Categories
Business Work

Success

sunset-people-sun-men_blog
Just last week 13 Llama Studio went on a team lunch to Jughead’s at Marol. Much eating, drinking, and merrymaking ensued. The team talked, bonded, took selfies, groups selfies, chugged whatever liquids each one pleased, and ravaged through plates and plates of delicious food. In short, we had fun.

But there had to be some serious discussions as well along with the fun.

I have been thinking for the past few days about how I would define success for 13 Llama Studio. And I have finally settled on five metrics that will define if we are doing well.

  1. Volumes: the most obvious metric. Quantum of business. Amount of sales. Top line. Revenues. How much money we were able to extract from all our clients combined within a said period of time.
  2. Community: being known and appreciated in a product/developer community. With Prasad and I speaking at the Mumbai WordCamp, 13 Llama hosting quite a few WordPress meetups at our office, and sponsoring the Pune WordCamp, I think we have made a good beginning here.
  3. Clientelle: by design or by happenstance, we are strong in three verticals: Education, Healthcare, and Media. In September, we were able to say that we are working for a marquee name in each of these three verticals. We’ll expose these relationships later on when the time is right. ЁЯЩВ
  4. Product Success: our key point of introduction when meeting someone new is that we are a product development studio, or more accurately a product development team for hire. We have tried our hands at projects which had the potential to be great products. Some of these were launched, and some of these could not be, for various reasons. Right now the team is working on three new product ideas, and we are gung-ho about making each of these a success.
  5. A Kick-Ass Team: And finally, the key ingredient that will make each of the above four a possibility. A team which is competent, dedicated, dynamic, always learning, always improving, and always ready for a challenge. I can confidently say that each of our team members has the potential to be a superhero that such teams comprise of, but there is still a journey ahead of each one of us before we can with full honesty say that we are superheroes. Also, the team isn’t complete yet. We are looking for superheroes, or potential superheroes who can take 13 Llama Studio to the heights we have dreamt of. So if you think you are someone who fits the bill and would love to work with us, 13 Llama Studio’s Careers Page.

Here’s to a bright and exciting future!

Categories
Landscape Photography Nature Photography Photography Travel Photography Wallpapers

Goa & Rains: September 2015

yourshot.nationalgeographic.com/photos/6691892/

Sinquerim from Aguada. Shot in Goa, August 2015.

Wallpapers

Buy an A2 size print from here

Categories
Business Internet Product WTF

Dear MTNL. Stop taking sips from my broadband coffee!

It’s a fine Sunday morning, and you go to a cafe with your friends, and order a nice cup of large cappuccino.

While you’re chatting with your friends, you notice out of the corner of your eye, the waiter bringing your cup of coffee. You feel relieved, and excited for your kick of caffeine. Just then, you see the waiter lift the cup to his lips and take a sip from your cup.

How do you feel?

Apart from the initial feelings of disgust, you calculate your losses. You’ve paid for a certain volume of coffee & foam, and the waiter is taking away part of it, without either paying for it himself or compensating you (since technically now you’re the owner of that cup of coffee). And all this without your permission!

Thejesh GN had written about how Airtel was injecting an iframe in the pages served on its 3G connection, though Airtel┬аdefended it saying that it’s to track our usage to help us better. How is monitoring which pages I go to going to help me better, and how the telecom company providing me the connection can’t track the amount of bandwidth I consume without injecting iframes into the source of pages I visit is beyond my understanding.

We could still say this is expected of a private company. They are, after all, after only one thing, profits. But if a PSU starts one-upping them, it’s worrying.

Not only has MTNL been injecting code into the source of pages we view on their broadband connection, they have been showing ads as well. Large ones. Sometimes larger ones.

Here’s a sample:
ads on MTNL broadband

It raises quite a few concerns in my mind, and here they are.

  1. Permission: MTNL is a service provider. And we pay them for the service. We expect a certain amount of data transfer at certain speeds, and nowhere while signing up were we informed or our permission sought that they will serve ads on the connection.
  2. Money: MTNL charges us the amount for the specific amount of bytes transferred per month, and if we exceed that limit, our connection is downgraded, which is equivalent to Shadowfax being chained to a snail. We as consumers keep monitoring our usage and reducing our superfluous consumption of bytes (stop reloading that often, watch lesser cat videos, download 720p versions of videos instead of 1080p and so on). And now we realise that a certain amount of our bandwidth will be consumed no matter what, because MTNL wants to run ads on the pages we see.
  3. As a producer of content/platforms: I run a business where we create web properties. Our clients are people who produce content or provide a service on these properties. In addition, I run this blog, and my firm has a website. It’s highly likely that when normal users (which includes me) using MTNL’s broadband connection accesses these properties, they would see these ugly ads on the pages. None of us agreed with MTNL to let them serve ads off our platforms and on our content. Some of us run ads on these properties which help us fund the operation of these properties. MTNL’s ads which ride on the connection are diluting the effect of the ads run by our paying sponsors, and are in effect robbing us of our ad revenues, in addition to spoiling the face of our properties and businesses. And there’s apparently nothing we as producers of content can do about it.
  4. Privacy: Of course the concern here is the same as in Airtel’s case. Today they’re injecting ads, tomorrow they could inject spyware (like some small-time private cable ISPs already do), or could inject ads in all corners of the page (like those same small-time private cable ISPs already do). And they have no business doing it.

On the money front, you might argue that it’s still a little bit of content trickling through and shouldn’t bother us. But I did some back-of-napkin calculations, and here are the approximate results.

Every page I visit consumes around 1┬аto┬а2mB of bandwidth. With modern browsers and content caching etc., every time a page is reloaded, the marginal consumption of bandwidth per repeat page would be in hundreds of kBs. On a page load, the amount of bandwidth MTNL’s ad consumes is around 30kB. Even if we calculate on the basis of absolute size of a page’s content instead of the marginal consumption, the noise-to-signal ratio here is 30kB/1.5mB = 2%

If I have a connection of 50gB FUP, this amounts to 1gB. I am being charged for a full HD movie download extra because MTNL wants to serve ads┬аon their connection to us. And not even making a profit off it, because so far I’ve only seen ads of MTNL services in this fashion ЁЯЩВ

How is this different from websites running ads?

Some might argue that YouTube also runs ads on the content they’re serving. рдХреЛрдИ рдЙрдирдХреЛ рдХреБрдЫ рдирд╣реАрдВ рдХрд╣рддрд╛! Well, YouTube doesn’t charge me for viewing videos there. When a paid service provider runs ads blocking their own service, and consuming the service that I as a consumer am paying them for, it’s outrageous.

People my age might remember an ISP called Caltiger who started operating in the late 90s. When VSNL’s connections were expensive (Rs. 5,000 for 500 hours of browsing), Caltiger came up with an industry-changing idea – free internet. It was dial-up internet, which means that we still had to pay the per-minute rates for phone calls, but then again, even VSNL’s connection was dial-up, which meant that the total outflow from a subscriber’s pockets were around Rs. 35,000 per year including the phone bill, and not just Rs. 5,000 that we paid VSNL. But Caltiger used to run ads on our screens using its dialler software in exchange for the free internet. In effect we saved Rs. 5,000 in exchange for agreeing to have ads running on our screens. Ads served, but no money taken.

MTNL cannot do both:┬аcharge us for bandwidth, but still serve ads. And that too without our consent┬а–┬аboth as consumers and as the real creators/providers of content.

The Tech

How do we get rid of this nuisance? Well, if you just see the source of their ads, you can see the following code that is responsible:

<div id="__BULLETIN__bdiv" style="position: absolute; z-index: 999999999; visibility: visible; top: 654px; right: 20px; display: block; transition: top 0s ease 0s;"><style> img.scalable { max-width : 100%; height: auto; }</style><a id="__BULLETIN__bdivButton" target="_blank" href="http://mtnlmumbai.in/index.php/fixed-line/landline/tariff"> <img id="__BULLETIN__bdivImage" style="height: 300px;" src="http://203.94.227.140/bg/Creative1.jpg" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"> </a> <div style="overflow:hidden; position:absolute; right:0; top:0; z-index:9999999999;"><a id="__BULLETIN__button0" href="#"><img id="__BULLETIN__button0i" name="button0" class="scalable" src="http://203.94.227.140/bg/CloseButton.png" border="0"></a>
</div></div>

Temporary solution: Blocking the IP address 203.94.227.140 in your etc/hosts file or in your router’s firewall would provide temporary relief, but since I blocked a similar address last a few weeks ago, they’ve updated the IP address in the request.

Permanent solution? What remained common was the 203.94. part. As far as I know, blocking wildcard IP entries or IP clusters using etc/hosts isn’t possible. Can any of you nice people guide me on how to block this IP cluster either using etc/hosts or the router settings?

Categories
Travel Travel Photography Wallpapers

Let’s Fly, Pigeon in Jama Masjid: August 2015

yourshot.nationalgeographic.com/photos/6504609/
Jama Masjid, Delhi, India.
Shot in February 2010.

Categories
Macro Photography Nature Photography Photography Wallpapers

Fresh Pink: July 2015

500px.com/photo/114221281/fresh-pink-by-amit-sharma
Since the Monsoons are on.

Categories
Hindi Literature Nature Photography Photography

рдЫрдкрд╛: рд╣рд┐рдЬрд░рдд рд╕реЗ рдкрд╣рд▓реЗ

рдкрдврд╝рдиреЗ рдХреА рдЖрджрдд рдмрдЪрдкрди рд╕реЗ рд╣реА рд▓рдЧреА, рдереИрдВрдХреНрд╕ рдЯреВ рд╣рдорд╛рд░реЗ рджреЛрдиреЗрдВ рдЪрд╛рдЪрд╛рдЬреА, рдЬрд┐рдиреНрд╣реЗрдВ рдкреНрдпрд╛рд░ рд╕реЗ рд╣рдо рдордВрдЭрд▓реЗ рдФрд░ рдЫреЛрдЯреЗ рдкрд╛рдкрд╛ рдХрд╣рддреЗ рд╣реИрдВ.
рдФрд░ рдХрд▓рдХрддреНрддреЗ рдореЗрдВ рд░рд╣рдиреЗ рд╡рд╛рд▓рд╛ рдкрдврд╝рд╛рдХреВ рдмрд╛рд▓рдХ рдЬрдирд╡рд░реА-рдлрд░рд╡рд░реА рдХреЗ рдкреБрд╕реНрддрдХ рдореЗрд▓реЗ рд╕реЗ рдЕрдирднрд┐рдЬреНрдЮ рд░рд╣ рд╕рдХрддрд╛ рд╣реИ рднрд▓рд╛?

рдмрд░рд╕реЛрдВ рддрдХ рд╣рд░ рдмрд░рд╕ рдХрд▓рдХрддреНрддреЗ рдХреЗ рдкреНрд░рдЪрдгреНрдб рдкреБрд╕реНрддрдХ рдореЗрд▓рд╛, рдЙрд░реНрдлрд╝ рдмреЛрдИ рдореИрд▓рд╛, рдЙрд░реНрдлрд╝ рдмреБрдХ рдлреЗрдпрд░ рдореЗрдВ рд▓рд┐рдЯрд░рд▓реА рдЦрд╛рдХ рдЫрд╛рдиреА, рдХреНрдпреЛрдВрдХрд┐ рдЙрди рджрд┐рдиреЛрдВ рдпреЗ рдзреВрд▓ рд╕реЗ рд▓рдмрд╛рд▓рдм рдХрд▓рдХрддреНрддрд╛ рдореИрджрд╛рди рдореЗрдВ рдЖрдпреЛрдЬрд┐рдд рд╣реБрдЖ рдХрд░рддрд╛ рдерд╛.

рдФрд░ рдЗрд╕реА рдореЗрд▓реЗ рдореЗрдВ рдПрд╕реНрдЯреНрд░рд┐рдХреНрд╕, рдЯрд┐рдирдЯрд┐рди, рдЖрд░реНрдЪреАрдЬрд╝, рдФрд░ рдЪрдордХреАрд▓реА рд╡рд┐рджреЗрд╢реА рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдмреЛрдВ рдХреЗ рд╕рд╛рде рдПрдХ рдЫреЛрдЯреЗ-рд╕реЗ рд╣рд┐рдВрджреА рдХреЛрдиреЗ рдореЗрдВ рдкрд╛рдБрдЪ-рдЫ: рджреБрдХрд╛рдиреЛрдВ рдкрд░ рд╣рд┐рдВрджреА рдХреА рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдмреЗрдВ рдмрд╛рдБрдЪрдиреЗ рдФрд░ рдЦрд░реАрджрдиреЗ рдХреА рд▓рдд рдкрдбрд╝реА. рдЙрдиреНрд╣реАрдВ рджреБрдХрд╛рдиреЛрдВ рдореЗрдВ рд╕реЗ рдПрдХ рдерд╛ рд░рд╛рдЬрдХрдорд▓ рдкреНрд░рдХрд╛рд╢рди. рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдмреЛрдВ рдФрд░ рд▓реЗрдЦрдХреЛрдВ рдХреА рдореЗрд░реА рдкрд╕рдВрдж рдХреА рдЧрд╣рд░рд╛рдИ рдирд╛рдкреА, рддреЛ рдкрд╛рдпрд╛ рдХрд┐ рд╕рд╛рд░рд╛ рдореЗрд▓рд╛ рдПрдХ рддрд░рдл рдФрд░ рд░рд╛рдЬрдХрдорд▓ рдХрд╛ рд╕реНрдЯреЙрд▓ рдПрдХ рддрд░рдл. рд╕рд╛рд▓-рджрд░-рд╕рд╛рд▓ рдореЗрд▓реЗ рд╕реЗ рдЖрдиреЗ рд╡рд╛рд▓реЗ рдЭреЛрд▓реЛрдВ рдореЗрдВ рд░рд╛рдЬрдХрдорд▓ рдХреА рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдмреЗрдВ рд╣реА рдЖрдзреА рдЬрдЧрд╣ рд▓реЗрддреА рд░рд╣реАрдВ.

рдЖрдЬ рднреА, рдХрд▓рдХрддреНрддреЗ рд╡рд╛рд▓реЗ рдордХрд╛рди рдореЗрдВ рднреА, рдФрд░ рдпрд╣рд╛рдБ рдмрдВрдмрдИ рдореЗрдВ рдореЗрд░реЗ рд╣рд░ рдШрд░ рдХреЗ рдмрджрд▓рд╛рд╡ рдкрд░ рдореЗрд░реЗ рд╕рд╛рде рдлрд┐рд░рдиреЗ рд╡рд╛рд▓реА рдореЗрд░реА рдирд┐рдЬреА рд▓рд╛рдЗрдмреНрд░реЗрд░реА рдореЗрдВ рднреА рдЕрдзрд┐рдХрддрд░ рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдмреЗрдВ рд░рд╛рдЬрдХрдорд▓ рдХреА рд╣реА рд╣реЛрдВрдЧреА.

рдЦреИрд░, рд▓рдВрдмреА рд░рд╣реА рднреВрдорд┐рдХрд╛. рддреЛ рдЖрдЬ рдХреА рдбрд╛рдХ рд╕реЗ рдореБрдЭреЗ рдорд┐рд▓рд╛ рдПрдХ рдкреНрдпрд╛рд░рд╛ рддреЛрд╣рдлрд╛, рд░рд╛рдЬрдХрдорд▓ рдХреЗ рджрдлреНрддрд░ рд╕реЗ, рдЬреЛ рдХрд┐ рдЖрдЬ рдореЗрд░реЗ рд░реЛрдорд╛рдВрдЪ рдХрд╛ рдХрд╛рд░рдг рдмрдирд╛ рд╣реБрдЖ рд╣реИ. рддреЛрд╣рдлреЗ рдореЗрдВ рд╣реИ, рдЙрдирдХреЗ рджреНрд╡рд╛рд░рд╛ рдкреНрд░рдХрд╛рд╢рд┐рдд рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдм, рд╡рдВрджрдирд╛ рд░рд╛рдЧ рдХреА рд╣рд┐рдЬрд░рдд рд╕реЗ рдкрд╣рд▓реЗ, рдХреНрдпреЛрдВрдХрд┐ рдЙрд╕ рдХреЗ рдХрд╡рд░ рдкреЗ рдЬреЛ рдЧреБрд▓рдореЛрд╣рд░ рдХреЗ рдлреВрд▓ рдХреА рддрд╕рд╡реАрд░ рд╣реИ, рд╡рд╣ рдЦрд╛рдХрд╕рд╛рд░ рдХреА рдЦреАрдВрдЪреА рд╣реБрдИ рд╣реИ, рдПрдХ рдкреНрд░рддрд┐ рд░рд╡реАрд╢ рдХреБрдорд╛рд░ рдХреА рд▓рдкреНрд░реЗрдХ рдХрд┐рддрд╛рдм, рдЗрд╢реНрдХрд╝ рдореЗрдВ рд╢рд╣рд░ рд╣реЛрдирд╛, рдХреНрдпреЛрдВрдХрд┐ рдорд╛рдирд╛рд░реНрде, рдФрд░ рдПрдХ рдЪреЗрдХ, рдЬреЛ рдХрд┐ рдЙрд╕ рдЧреБрд▓рдореЛрд╣рд░ рдХреЗ рдлреВрд▓ рдХреЗ рд╕рджрдХреЗ рд╣реИ.

rajkamal

Categories
Travel Travel Photography Wallpapers

Hawa Mahal: June 2015

500px.com/photo/110632639/hawa-mahal-by-amit-sharma

Categories
Photography

A little bit o’ Fortune

Good news folks! The photo of mine of Lohagad/Lonavala titled ‘Bliss’ has been published in Fortune India magazine’s May issue.
www.flickr.com/photos/recaptured/4716846288

Here, pictures of the magazine’s pages:

Go buy your copy today ЁЯЩВ

Categories
Landscape Photography Street Photography Travel Travel Photography Wallpapers

Strawberry Sunset: May 2015

500px.com/photo/107376703/strawberry-sunset-by-amit-sharma

Evening and sunset at strawberry country, Mahabaleshwar.

Categories
Product Society Technology

Indian Institute of #NetNeutrality

A lot has been said about #netneutrality in the last few days, from how dear ol’ “altruistic” Zucky has a golden heart and wants to see poor kids in Chandauli access Facebook the Internet for free, and how Airtel just wants every poor child to access “the Internet”, to how the debate is full of metaphors like a fishermen’s net is full of fish in the evening.

So let me take a jump in the net neutrality discussion to talk about three issues that have been bugging me related to this:
1. Idea & IIN
2. The cable TV metaphor, and
3. The toll-free number metaphor.

Idea & IIN

We don’t see the connect between Idea’s IIN ads and net neutrality yet. It isn’t directly related, but it does lay down the groundwork for the idea (pun unintended) that somehow, the mobile operators/ISPs are the magnanimous fellows who are bringing all this wonderful Internet magic to you, and by association, can claim ownership to the content and innovation it brings along.

You’ve seen the IIN ads – where Idea’s Internet Network is the source of education for all the underprivileged, all who have been wronged by unfair selection practices in traditional educational institutions, and all who are mocked by their peers, but have the zeal to learn on their own.

Wow so cool. Except that Idea has nothing to do with it. Like I tweeted a few days ago, it’s like BEST laying claim for the education of your kid who goes to college by bus and becomes a lawyer. There, one more metaphor – take it and go.

Yes, Idea (or any mobile operator/ISP) isn’t providing anything beyond a connection to the Internet. They aren’t providing a platform. They surely aren’t creating the content that’s adding to our education when we decide to educate ourselves. The people in the ads could very well learn the exact same thing, find the exact same information if they were using a Vodafone connection, or were accessing the Internet through a local cable broadband connection.

If anything, Idea and other mobile operators are responsible for impeding said education due to their pathetic network quality and high data prices.

The Cable TV Metaphor

Mobile operator sympathizers have been citing the way cable MSOs operate as the model for internet access, which is, you choose which channels you want to watch and subscribe to those, in addition to a basic access charge, that you pay your MSO or local cable guy. Certain channel groups have tie-ups with certain large MSOs and not with others, so certain channels are available only on the former and not on the latter. Nobody complains there, so why the hue and cry this time?

To start with, that one industry is being run as a racket can not and should not be used to justify attempts to destroy another network and technology. But let’s keep that aside for a while.

TV and the Internet can not be compared. Here is why. In the case of TV, a cable/dish subscription is nothing but a bundle of channels, it’s a one-way medium, and we’re all purely consumers. Add to that, we do not do our daily communication and business over television waves. It’s a pure mass-media system.

The Internet, on the other hand, is not just another media. It’s not a bundle of websites, and not at all a bundle of websites the folks at Airtel / Reliance / Internet.org can decide it to be. It’s like the ocean, where these websites exist, and thrive purely on merit, either of technology, content, or marketing, not because they sign up with particular ISPs so that those ISPs agree to delivery their bytes to end-users. The Internet is not “just a technology”, the Internet is an entity of its own, and you do not get to call it the Internet if you do not let me access certain sites based on tieups your tieup sales team has made.

Secondly, the Internet has always been about choice. I choose to open Vimeo or YouTube at the time I please, and search for the video I want to see, and choose to watch the one I like. Compare this with TV, where the channel decides which content is appropriate for its audiences, and when it should be aired – the only choice we have is to either watch it or watch some other channel altogether.

I am not just a consumer on the Internet. I am also a content creator. Through our websites, blogs, social profiles, we disseminate content.
We are, at the same time, consumers and creators of content.

More importantly, I am not just a consumer on the Internet. I am also a content creator. Through our websites, blogs, social profiles, we disseminate content, of varying levels of intensity and seriousness. In addition to that, people like me make our living through the Internet. We are, at the same time, consumers and creators of content. And with this freedom to create and innovate, the number of web properties increases every day. Can the ISPs play god by deciding which ones of these you and I, or the kids in Chandauli get to see?

The Toll-Free Number Metaphor

We started hearing this when Airtel started feeling the heat of the public backlash. In fact, an email arrived in many mailboxes today from Airtel’s MD & CEO Mr. Gopal Vittal, where he insists that Airtel Zero is nothing but a 1800 service for websites.

Except that it’s not.

I can call a 1800 number from any SIM card or landline phone within the geographic boundaries, and not be charged. To access the “1800 website” I will have to sign up with Airtel Zero’s service on an Airtel SIM card. The metaphor does not go the whole hog Mr. Vittal.

Once again, the Internet is not comprised of a bundle of websites or phone numbers. It’s a place where different forms of media and platforms and properties are being created every hour, and that’s the beauty of it. “Websites” are one type of property on the web, though the dominant ones, but there are other types of properties, and more such will keep coming up as innovation goes on.

тАжthe illusion of choice the mobile operators are talking about, is for the provider of the content, and not you and me, the consumer of the content.

Also, to access a 1800 number, all I do is dial the said number (the transaction with the network begins there), and be assured that the conversation is between the owner of the number and me (unless there’s tapping going on, in which case we have other serious issues to handle). In the case of Airtel Zero or Internet.org, the only way the ISPs can make sure I am not billed for going to their favourite sites is by snooping on my data packets (because my transaction with the ISP begins when I log on, or in the case of mobile internet, it’s an ongoing transaction). This is gross violation of my privacy, and it’s none of their business to be looking at the data I am sending and receiving.

In the end, the illusion of choice the mobile operators are talking about, is for the provider of the content, and not you and me, the consumer of the content. You and I don’t choose whether we get Flipkart for free or Amazon. It’s only the choice of Bansal or Bezos to sign up with these “zero plans” if they want more visitors to their sites. We don’t get any choice if there’s no net neutrality going forward.

If we let the mobile operators/ISPs decide which sites we can and cannot access, and do not insist on net neutrality today, maybe going forward you’ll be charged extra to read this blog, or simply access WordPress.com, or maybe you simply can’t access these, because they’re not part of the bundle that your ISP is offering you.

Do your bit today, visit www.savetheinternet.in, or www.netneutrality.in to know more about the issue and find out what actions you can take to prevent mobile operators and ISPs from taking the Internet hostage.

Disclaimer: I run a firm which makes web properties and runs its entire business on the web.
Disclaimer 2: I am trying to post this blog through the Airtel broadband connection I have at home, which after the miniscule 15GB FUP (which can be exhausted in a mere 5 OSX updates) runs at the awesomely slow speed of 512kbps. I’m frustrated with them over this, but net neutrality is way bigger than petty quibbles over data packs ending prematurely.

(Post’s featured image from FreePress on Flickr under Creative Commons licence)