Y for Yocto

Nope, no click-bait here: Yocto is very much a real word with a real meaning. So if you read no further, at least you can walk away better armed and prepared to score handsomely in your next Scrabble game when that relatively rare, coveted Y-tile (4 points!) lands on your letter rack. But if you’re…

W for Write Me a Letter

In some ways I can relate to those born almost a hundred years ago. That generation found themselves traveling by horse-and-buggy (or bullock/camel cart, depending on the continent!), watched in amazement as the automobile , and then the airplane were invented – and finally as both went mainstream. Even better, most of them experienced the…

S for Sometimes

Over time we get conditioned to ignore the banalities of daily life; and sometimes we look for a deeper meaning behind the picayune. Someone cuts us off in traffic, and we feel that they are out to “get us”. Someone doesn’t return our call or email and we are convinced they are snubbing us. Heck,…

Q for Quidnunc

Ok, so if you actually know who can be called a quidnunc, chances are you are either a bona fide logophile, or you have seen the eminently forgettable movie “Love Happens’ which despite starring Jennifer Aniston and having words like “quidnunc” and “poppysmic” liberally sprinkled in, sadly failed to impress logophiles… or anistonophiles (yep, just…

P for Please, Mr. Postman

The Postman Always Rings Twice. Even on Saturdays ! Or so feels the United States Congress, which today thwarted the beleaguered United States Postal Service’s self preservatory proposal to stop delivering mail on Saturdays in an attempt to stay financially solvent. While the political palaver is likely to continue for months before any resolution is reached…

O for Ozymandias

“I met a traveler from an antique land”, so begins the sonnet by P.B. Shelley penned almost two hundred years ago. In a few short lines that follow, “Oyzmandias” brutally underscores the inevitable decline of great kings and the powerful empires they build and the inconsequentiality of things in the “long term”. In travels across…

N for Numbers

It all begins the day we’re born. Our life is ruled by numbers. Various permutations of random juxtaposed digits, that shadow, trail and chase us every day of our life. Your birthday: a series of numbers. The time you were born, and how much you weighed as a newborn – more numbers. And it doesn’t…

M for Money for Nothing

How much land does a man need, anyway ? Whether you feel that Tolstoy’s famous short story was a cautionary tale against the evils of capitalism or simply a thinly veiled paean to the socialist way of thinking  (though sometimes a good story could be, you know, just a good story !) the obvious moral…

L for Love, not Like

Thanks Facebook, for bastardizing a fairly picayune but ever-handy word that formed the staple of quotidian vernacular and a handy favorite among commonly used words in my (and I suspect, your) vocabulary for years. “Like”, I used to like you but now I’m not so sure.I still can’t help but fall back on you, in…

K for Kodachrome®

Think of a company that invents a sizzling new technology that fundamentally changes the way people view information from far-flung places and then figures out a way to translate this technology into tools that put something once-esoteric into the hands of the masses. Now imagine that the founder of this company is a dropout from school…

J for Joe DiMaggio (where have you gone, anyway !)

A nation does, indeed, turn its lonely eyes to you. Well, Joltin’ Joe has long left us and gone, but our eyes still turn. Somewhere. Anywhere. But away from the caustic, vituperative drivel that passes off as dialogue and discourse in this election year. If you have turned on the TV or listened to any…

I for iThink

While iThink may sound like a nifty innovation coming out of the famed, recently bereaved, Cupertino company, it isn’t. However I cannot deny that events in the recent days have caused the thinking man to don the thinking cap again, perhaps on matters more somber than picayune. iThink about how life is temperate and tempestuous,…

H for Happiness

I hope you did not come here looking for the perfect recipe for happiness. Really, if it was so easy-if happiness could say be bottled up as an elixir- there would be lots of bottlers hawking the magic potion. And if happiness could be boxed up in a neat little package, numerous companies would be…

G for Grass is Greener…On the Other Side?

It is not just a cliché, is it ? The grass apparently indeed appears greener on the other side. I know of single people who wish they were married, and married people who wistfully remember their bachelor days. You know busy executives with lots of money but no time who are looking for ways to…

F for First Things First

The allure of being #1 is undeniable. After all, it’s the winner that stands highest on the podium, takes the largest trophy, makes the most money and has the fawning attention of the fans and media ever eager to watch and report on every move a winner makes. But what does it take to be…

E for Everyday Matters

Is life worth living ? It depends upon the liver. This William James quote was one of the earliest examples of puns that I learnt in Grammar class. (I said earliest, not classiest). The liver, the person living the life, as opposed to the organ in the human body responsible for protein synthesis and detoxification,…

D for Doggie Tales

I have never owned a pet. Not even an imaginary one, though in my younger days I admit I thoroughly enjoyed the exploits of Tintin’s fearless partner Snowy, or admired the fiercely protective demeanor of Buster in End Blyton’s Five Find Outers series. Over the last few months however, I have had the pleasure of…

C for Clarity

MAD magazine may not be an obvious place to seek philosophical inspiration, but Alfred E. Neuman ( better known for “What me, worry?”) once had an astute observation in print that caught my eye. He declared that: “Most people don’t know what they want, but are they pretty sure they don’t have it.” Admit it…

B for Best

Come to think of it: we are quite picky in that we generally always want “the best”. We want to live in the best neighborhoods, wear the best clothes, drive the best vehicles our money can buy, eat at the best places, watch the best movies, and so on. I mean, really, how many times…

A for Alma Mater

Honestly, this post should really have been titled “A for Action”. For after quite blithely asserting that I would simply pick my next blog post topics in simple alphabetical order, action is what was found lacking; it has taken me ten full weeks to decide on a topic and share these thoughts. It did take…

Lost in the Weeds

YOU know the drill: you wake up, and seconds later, the invisible screen in your mind flickers to life and (like a Windows 3.1 boot menu), starts scrolling the litany of things we need to get done today – the dreaded-or-loved-but-never-ignored-for-long “to-do list”. It seems that every day we are waking  up to dozens of…

I’ll take the 1%, Albert.

Look around, and you will see hundreds of objects that are a result of curiosity, intelligence, perseverance, ingenuity, dint of effort -and often plain luck- come together in something that makes our life easier, better, convenient (and occasionally uplifting). Inspiration is found in many places, and not all inspiration results in an “end product” that…

Eye of the Beholder

Several years ago, I saved up for months and then spent a small fortune buying my first “real” camera: a good, sturdy “state of the art” Nikon SLR . I then proceeded to save up for a few more months and spend a slightly bigger “small fortune” to buy different kinds of  lenses: wide angle,…

Beware the Ides of March

Had Julius Caesar heeded the warning of the soothsayer, would he have lived to see another day ?? The Ides of March (or today, March the 15th) is a term that for over two thousand years has become synonymous with the power of foretelling the future. It is the day Julius Caesar was assassinated (in…

Sunny Side Up

Optimism should not be related to the weather. Why then does a sunny disposition refer to someone having a cheerful outlook, whereas the somewhat unpleasant task of sacrificing current wants to ensure future security is referred to as saving for a rainy day? That being said, I guess there is nothing like a bright sunny…

The Rain in Spain

I never did find out if it (the rain in Spain, that is) falls mainly in the plain. But what I can aver is that it does fall pretty consistently in the city. Particularly when one wants it not to: such as when one only has a few hours to take in the sights and…

Long Live The King

Mention “The King”, and chances are that you have a vision of Elvis Presley crooning to an over-sized microphone (though recently, Michael Jackson is increasingly picking up the grandiose sobriquet as well). Unlike the monarchs of yesteryears, however, these kings are truly crowned by the overwhelming vote of the vox populi – they are the…

Follow the Yellow Brick Road…

Did you look at this picture and wonder what was going on in the sculptor’s mind ? Well, I did – and not just when I first glanced at it or was taking the photograph, but several dekkos later, well, I have to admit – i just didn’t “get” it ! Days later, I was…

Carpe Diem

She was 48, and yes, her death was unexpected. It may seem, perhaps, a bit morbid to start writing a blog with a reflection on death. The trail of thought that leads to these penned lines however began innocuously enough – I was simply reconnecting with an old friend I had not met for many…