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Tuesday, April 25, 2006
Monetising MySpace
The New York Times writes:
Changing Technorati Top 100
Publishing 2.0 writes about what's happening in the blogosphere:
IMF's Challenges
WSJ has an interesting article on the challenges facing the International Monetary Fund:
Buy Side Publishing
Ross Mayfield writes:
Mobile Blogs
The Economic Times has an article which quotes my colleague, Veer Bothra (who also runs MobilePundit):
TECH TALK: Revolution on the Roads: Cars and Choice
The first factor in travel is the vehicle. There was a time not so long ago when in India we had a choice between an Ambassador and a Fiat. Then, along come the Maruti – smaller, sleeker, and much more affordable. Now, there are new model launches from multiple automobile companies every month. Cars have become bigger and better, and with that has come greater comfort in long-distance travel. I remember some of our Rajasthan trips of the past. The best mode for long-distance travel a decade ago on those roads was a jeep. The roads were called thus only because one could not call them anything else. Cars would not survive those roads! Times have changed. During the last trip I did in September, we rented a Toyota Qualis. The same roads which I used to shudder driving on seemed so much better. Every year, more of the roads improve. On the Surat trip, we went by our Honda Accord. En route, I saw all types of car models. Even the smaller Maruti 800 models can offer a pleasant experience on the roads now. But with growing prosperity, the Indian upper classes have been buying a variety of cars – and using them. The Honda is the sixth car I have used in my life in India. I remember us having an Ambassador when I was very young. Then, we had a Fiat model. During my short stay in the US, I drove an old Buick – I wanted to be able to pack up and return to India at short notice, so wanted a car which would not lock up a significant investment. When I returned from the US, I drove a Maruti 800. I used to do a lot of city driving until I had an accident one night. Blinded momentarily by the headlights of a car coming from the opposite direction, my car hit a lamp-post with the bulb falling and shattering the windscreen of my car. Amazingly, nothing happened to me even though pieces of glass were all over the front seats. After that, I decided to get a driver. (That is one of the luxuries of living in India. A driver’s salary is about Rs 5,000-10,000 a month. ) The next car was a Maruti Zen. I liked the compactness of the car. We then got an Opel Astra. And finally, four years ago, a Honda Accord – which we still have. I am not much of a car model person. I look at cars as serving the need of going from point A to point B. As long as that happens well, I am fine with any car! I can barely identify models looking at them. We haven’t been much into the long driving thing, so the car has been mostly used for local driving. We end up doing about 10,000 kms a year in the car. Although the choice of cars expanded, the road conditions left a lot to be desired. However, as I discovered on my road trip to Surat, that has begun to change and the road revolution has begun. Tomorrow: Real Highways Related Entries: [All]TECH TALK: Revolution on the Roads: Random Thoughts [April 28, 2006] TECH TALK: Revolution on the Roads: Mobile Lifestyle [April 27, 2006] TECH TALK: Revolution on the Roads: Real Highways [April 26, 2006] TECH TALK: Revolution on the Roads: Travel Options [April 24, 2006]
Tech Talk
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| Comments (3)
Hi Rajesh: Great to know Indian highways are improving and people are indeed considering driving between megacities as an option. However, as most of us have experienced, though roads have improved did it really cut the time to commute? As i can tell from my own expereince, when returning from surat to Mumbai via newly build highway-or newly reconstrcuted highway~ we were able to rach upto Mumbai city limits mfaster than ever before ,but once you hit mumbai local roads passing through suburbs, reaching south mumbai from Virar via road took us very simialr time that took us from surat to mumbai!! I am writing this mainly from analogy I see from telecommunications world in India...That is- Indian MNCs have build nationwide fiber network,some of them also have taken over global broadband fiber networks but in the access still we have limited bandwidth and fewer options to jump on national or international superhighways!! Unless Indian technocrats see end to end user expereince be it road travel or internet access conditions, from access to backbone..we may still lage behind developed countries in terms of infrastrcture. Indian technocrats and Enterpreneures have a challenge never tackled by any developed nation or developing competitors such as China to provide "broadband access" in the local loop and may have to think outside the box and adapt newer technologies, hybrid solutions or homegrown tactics -- both for transportation industry as well telecommunication industry and to provide world class infrastrcture.. Of interest is the NYT interactive presentation of India's Golden Quadrilateral highway project. [Hat tip: Arzan] Posted by Atanu DeyVery good thing is that government change didn't halt the process of making highways better. In long run these highways will be more helpful and of course it saves travel time. -- Shan. |
Rajesh, i remember that some one has predicted as it will be very difficult to convenience advertisers?
Posted by Shan