Deafening Silence | Opinion | The Harvard Crimson

Last week in Israel, hundreds of terrorist attacks occurred around the country. But the world is silent.

Source: Deafening Silence | Opinion | The Harvard Crimson

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Because You Love Them. . . . Helicopter Parenting

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India 2. . . . Apple 0

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The American University has put the price on the suit as 862.4 million dollars.  The amount of damages has not been decided by the jury as yet.

The Times of India

Gurinder Sohi and Terani Vijaykumar are names you probably won’t recognize. But they are the David to Apple’s Goliath in a lawsuit that accuses the iPhone maker of illegally using their patented technology. A jury in US recently found that Apple infringes upon a computer processor patent made by Sohi, Vijaykumar and two others in its iPhone 5S, iPhone 6, iPhone 6 Plus and iPad Air 2. Here are 5 things you should know about Sohi and Vijaykumar…
1.
Sohi and Vijaykumar were part of a team of four engineers who created a “Table based data speculation circuit for parallel processing computer” that Apple eventually used to “enhance efficiency and performance” of its iPhone and iPad processors, according to the complaint. The lawsuit was filed by the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (WARF), University of Wisconsin, where Sohi led the team of engineers.
2.
Sohi was the lead engineer of the project, which was granted a patent in the US in 1998. He is currently a professor of computer sciences at the University of Wisconsin Madison. Vijaykumar, on the other hand, is a professor of electrical and computer engineering at Purdue University. Both pursued their graduation at BITS, Pilani.
3.
According to the complaint filed by WARF in the Wisconsin court, the patented work “has been recognized as a major milestone in the field of computer microprocessor architecture/design.” It improves the power efficiency and performance in processors with the help of a “data speculation circuit.”
4.
The jury ruled that Apple infringed upon all of the six patents in WARF’s complaint and rejected Apple’s request to prove patent invalidity.
5.
WARF had sued Apple for a sum of $862.4 million, but the jury has not yet decided how much would be granted to the foundation and the team members.
6.
WARF had sued Intel for the same patent in 2008 as well, but that case was reportedly settled out of court for an undisclosed sum of money.

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The International Flight of Words. . .

Haiku

Image from Google Public Domain   Thanks to  my faithful researcher, Judy !

Haiku fans flock to Union College in Schenectady coverage from The Times Union of Albany , New York
Haiku North America draws international crowd
By Paul Grondahl Updated 10:55 pm, Friday, October 16, 2015

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I love the joy this moment brings these two ladies~

Mary DiMichele of Montreal, left, enjoys the birds calls as she records Ruth Yarrow’s presentsentation Haiku with Feathers at the Haiku North America autumn conference on Friday, Oct. 16, 2015, at Union College in Schenectady, N.Y. (Cindy Schultz / Times Union) Photo: Cindy Schultz / 10033792A
Photo: Cindy Schultz
IMAGE 1 OF 12 BUY PHOTOMary DiMichele of Montreal, left, enjoys the birds calls as she records Ruth Yarrow’s presentsentation Haiku with Feathers at the Haiku North America autumn conference on Friday, Oct. 16, 2015, at Union … more

Schenectady
Haiku devotees
convened at Union Friday.
Poetic sparks flew.

It’s tempting to start thinking in haiku, an occupational hazard when one spends a morning with 130 haiku aficionados from Canada, India, Japan, Australia and beyond at Haiku North America, the world’s largest and oldest conclave of all things haiku.
They are unrepentant word geeks. Each clutching a tiny notebook. Incessantly jotting down observations.

Kala-Ramesh
Kala Ramesh made her first trip to the United States, 8,000 miles from Pune, India, to share her haiku and learn about the form. She showed a short documentary film, “Haiku WALL India,” about her program that replaces graffiti painted on urban walls with haiku written by hundreds of teenagers.
“Haiku has gotten extremely popular in India,” said Ramesh, a teacher at Symbiosis International University in Pune, a city of 3 million near the capital of Mumbai. She’s published 500 haiku. Two examples: “Gita chanting…/birds become/the ellipsis.” And this: “predawn/wakens/to the sound of OM.”

I have often said that many Indian people speak in poetry and here is Kala Remesh! 

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Jama Masjid Mosque in Old Delhi

MUSLIMS OFFERING NAMAJ ON THE OCASSION OF EID AT JAMA MASJID IN THE CAPITAL

MUSLIMS OFFERING NAMAJ ON THE OCASSION OF EID AT JAMA MASJID IN THE CAPITAL

This Jama Masjid ( Friday mosque)  is  the largest mosque in India.  It is located in Old Delhi and was built by the ruler who built the Taj Mahal.  Eid is the celebration of the end of Ramadan.  There was a Friday Mosque in the Pols or old city of Amadavad.  They need to be large because the followers go there to pray on Friday, their holy day, if at all possible.  I hope you will watch the short video to have architectural details of mosques explained.  I have to admit, I am partial to the elegant simplicity of mosques. . . symmetry, lack of figure  decoration, use of marble and other beautiful stone.  Women in most mosques have their own separate place to pray away from the men.  We also visited a mosque where women are not allowed to enter, including tourists, into the mosque itself even if it is not prayer time. In our travels, we tried always to be good visitors and obey the rules of the culture.

The pilgrims, either tourists or the faithful, enter the site climbing up many, steps  steps, as a metaphor of our life journey.  At the entrance everyone removes their shoes. In our first group , we had a very tall boy who was always afraid his expensive large sneakers would be stolen.  We would always laugh as we never saw in 6’4″ Indians!   Some of the boys had on shorts and had to rent a piece of  cloth to cover their legs.  All women had to cover their head to enter the courtyard.

The students always had  their sketch books handy to sketch a detail here or there.  Crowds of Indians would gather around them as if to see magic from their drawing instrument.  Someone had the idea of asking the watchers to autograph a page in the sketch book.  This was met with much laughter.   A 12 year old boy was asked to sign his name. Then there was a surprise for all the American students.  The boy shook his head. . . .he didn’t know how to write his name.  He had been selling inexpensive trinkets since he was a tiny boy to help his family with the few rupees he made.  He had never gone to school.   This is the desperate fate of many poor families in India!

 

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Human. . . . . Francine

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Photo by tome Marshall/Swns.com

From ecumenical feeding of the poor to the depth of horror in  this concentration camp.  Please read this little girl’s memory of kindness and care in the midst of darkness.

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Langar Week in Ludhiana, India

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Leaders of four major religions come together at the Friday Mosque to share a meal prepared  as a symbolic coming together to alleviate  world hunger.  Please watch the video which is not in English but worth a look.  After all , it is the images of people with symbols of their differences in faith coming together for the good of the poor and hungry of the world. Ludhiana is in the Punjab, not far from Amritsar where the Sikh Golden Temple is located.  At that site, they feel up to 100,000 hungry souls a day.  One of the Sikh  insightful observations is “On an empty stomach, it is hard to believe in a loving god!”

THE OLD building of Jama Masjid, Friday Mosque,  in the narrow streets of Field Ganj in Old City of Ludhiana, witnessed an unusual scene this Sunday.

A Hindu priest, P D Shukla, in saffron robes and a rudraksh mala in hand, was going around the mosque premises, asking people if they have had a proper meal. So was Manpreet Singh, a church pastor, as some Sikhs served food in the mosque’s verandah. The food was prepared in the community kitchen (langar) on the rooftop of the mosque. Close to 400 people — madrasa children, some Sikhs and labourers, too — were served food.  ( Thanks to my friend, Judy)

The Muslims, Hindus, Christians, and Sikhs of Luniana came together to provide a meal, langar, for whomever wished to partake.  Yes, in Incredible India, there is a free lunch! World Hunger is a bigger issue than religious differences.

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Garba at CEPT (Dance begun first in Gujurat)

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Huge crowd at CEPT to celebrate with Gaga.  Keyur said it would go until 2AM.  Wouldn’t you like to be there?

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Dream Weekend. . . . .

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This is a touching commercial for Subaru Impreza. It tells the story of a very special road trip of a dog owner and his old dog.  It is touching and sweet  with the man wanting to fulfill the dog’s bucket list or at least the bucket list he has for his old friend. It touches my heart every time I see it on TV!

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Me

This gallery contains 6 photos.

Originally posted on keep picturing:
Last night nobody was there to take my pictures actually all my friends and me were busy in enjoying garba(dance) on our favorite Gujarati songs. But tonight Aneri was there to take my picture. Thank…

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