you people, Mr. Wilson, what do you have?

Edward Wilson: The United States of America. The rest of you are just visiting.

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Beach Entrepenure

Cooks everything. Gets you around. Puts you up.
As seen on a beach in Goa.

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