Jun 17, 2010

Micromax - 3rd largest mobile vendor in India

Don’t know when the iPhone 4 will be launched in India. And by that time, Apple will be gearing up for the iPhone 5 in US. Had a quick glance at a Samsung that a colleague at work was using and was not at all impressed. Unwilling to pay any big bucks for Blackberry or one of the very few Android phones available in India, I went and picked up the Micromax Q5fb - desperately wanted a QWERTY phone to update Facebook and Twitter on the move.

And I am impressed - the feeling is exactly similar to the one when I used to have a Linux desktop as my primary machine at home till I moved to an Apple eMac 6 years back. Then it was Linux till I afford a Mac. And now it is Micromax till I afford an iPhone.

After just 3 days, I could not resist but to try hacking the phone. And last 3 days, it was about understanding how can a such a phone be sold so cheaply.

And this is what I found - Micromax Q5fb is assembled from a chipset MT6235 from a Taiwanese company Mediatek which loads it with a customised operating system Nucleus RTOS from US company Mentor Graphics. Then in India, Micromax uses a game changing business strategy - low inventory, double margins for dealers compared to the mainstream players and now an increasing big budget sponsorship of events such as cricket and bollywood, that are second only to food and water in India.

It is amazing to see this evolving business model and how it has made the well established global leaders in mobile phones being relegated to also rans.

No wonder, Apple doesn’t consider the Indian market - it is a different ball game here and maybe they are the only one from the big mobile players who understand this.

Mar 11, 2010

Extending wi-fi signal at no cost

I was able to change this

to this

by using a simple kitchen foil as following -

I was inspired by 802.11b Homebrew WiFi Antenna Shootout, which I stumbled upon while trying to find a solution to the wi-fi signal dropping when surfing the internet from a room other than the one where the router is placed.

Jan 27, 2010

Quix - find of the month

I came across this Wired article Ubiquity Alternatives Offer Power Users Command-Line Tools for the Web. The bookmarklet Quix is a wonderful tool - command line for the browser - it is similar to Quicksilver for Mac. I have dragged the bookmarklet to Safari’s Bookmarks Bar in the first position and hence I can invoke Quix command line by just pressing ⌘-1. There are loads of useful commands - I liked the ‘tt’ command which is useful for tweeting the current URL through Tweetie.

Sep 16, 2009

IT Ops: Incident Based Price Model

Driving down IT Operations Costs

Introduction

Even before the economic downturn started, organisations were always exploring ideas for bringing down the IT Operations costs of running live systems. The economic downturn has just brought more rigour or pressure in exercises aiming to reduce costs. IT service providers are exasperated as they are reaching a point where they can only maintain a skeletal support team and have to start absorbing risks associated with it and are vary of any more cuts demanded of them.

This document aims to address how organisations can prepare for any further cost reductions in the IT Operations costs by opting for an Incident Based Price Model in place of the traditional Fixed Price or Time & Material Price models.

Current Models: Challenges and Limitations

Where does the supplier get half a person? Fixed Price and T&M Price Models have been effective for both buyers and suppliers of IT Services in Production Support and Operations till the number of FTE (full time equivalent) were at least 2 for a certain application group. But for organisations having a complex IT landscape (number of small disparate systems complex enough to warrant multiple technical skills), the number of personnel required to service the volume of actual incidents or problems may not be justifiable.

Early indication of a problem on the horizon is when the buyer starts asking for a fraction of FTE or when the supplier starts offering that. This is when compromises start happening and risks being taken for parameters such as backup plans of staff e.g. replacement in case of illness or holidays.

The New Approach

Incident based pricing is not new - product vendors have been following this model indirectly for ages. It may be new to the support involved for customised and bespoke applications.

The key is of course to put a price tag on an individual incident. The most obvious step seems to be on the basis of Severity. But there are other parameters to be considered e.g. a sev 1 incident might be due to a server powered down by mistake for which the resolution is as simple as switching it on and taking care that the OS and applications start in a controlled fashion. On the other hand, a sev 4 incident could be about bank address of a particular customer changed but not picked up by a payment process in time for automatic debit. This could be more difficult to investigate and resolve than the sev 1 mentioned earlier.

Of course, including too many parameters would lead to a additional overhead in finalising a contract as well as billing. Though a daunting task, overhauling the contract and billing systems to include as many relevant parameters as possible, may make it possible to have a finer control. But till then, it is important to strike a balance and design a matrix that could be in the following format-

		Complexity
Severity	Low		Medium		High
Sev 1		£250		£500		£1000
Sev 2		£100		£250		£500
Sev 3		£30		£50		£75
Sev 4		£20		£30		£40
Sev 5		£10		£20		£30

One of the parameters defining the complexity could be the number of applications or support groups impacted.

Regular maintenance activities and critical activities can be charged at a special rate or allowed to fall in one of the above cells.

Controls will have to be put in place for incidents travelling from one support group to another and back.

Treatment to be decided for unresolved incidents. ‘No payments till resolution’ could be considered as an automatic penalty and would result in avoiding efforts for a separate penalty system under the other price models. But this would introduce the new risk and additional overhead of the incident resolution sign-off process in some cases.

Since the billing is directly linked to incident resolution, there is an incentive for the supplier to resolve the incidents as quickly as possible. And there will be no need for a rigourous SLA, at least for low severity incidents. This would also save on the related overheads of tracking and following up supplier on the SLAs.

This is a work in progress and the Google Doc here will be updated with any future changes.

Apr 27, 2009

Big Source of Joy

HDTV connected to a Mac running Plex controlled by Apple Remote. Plex is a great replacement for Front Row because of the control, configuration and expandability options it provides and it is as slick as Apple software.

Oct 11, 2008

Global Financial Crisis and the Web

After the dotcom bubble burst, internet evolved in Web2.0. And I think after the current financial crisis, we will get Web3.0 and maybe it will be easier to define and deliver Web3.0 (I think it will be development resulting from the crisis) than it was for Web2.0.

Sep 2, 2008

Another browser… but then this is from Google!

Google is releasing a new browser, Google Chrome today. And I thought the browser war was already over. More details at Official Google Blog: A fresh take on the browser.

Aug 28, 2008

Ubiquity: Firefox Add-on

There is a new add-on from Mozilla for the Firefox browser called Ubiquity. I haven’t used it yet, but the demo looks quite impressive and Ubiquity could become the mother of all add-ons. More details can be found at Mozilla Labs » Blog Archive » Introducing Ubiquity.

Jul 31, 2008

Apple Mac OS X - Leopard on eMac 1.25 GHz PowerPC G4

Runs absolutely fine… even with 512 MB RAM. So my 4 year old desktop is still doing great and has the latest and best OS and now feels just like new.

Apr 24, 2008

New gadgets acquired

1. Canon HV20: I had already decided for a HD camcorder as I didn’t want to be stuck with a SD (Standard Definition) camcorder while HD (High Definition) takes over the delivery mechanism (TV - HD and players - Blu-ray).

After much deliberation on the recording format (Tape or HDD - Hard Disk Drive), I decided on Tape as it still offers better quality than the compression formats on HDD, especially if you go for HD. This is because HD requires substantial storage space and hence rigourous compression if it has to be stored on HDD or Flash Drives (some camcorders have started offering that). This leads to convoluted workflow while editing and publishing. Also, contrary to my assumption, tape is considered to be a good archival medium.

And my research says that Canon HV20 is currently the best consumer camcorder to record HD on Mini DV tape, especially with its fantastic CINE setting.

Soon, I will post the results on Vimeo. Not Youtube. Vimeo lets you upload better resolution videos including HD.

2. Canon Powershot G9: This was a result of another painful and long decision making process. By paying 10% extra than what one pays for the G9, it is easy to acquire a DSLR (Digital SLR), but I decided against DSLR as I am still not dedicated enough to photography to warrant a DSLR.

On the other hand, I wanted complete manual control to be available for those genius moments and G9 fits the bill (my other camera Fujifilm Finepix E550 offered manual control but it has started showing its age). G9 is a compact with a retro rangefinder look rather than the sleek compacts/point and shoots that have flooded the market.

But the learning curve is not for the faint-hearted and currently I am a bit worried when I will be able to master it.

3. Wacom Bamboo One: Finally, a cheap pen tablet compatible with Mac and from a company dominating the product space and rightly so. What a difference a pen tablet makes in Photo editing!? It is unbelievable - a 3-5 minute lasso selection task using mouse or trackpad in an image editing software can be done in 10 secods flat.

Feb 28, 2008

IT/Software students

I am not in touch with IT/Software students in school/colleges currently. But Yahoo! Developer Network, Google Code (especially Google Summer of Code, which brings together students and mentors from the industry every year and pays substantial stipend for each project selected for development), Mozilla Labs, IBM developerWorks Open Source, Sun Developer Network provide an ample learning opportunity for aspiring students. And of course, so does getting involved in one of the many Open Source projects hosted at SourceForge.net. But the frameworks, APIs, tools, and hosting platforms provided by the above companies can help students to get started quickly and make decisions between choosing ideas faster.

Feb 25, 2008

Yahoo! pipes - Project Flickr On Ur Page (foup)

I was able to create and publish a Yahoo! pipe called foup that takes an email id registered with Flickr and returns the photosets created and the details of each photo in the photoset. The XML formatted pipe output can then be used to form the URL of each image and display the photos on your site [I will update the post soon with a simple html/script that does that].

Users need to be aware of the Flickr Community Guidelines before using Flickr images on their site.

There are a lot of ideas for the project - depends on how much time can be devoted.

Next post will be about Yahoo! Developer Network, Google Labs, Mozilla Labs and how IT/Software students can benefit from them.

Feb 18, 2008

Yahoo! pipes

Firstly, Yahoo! do not brand it as Yahoo! pipes - just plain pipes.

I have been dabbling with Yahoo! pipes for a couple of days. It has been quite some time since I did any coding, so I can’t add much value right now other than directing you to this informative presentation (5.4MB).

But I have an idea - a WordPress plugin that picks keywords from the blog post and outputs news results, blog search results, Wikipedia entries, or something similar. Any takers?

Jan 29, 2008

Nokia to buy Trolltech and its involvement in KDE and Gnome: iPhone connection?

Ars Technica has reported that Nokia is to buy Trolltech.

I would like to speculate that this definitely has something to do with the success of iPhone. And that Nokia wants to build a strong platform on the desktop for it’s phones. Till iPhone came into the market, the desktop interface to mobile phones was limited to the (not so friendly) syncing of the address books and a few other features.

What surprises me is the selection of the development platform - Qt from Trolltech, KDE and GTK/Gnome are predominantly Linux technologies. So does that mean Nokia is betting on Linux’s success on the Desktop.

Jan 11, 2008

What we should not do is a half-hearted job

Ratan Tata has said the above in an interview and I am totally in awe of this great man. Won’t every person in India and elsewhere in the world benefit immensely if this simple advice is put in practice by everybody?

The unveiling of the Tata Nano could be a defining moment in history in many terms (and not limited to the automobile industry) - product design capabilities, R&D investment, transportation, environment, alternative fuel, social well-being and much more.

Being in UK, the possibility of a price point of owning a brand-new car at £1250 just seems unbelievable to me. And contrary to many who may think that Tata Nano has no place in the western countries, I think there is already an existing market which is catered by the likes of smart car and Tata Motors could be targeting this market.

Jan 10, 2008

Social Bookmarking/Tagging and Document Management

While discussing Flickr and tagging with friends, realisation dawned on me that tagging could be used effectively in organising the numerous documents that are produced regularly in our day-to-day work in IT (adoption in an enterprise for other users will require much deeper thoughts - but I think for existing users of a Content or Document Management System, this could be the next enhancement).

The basic idea is to have del.icio.us for the desktop (or rather network or rather intranet). But the bookmarks not limited to web pages, instead the emphasis should be on documents (or files on the network). Of course, the success and effectiveness will be very much dependent on the contribution of each and every creator and reader of the document (hence the term Social bookmarking, isn’t it?). The del.icio.us network paradigm when applied to such a product can also be useful for collaboration.

Jan 7, 2008

Collaboration Tool - Microsoft Sharepoint

My first impressions on using Sharepoint were very positive (it seems to be a real enterprise solution as compared to the online tools I had mentioned in my earlier post) and has loads of features.

But I had just started using it and I discovered an issue (I am not calling it a bug) with the simple upload feature in the Shared Folders - it does not allow the ‘&’ character in the file names. Well, I have never used an ‘&’ in a file name and I have no special affinity towards it (but my project has tons of files created that include ‘&’). I fail to understand - if Microsoft Windows XP allows a file to be created with a character, why does another Microsoft product not support it.

And when you select multiple documents for upload with file names including unsupported characters, it throws an ‘Access Denied’ error - now that, I think, is definitely a bug.

I am wondering how Microsoft’s Testing team looks like.

Dec 18, 2007

Online Project Management and Collaboration Tools

While exploring the new wave of Web 2.0 sites on Go2Web20.net, I came across this interesting breed of ‘Online Project Management and Collaboration Tools’. There are too many similarities with each other and it is difficult to judge who was the original. All of them are completely hosted applications and that might be a deterrent to some enterprises in adopting these tools. None of the tools talk about being compatible with Project Management methods or standards like PRINCE2 and PMP.

Here is the list -
- Teamwork Project Manager
- DeskAway
- Project Spaces
- Actionize.com
- Goplan
- huddle
- cyn.in
- Project 360
- 5pm

Dec 5, 2007

Webby Awards 2007

I don’t know when they were announced but the winner and nominee list gives some interesting sites to surf.

Nov 28, 2007

Photos

JAlbum looks like a good software for designing photo galleries quickly. A few of my experiments can be found here and a few photos from a trip earlier this year to the fantastic Eden Project, Cornwall are here.