Search Results for 'orkut'


Sinful Xocolatl

4 Mar 07 17:26:50 PM - 399 Views |  comments rss: 

Leave a comment | Comments (8) | Perma link | Email this post

Ellena comments: on 13 Mar 07 14:28:00 PM

Heyyyyy You (Supriya)

My My You are sure on roll readng my articles … Its really inspiring let me start workin on my next one …..try Some Choco recipes really easy and you will loveee it.

I Cant Thank you enough
Cheers

supriyad comments: on 13 Mar 07 14:20:00 PM

A must read for a choco lover for me! Loved it.. *yummy*

Ellena comments: on 7 Mar 07 14:10:00 PM

Thanks maria
I am glad you liked it

cheers

maria_m comments: on 7 Mar 07 12:45:00 PM

Hey Natasha
 
That’s a delicious blog. Loved it.
 
Maria M

supriyad comments: on 5 Mar 07 23:25:00 PM

Excerpt taken directly from an event created by my friend Amit on Orkut:
 
Quote:
 
Hi!

I am writing on behalf of Blank Noise

On March 8 last year (Women’s Day), we had a blog-a-thon of stories of street sexual harassment. The blog-a-thon was picked up by bloggers across India, and all over the world. We shared stories we had never shared before, stories we thought we had long forgotten, stories that we had often wanted to bury. We read each other, we linked to each other and we linked back to the Blank Noise Project blog. We were touched by each other’s stories, and drew strength and sustenance from the the long, cross-cultural chain of shared experiences.

This year for Women’s Day we’re asking you to share experiences of times when you were an ACTION HERO and fought back against harassment.
Blog about your experience, and let us know so we can link to you on our blog.

When did you flip a situation so you could resist, when did you give back as hard as you got? How did you choose to confront the situation?

When did you become an Action Hero?

We hope that this response helps us understand the different strategies women (across age groups, cultures, and countries) have instinctively created to deal with street sexual harassment.

(If you’re a male blogger, ask your female friends and relatives about their experiences.)

Here’s how to participate:

1. blog your story (as soon as possible, and definitely before March 8!)

2. email the link to your blog post to blurtblanknoise@gmail.com with
a subject titled “Action Heroes Online”

3. we will link to you right away!

And don’t forget your non-blogging friends and family members — we’d
love to hear stories from your mothers, aunties and grandmothers!

Non bloggers are also invited to participate- email us your story. We will upload your email at www.blanknoiseactionheroes.blogspot.com

Questions? Email us at blurtblanknoise@gmail.com.

Looking forward to hearing from you,

AmitKen
Blank Noise Team
http://www.blanknoiseproject.blogspot.com


BLANK NOISE PROJECT

 
Unqoute

Ellena comments: on 5 Mar 07 02:30:00 AM

Hey Julia.

Thanks A Bunch
So True I loveee chocolate in any form too …..I am sure You Will Love The recipes

Enjoy And Cheers With hot Chocolate

Julia Dutta comments: on 5 Mar 07 02:13:00 AM

Ellena,

What a wonderful post!! I love chocolates in any form and colour and I must say there is nothing as good as Chocolate to lift up your spirits! Which ever way you want to look at it - mood elevator or chocolates as a prasada - take me high! Thanks for the recipe. A must try I suppose?
Julia

superficial comments: on 4 Mar 07 17:31:00 PM

in xchange for one of those chocolate rum balls? (and a bottle of rum? )

Impressive information….

Orkut

Filed under: General News — Bryan Alexander @ 08:33:32 am


Homepage picture for Orkut.

Magnet HackFest01 Report

And it is over! We completed Magnet’s first HackFest at 5pm today. A bunch of hackers came together on 23rd December at 5pm, and hacked internals of systems, coded cool ideas, researched on future trends, watched movies, ate pizzas and vada pavs, goofed around, and had a tremendous experience in 24 hours.

As I already wrote yesterday, we settled in, brainstormed about ideas, and then played Quake. It was 9pm by then. Some had started working on their ideas, some were interested in playing more. We ordered pizzas. The pizza guy came in on the 27th minute (30 minutes, nahi to free, right?). Asked the pizza guy about who pays the bill if he gets late. Have seen and heard in the movies that the pizza guy has to take the loss. He said the company pays. The pizzas were good, and we were stuffed by the time we finished half of what we ordered.

Resident EvilThat was right time for a movie. Juggled with a few options and finally decided to watch Resident Evil. Watched the first part, and half of the hackers were already on their computers by then. Some even watched the second part. It was getting pretty exciting by that time.

My first hack task was over, thanks to the automatic fix on the popularity contest plugin for WordPress. So I started looking around for other things. Wanted to try out Photoshop CS3, so kept that on download. Guess when I finished the download? No, not in the morning, it’s still not done! The Adobe Labs’ download process is a little finicky. For one, it requires you to login to download the beta. And then it would not work with wget / other download manager. I am on a Mac, and I started the download in Firefox. Now Firefox has this big annoying problem with downloads. If you loose connection in between, or pause the download, sometimes you have to start it all over again. I did not want to put a 685MB download on Firefox, but then I did not have wget on the Mac. So I said let me start the download, and download and compile wget in the meanwhile. I had been delaying it for quite some time anways. So I downloaded wget source code and went to compile it. Realized there was no gcc on the machine yet! Got the Mac OS X DVDs and installed the developer tools and gcc. The compile would still now work and failed with the error message: “C compiler cannot create executables”.

Now that was something I got for the first time! A little bit digging around, and reinstalling the packages did not solve the problem. Installed gcc-4 instead of 3.3 and then it was ready to be compiled. But by this time, I found out that though wget does not come with the Mac anymore, there is cURL. And I can do more things with cURL. So tried to hook up my CS3 download on cURL, but it wouldn’t go ahead without a login. Gave up on the attempts as the download was progressing well.

Started looking at doing something to show related contents from other blogs when you are seeing a blog entry. I already have a “related posts” plugin to WordPress, and thought it would be good to have links to other blogs who are related. Naveen did some research and found out Sphere - it does the same thing. Albeit with an unfriendly interface. And then I found out that Google too has a “related links” provision. Had seen some wonderful visualization done on the principle though. And I think this is still an open idea - visualizing the related content - similar to what LivePlasma does for CNet news via big picture.

I also wanted to solve some long pending problems during the hackfest. So took on doing something to manage the software updates for the Macs we have in office. We have 3 MacBooks, a PowerBook, a Mac Mini, and an iMac. I wanted to have a system for software update for the MacBook, so that we don’t have to download the updates individually on each laptop. Now if you know the Software Update process on the Mac, it’s pretty much automatic. There are not real options on the interface to point to an update repository. I had done some research on this earlier and knew that the Mac OS X Server has a feature to update all Macs from a single update server. We did not have the OS X Server, so I had to do something else. A lot of reading and some Google later, I found two things - the Software Update Enabler which allows me to point to a URL of my choice for getting the updates, and a shell script - sumirror - that can mirror the Software Update repository one machine for you. This was very much what we wanted, so I started working on it. A few hours of hacking, and we now have a solution that works for us. I modified the shell script to detect the requests made by the client, and which were not found (via 404 messages in httpd.log). Then took that list and got the IDs of the packages that were queried for. Remember, we did not want to download anything extra - the Mac software and updates are very heavy and I don’t want to kill my bandwidth on them. So I made it pick up only those software which the client checked for. After getting this list, it was a bit of processing on the software update catalog file to get the correct URLs to download the files, not downloading languages other than English, and testing things out. I am very happy that this worked, I wanted to do it for quite some time. I will write up a detailed note on this in the coming days, so if you want to do it, you can do it easily.

Did a lot of other research while all this was going on. I am actually thrilled that I learnt so many new things. Here are a few things I tried / read:

And then probably a few other things! I had downloaded the Photoshop CS3 setup on our server, using an SSH and lynx, and was downloading the balance 163mb after the connection broke. And a few minutes ago, the download completed. And vanished! I can’t find the file anywhere now. Will have to download the whole thing again now! This is really a pain.

Apart from that, it’s been a great hackfest! Vishal is working on profiling database queries for optimization, Kartik is working on having festival speak in Gujarati. Arun worked on shutting off all the servers from a single machine, and is looking into fax support for Asterisk. And I just heard some noises from Vinay and Mohan, looks like they got something done!

And here is an interesting panorama that Ameya took. Vinay, Arun and Mohan interviewed me and Kartik - about programming, hacking and general questions. This photo is of that time.

Panorama 2 - HackFest

Orkut vs. other social networks

Stuart Henshall comments on Orkut’s rapid growth compared to other social networks:

Orkut bridges the gap between Ryze (too open) and Linkedin (too closed) without the “everything is for sale” on Tribe. I suspect that those with “Friendster” experience also see it as providing extra functionality.

While I think the comparisons are accurate, the “toos” need to be considered in context. Ryze is not too open for those trying to dramatically increase their visibility to a large audience. LinkedIn isn’t too closed if you’re a busy executive/professional only wanting to make focused contacts. And what’s wrong with the “everything is for sale” aspect of Tribe? At least it seems to help keep the discussion forums themselves free from advertising, because there’s an appropriate place for it.

Always consider context when making value judgments. When deciding on a social networking tool, the question is not, “Which one is best?”, but rather, “Which ones are best for me?”

Orkut and Cyber Crimes

Orkut Invites?

Filed under Google at 2:32 pm on September 26, 2005.

Orkut is an online community of sorts, but has been aquired by Google, so you know I have to be a part of it. Unfortunatly, like all of Google’s ‘Beta’ programs, it requires an invitation from an existing member. So, my question to the readers of this blog:

Anyone have any Orkut invites I can have? :-D

tony

Harald has been using it for a while and while I have long been skeptical of the benefits and uses of this software I have finally let curiosity get the better of me. So if you know me and you’re on “Orkut”:http://www.orkut.com/ (the Google-owned social software site), look me up. It seems already “I am connected to 244374 people through 1 friend”. I think this reflects the rather tenuous idea they have of connection rather more than it reflects any real godlike social status!

Orkut Celebrates Valentines Day

Orkut.com

Posted by Jamis on February 06, 2004 @ 09:44 AM

Site of the day: Orkut. It’s a new online community that is sponsored by Google, based on networking. You can only join when someone who is already a member invites you.

Once you are a member, you can keep links to all of your friends that are also members. From those links, then, you can see who the friends of your friends are (possibly increasing the circle of your own friends), join and participate in online communities, and more. Nothing incredibly original, but the implementation of it is pretty compelling. It’s been fun to play with, anyway.

It has a lot of potential; I’ve already joined the orkut Ruby community, and the D&D community, both of which are quite large (almost 200 members at the time of this writing). I’ve even found a few people that I knew, just by searching for them—kind of fun!

It’ll be interesting to see where this whole thing goes in the next few months.

Posted in Odds & Ends

Be the first to leave a comment on this article. Tell us your thoughts using the form below!