That’s a surprising development.
This is one of my favorite songs from one of my favorite movies from when I was a kid. This song is from the movie Sholay, arguably the biggest Bollywood hit in history. My parents had the song on tapes and I think maybe even an LP. It’s one of those songs that just is permanently part of my life’s soundtrack. And, it’s such a good song too. Some more background about the movie from Wikipedia:
Sholay is the highest grossing film of all time in India. It has earned Rs. 2,36,45,00,000, equivalent to US$ 60 million, after adjusting for inflation. When first released, the film was declared a commercial disaster. Word of mouth convinced movie-goers to give the film a chance and soon it became a box-office phenomenon. It ran for 286 weeks straight (more than five years) in one Mumbai theatre, the Minerva. Sholay racked up a still record 60 golden jubilees across India and doubled its original gross over reruns during the late 1970s, 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s. Sholay was the first film in the history of Indian cinema to celebrate silver jubilee (25 weeks) at over a hundred theatres across India.
In 1999, BBC India declared it the “Film of the Millennium”; Indiatimes movies ranks the movie amongst the Top 25 Must See Bollywood Films. In that same year, the judges of the 50th annual Filmfare awards awarded it with a special award called Filmfare Best Film of 50 Years.
Bollywood films, especially from that era, always feel campy to me, but I think I might have to give this another viewing soon.
Bonus video from the 1965 film Gumnaam. This song, Jaan Pehechan Ho, also appeared in the movie Ghost World (which, if I’m remembering correctly, is the first movie my wife and I watched together):
We always wonder if her neck hurt after shooting finished…
(PS. I’m actually reasonably impressed that I can translate much of both songs without looking up words… considering my parents don’t speak Hindi in the house (we’re Gujarati), I think that’s an accomplishment)
Two years ago, I was introduced to Sxip and the work around Identity 2.0. The key standard involved in all of this is OpenID. Here’s a quick recap of OpenID:
OpenID is an open, decentralized, free framework for user-centric digital identity.
OpenID starts with the concept that anyone can identify themselves on the Internet the same way websites do-with a URI (also called a URL or web address). Since URIs are at the very core of Web architecture, they provide a solid foundation for user-centric identity.
…
To login to an OpenID-enabled website (even one you’ve never been to before), just type your OpenID URI. The website will then redirect you to your OpenID Provider to login using whatever credentials it requires.
OpenID has been in the news lately with two separate announcements from major companies. Both Microsoft and AOL are committing to support OpenID. Microsoft has simply announced support. AOL has gone a bit further and enabled OpenID URIs for every one of their users. That’s a big, big deal. I don’t know anyone without an AIM login.
Just a couple of notes. The most important takeaway to me is that it’s now even easier to start a company. I’m building a new site right now at home and having to write a new registration system from scratch absolutely sucks. I don’t know why we all do it over and over again, but we all do. It’s a waste of time and only takes away from building the great product.
The other interesting thing is that the companies that went this way are the two companies who really have pushed single-sign-on in the past. I would’ve expected the first major company to move this way to be a more tech-saavy, personalization focused company like Yahoo or Amazon. I just didn’t expect a big company like AOL to do something so, well, technically savvy. Of course, after buying WIN and getting Jason Calacanis, even for that short while, they did a ton of smart, savvy things. So maybe they’re more nimble than I thought.
On a slightly different note, I noticed that Sxip has killed sxore and is focusing on Sxipper instead. I think this idea is better and will be trying out the plugin. The idea is a variation of something I thought would be better than the completely web-based approach.
I’m hoping that OpenID providers like Sxipper or MyOpenId or even AOL or Microsoft catch on so that one day I might be able to just build a web site without reinventing the register-login-recover-password loop that seems to be a universal requirement.
I’ve been singing the praises of the XBox360 for some time now. Between Call of Duty 3, Gears Of War, and Madden, I’ve seen the best that the console has to offer for graphics and gameplay. Hooked up to a 1080p LCD TV, this setup looks beautiful. I even began to believe that maybe Microsoft could actually make a good product.
Playing with these games on XBox Live, however, has reminded my why I hate Microsoft products. Madden was relatively smooth and I have few complaints there. It’s a simple online experience, after all, just 1 versus 1 and basic voice communication. Gears and COD3 have been a nightmare by comparison.
The fact that both games suffer from similar troubles makes be believe that the issue is Live, not the games per se. Both games would’ve benefited from a lot more testing of their online experience, no doubt, but the biggest issues have come up with creating or joining games. All of this functionality relies on XBox Live, and in both cases it sucks.
Gears has specific issues finding and joining games. Every time you attempt to join a game that’s close to full, you have at least a 50% chance of getting an error back from the game. The error is cryptic (connection to host lost), but I think it’s the result of what should be an expected and handled error, the game filled up before you got in. It happens often enough that it takes several attempts to actually launch a game.
There are also several gameplay bugs that are pretty annoying. Chainsaw someone and try to move at the same time and you’ll get frozen to the spot until someone kills you. Join a ranked or player match last and sometimes your voice communications won’t work (you’ll be able to hear everyone else, but they won’t be able to hear you). Join a player match after other people who have been through one round already and you won’t be able to hear or talk to them. Those are the most egregious bugs I’ve seen in a console game.
COD3 is even worse. The game requires the most specific router setup possible with either UPnP on and configured correctly on the router (not the case on my newish Linksys router) or port forwarding configured for the “XBox Live” ports (88 UDP and 3074 UDP & TCP incidentally). Without the proper network setup, it’s more or less impossible to join player matches and very difficult to join ranked matches. The game is pretty much unplayable online in this state.
After spending some time investigating all of this, I was able to get online. It got better, but still was and is a horrible experience. It takes upwards of 10 minutes to successfully join a ranked game (after about 2-5 tries). Joining player matches has the same problem as Gears. Overall, the experience is painful to the point that people who otherwise love the game are complaining about it.
Then there are the gameplay bugs. Often times, joining a game in the Abbaye map will put you in an impossible position. I’ve been stuck so that map is offset (I think I’m at one point on the map, but everyone else sees me at a different point), or I get dropped through the floor of the map and continue free falling while everyone is playing miles above me. While it’s cool to be stuck in this weird, cloud filled globe, I want to play the goddamn game. Especially after waiting 10 minutes and trying over and over again to join it in the first place!
The kicker in all of this is that both of these games have been patched once already!
While consoles have generally focused on the single-player or single-console experience, all of the next gen consoles are emphasizing their connected functionality. XBox 360, for example, allows you to download videos, movies, etc. onto your XBox via XBox Live. The online experience is part of the next gen feature set. That’s why I’m just amazed at how bad these games are so far. If Microsoft wants to keep their momentum, they need to fix these things. PS3s seem to be available everywhere now and Christmas is past, so they should be battling on equal footing. The online experiences need to be better if they expect people to use even more services from Xbox Live.
Interesting comments given at a security conference.
Apparently Microsoft introduced more about Windows Vista at CES. That prompted a mac fan out there to create a couple of videos to demonstrate the great new features of Vista. You can watch Episode 1 on the innovative user interface and Episode 2 on search and parental controls. Good natured jab.
(Found at Crooked Timber)







