Category Archives: 1-By Laksh

All these articles are from Laksh’s desk

Temples of Silicon Valley

Silicon Valley is the southern part of the San Francisco Bay Area in Northern California in the United States. The term originally referred to the region’s large number of silicon chip innovators and manufacturers, but eventually came to refer to all the high tech businesses in the area; it is now generally used as a metonym for the high-tech sector. Despite growth in the technology sector throughout the United States, Silicon Valley continues to be the high tech hub because of its large number of engineers and venture capitalists.

A temple (from the Latin word templum) is a structure reserved for religious or spiritual activities, such as prayer and sacrifice, or analogous rites. A ‘’templum’’ constituted a sacred precinct as defined by a priest, or augur. It has the same root as the word “ template,’’ a plan in preparation of the building that was marked out on the ground by the augur. Though a templum, technically speaking, is not a “house of the gods” but a diagram that for the Romans linked the geometries of heaven and earth, it was also indicative of a dwelling place of a god or gods. Source Wikipedia

Silicon Valley sure has many temples…but rather different kind. Let me differ a little from Wikipedia, and commit blasphemy.:)

For starters, priests are neither dressed in black nor worship at altars. A mass here is an all hands meeting where the priests listen to the gospel of worshippers. And who are these worshippers? Which nationality they belong to? What religion, what caste? Well, take a pick….or just ‘google’ these terms. For once, all the ‘googol’ search results apply.

 

No matter who you are or where you are from, your entry is guaranteed if your grey matter is intact. Once you enter, you join thousands of others who are toiling away to ‘technology’ nirvana and in the process even churning out a few billions. And when you are ready, you simply go ahead and create your own (No need for a sanction from Vatican, a walk-out from the current employer would do). This is how all those temples in silicon valley came into being—HP, Intel, Apple, Yahoo and Google—to name a few.

The religion caught up all over the world…the products and innovations being their missionaries.  No wonder there are these tiny little vallies and temples all over the world now, each one practicing their own version of this religion.

 

 

 

And the religion? better not talk about it. It’s all about practicing it.:)

Folks! It’s time to pray in one such temple or better still, create one. Amen!

 

Love in Rambo Style

In Nagesh Kukunoor’s Bollywood Calling, Om Puri explains to
the frustrated Hollywood import that ‘we Indians want all the
emotions in a single movie’. Desamuduru is one such a movie
with a bonus-a hero in six-pack splendor. Ever saw a ‘Rambo’
romance n’ dance? In Desamuduru you do.

Puri Jagan has come to be known as a man who defies tradition.
He takes this defiance to an all-time high, by making his hero fall
for a Sanyasin. After taking this unconventional story idea and
setting the love track against the picturesque Kullu-Manali, he
retracts to a rather predictable action-filled-love-story kind of
narration. While, the first half is all about how the hero wins
over heroine’s heart, the second is about getting her back in
‘sahi-salamath’ shape. In short, it is the usual Puri Jagan’s
hero characterization, replete with pithy one-liners and
truckloads of violence.

Puri Jagan could have come up with a different fare had he
explored the premise of a Sanyasin abandoning her path and
narrated the film from the heroine’s point of view. Instead he
uses this as a sidetrack for the film-like an obvious ploy to
make the heroine an impossible-to-get-item. Similarities to
the Hindi movie Paap are there to be seen with Allu Arjun
sporting a John Abraham avatar and Hansika dressed as
a modern Sanyasin. But the ensuing conflict is the usual
Puri Jagan’s fare, with the hero going all out to woo his girl.
When he finally succeeds in ‘spoiling’ her, as Ramaprabha
observes, it is our Desi Rambo all the way.

Infact, the transition scene from Kullu-Manali to Hyderabad
is a defining one (though inspired from Lock, Stock and
Two Smoking Barrels) where the hero receives a call in mid-air
from the villain and unlike in the original movie, picks it up and
‘loudly’ announces his plans for the second-half. Loudness is
the defining characteristic of Desamuduru, and luckily for the
entire unit, the movie is screaming loud at the box-office too.

While congratulating Puri Jagan for setting the box-office on
fire, here are some issues worth pondering in the main plot.

Is the heroine after all so difficult to get?

She becomes a Sanyasin not by her will, but by design. So,
she is on tenterhooks to begin with and may be even ready to
break loose with any hero in the near proximity. Hence, for all
practical purposes, Puri’s regular, Ravi Teja, would have sufficed…
did she really need a six-pack Allu Arjun?

Eternal love or carnal love?

A Sanyasin is supposed to renounce the real world and the
denial of flesh is a step towards it. Now if she has made up her
mind to shun the bodily pleasures and if she has to think otherwise,
she has to experience them first. However, she does not. As the
film has to appeal to a large audience, this aspect has been left to
the wind and as a result becomes the usual
‘sweet-love-with-no-touch-till-marriage’ kind. Ok…now, if their love
is not carnal and their bond is eternal, then bodies don’t matter,
time does not matter, etc., etc. Then what necessitates all those
conversations about ‘matti, mannu, masanam’ etc.

Hmm..agreed that the audiences have ignored the so-called
minor issues with the plot and gave a clean chit to Puri Jagan.
Or they might have been carried away by the enthusiasm of
Allu Arjun, or the freshness of Hansika or the foot-tapping
music or the neat cinematography. But will these come to
the story teller’s rescue every often when he takes the so
called cinematic liberties with the so called bold/unconventional
themes and still yield the same result at the box-office?

Well, we might have to wait till the Ramcharan’s film hits the marquee.

For the time being, let’s agree with Mr. Om Puri and accept
Puri Jagan as a master in such genre. Coming to
Nagesh Kukunoor,…he just announced his next film with
John Abraham.

Now will it be a Paap kind, sans the Desamuduru’s effervescence?

Well, that’s another wait!!

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Also featured in

Swami Vivekananda: The Living Vedanta


Swami Vivekananda was a blessed soul, a karana janma, a man with
a purpose and mission. In Ramakrishna Paramhamsa’s
words he was an Avatar Purusha, someone who chose to take birth
to alleviate the suffering of the mankind.

But Swami Vivekananda was also a human being, who lived the life of
an ordinary and may be below ordinary many a time. He slept on the
pavements, he lived the life of a monk, and touched the lives of many.

The book ‘The Living Vedanta’ spans across the life of Vivekananda–an
eventful 39 years–and presents a picture of him as seen through his
relationships. His relationship with his brother monks, with his western
disciples and most of all, his inner self.

It also deals with the inner turbulence of a man on his way to the higher
spiritual plane. A man divided inside with desire to go beyond the world,
and his mission for the world.

The book is a must read for everyone who wishes to understand the great man
and most importantly, his message.

“..Desire, ignorance, and inequality–this is the trinity of bondage.

Denial of the will to live, knowledge and same-sightedness is
the trinity of liberation.

Freedom is the goal of the universe.

Nor love nor hate, nor pleasure nor pain, nor death nor life, nor religion
nor irreligion; not this, not this, not this.”