Tuesday, May 03, 2005

s h i f t



A new bicycle design created at Purdue University could erase the need for parents to hold on to the back of a two-wheel bicycle as their child learns how to ride.

The bike, called SHIFT, was created by an industrial design professor and two students. Their designed topped 853 entrants from 56 countries to win the $15,000 first prize in the 9th International Bicycle Design Competition in Taiwan.

"Most children learn how to ride a bike on training wheels, but these simply keep the bike from tipping," said Scott S. Shim, an assistant professor in the College of Liberal Arts. "Our bike allows children to learn how to balance themselves as they ride instead of looking back to see if their parent is still holding the bike.

"This bicycle, which is for toddlers, was designed with my 4-year-old son, Kevin, in mind." The 16-inch-wheel bicycle looks like a tricycle, but as the child gains momentum and learns to balance, the two rear wheels shift inward to merge into one wheel. This causes the balance to gradually shift from the bicycle to the child.

"SHIFT provides more balance at lower speeds when stability is most critical, especially when starting and stopping, by providing a larger stance," Shim said.

black friday



Black Friday
Language: HINDI
Director:Anurag Kashyap
Producer:Jhamu Sughand, JSPL
Cast: Kay Kay Menon, Aditya Srivastava, Pawan Malhotra
Music: Indian Ocean
Lyrics: Piyush Mishra
Cinematography: N. Nataraja Subramanian
Editing: Aarti Bajaj

Black Friday is the story of the 1993 bomb blasts that took place in Mumbai. Based on a book by S. Hussain Zaidi, this docu-drama tries to recreate those events and the intense feelings that followed them. The documentary was screened in the US at the Indian Film Festival - Los Angeles on April 22. It was adjudged the Jury Grand Prize winner for "original storytelling, innovative cinematic technique and boldness of vision in tackling a complicated social issue."

We attending the screening of the movie at the Pacific Film Archive (Berkeley) as part of the San Francisco International Film Festival this past Sunday. The movie brought back sad memories and raw emotions that most Bombayites have struggled with for the past decade. I was in the middle of my 11th grade final examination at Ruparel College when I heard and felt the bombs explode all over the city. Mom and brother were at home - it was my brother's 12th birthday. Dad was at this office in South Bombay. The family was safe and unhurt, but the ghastly incident left scars that went much deeper.

Overall, the story stayed true to the events and presented multiple and conflicting points of view without ever being judgmental. The movie is currently banned in India and can only be viewed at international screenings.

the CF years

The "Carly Fiorina Years" Memorabilia Shop

Those who outlasted Carly Fiorina, Hewlett-Packard's ousted chief executive, now can trumpet that fact on a T-shirt or coffee mug. The Carly Fiorina Years Memorabilia Shop sells various items emblazoned with logos such as "I survived the Carly Fiorina Years, 1999-2005."

The site has been expanding its offerings of late. It now offers products for non-survivors who lost their jobs during restructuring initiatives and for those who survived Bob Palmer's tenure as Digital Equipment Corp. CEO. (Compaq acquired DEC in 1998 before HP acquired Compaq in 2002.)

Another logo reads, "Putting the 'i' in 'performance' since 2002," a likely reference to the lowest rating awarded through the HP performance review. Employees rated "i" are typically placed on "corrective action" and more often than not end up leaving the company.