Monday, July 21, 2025

Ebony And Ivory

 
Friday, August 3, 2012
Ebony and Ivory

Live Together
In Perfect Harmony
Side By Side On My Piano Keyboard,
Oh Lord, Why Don't We?
We All Know
That People Are The Same
Where Ever You Go
There Is Good and Bad
In Everyone,
We Learn To Live,
We Learn To Give

"Ebony and Ivory" was banned for a while in South Africa during the Apartheid era.

In the early 19th century mammoth ivory was used, as substantial source, for such products as piano keys, billiard balls, and ornamental boxes.

One thing that Paul forgot to mention was that the piano keys were made of ivory.
I make that record here, even belatedly (he is alive and kicking well unlike the dead elephants).
Paul McCartney is the writer and Stevie Wonder the other of the duet.


This song hit the chart in 1982 and I was in England.
I was neither black nor white but a browny (not a brown Sahib) and was feeling the pinch.

All the jobs I did  up to that point were the ones white man did not want to work.
One place had the highest maternal death and another place had highest neonatal death in UK.

All the same, I worked for humanity and mostly neonates.
Worked hard to improve the lot including newly established wings and hospitals and planning for new ones in Dartford.
I was focused when British doctors were either half drunk or fully drunk and one social worker was killing destitutes to get their social benefits illegally and there was a mad GP and mad nurse murdering NHF patients and babies.
All three were in prison, one committed suicide in the cell.
Then the last case was  a little girl who was seduced by the father who was a policemen.
I had enough and left UK for good never to return.
These people who are agents of human rights, look straight into the mirror and see who is more innocent.
I abhor violence and killing even in war.
But I abhor killing innocent animals, more.

If we look at the history of Ceylon British occupiers killed our Gentle Giants almost to extinction in the hills and where now tea is planted and foreign labour was brought and they were the worst treated slaves until 1975, when British Television exposed them in broad day light.
I do not say their lot is better three years after the war ended and their daily wages are not enough to buy flour or bread!
They are fast leaving the plantation but their leaders are living in cushy Colombo 7 palaces.
They only come up when they need their votes that comes once in every six years.
Now coming to my lead story the Ebony and Ivory.
Ivory trade was regularized only towards beginning of  1980.
In this country we have both Ivory and Ebony.
From 1970 we started decimating the Ebony with 1973 oil price hike and with foreign cash deficit

We started decimating tree cover including in the plantation sector and growing not cash crops but manioc.
The tree felling is continuing with political patronage and now anybody who is somebody with political backing of  two third majority can transport illegal timber anywhere in this blessed country.

We deserve this type of government for our own stupidity.

State laborers were eating maniac with their leaves as vegetable matter and I had to do postmortem on them and the diagnosis was cyanide poisoning.

Now, we are killing the remaining tuskers to adorn the high palaces with ornamentation.

They are venerated for 10 days and the rest of the year they are neglected by wildlife, railway and the hashish cultivators in the deep jungle with ¨Upi Wawamu Rata Nagamu with Hashish¨.

Below is a historical record which I copied form elsewhere in the web for your information.

Japanese, American, Russians and the Chinese are the biggest consumers of illegal IVORY TRADE.

In the early 19th century mammoth ivory was used, as substantial source, for such products as piano keys, billiard balls, and ornamental boxes.

Some estimates suggest that 10 million mammoths still remain buried in Siberia
.

The ivory trade is the commercial, often illegal trade in the ivory tusks of the hippopotamus, walrus, narwhal, mammoth, Rhino and most commonly, Asian and African elephants.
Ivory has been traded for hundreds of years by people in such regions as Greenland, Alaska, and Siberia.

The trade, in more recent times, has led to endangerment of species, resulting in restrictions and bans.


Monday, July 30, 2012
Elephants or Starving Monks- A Question?
Elephants or Starving Monks- A Question?

 
In this Modern Buddhist Sri-Lanka and Democracy (Crazy) alternative opinion is suppressed.
If Elephants are given the choice none of them will be willing to be chained to a tree.
They prefer their herd (they are social animals) and roaming in the wild.
I have no objection to taming a single elephant (often with some disability) gone rampage.
Instead of looking after Elephants rich Buddhist monks (residing in big temples) should look after their fellow monks in some remote villages not having a single meal proper on some days (even the ordinary people, Tamils included do not have a square meal in these parts of the country).

Sinhala Buddhists and their political rulers going gradually mad with power.
Problem is many of them in power and high places do not understand that they are even anti-democratic to animals and their welfare.
Now with the rain failing even the birds do not have drinking water, let alone the big elephants in the dry zone.
 
We have thamashas in the big cities sometime with Indian celluloids appearing.

Reproduced is a text what appeared in a local paper last year.
I am not privy to the details and I take no responsibility of its contents and hope the Author does not mind me reproducing it here.
 
I read the Dhamma Padaya and Karaneeya Meithriys Sutta verses (which I read very often) when I am at a loss to how to interpret modern Buddhist practices.

Elsewhere I have classified Modern Buddhist from Eggo to Chicken to EGO (some monks belong to this category).


By Ravi Palihawadana

I completely fail to understand the proclivity of certain Buddhist monks to raise animals in captivity at temples.
Nearly three decades ago, as a 22 year old youth, a few friends and I got up at 4 o’clock in the morning and trekked 10 km along a footpath from the confluence of rivers Ganga and Varuna to Isipatanaramaya at Sarnath, India.
This is supposed to be the path trodden by the Buddha whenever he spent the rainy (Vassana) season at Isipatanaramaya. We walked through mango and bamboo groves. It was an exhilarating experience. We could almost feel the presence of the Buddha and his benevolence towards all living beings.
However, upon reaching Isipatanaramaya, we were dismayed to see caged peacocks.
The whole place was highly commercialized.
The obvious distress of the caged birds was certainly loathsome.
We all felt that the incumbent monk had entirely failed to appreciate the fact that it was the place where the Buddha set in motion a process that would over a period of more than 2500 years help liberate hundreds of thousands if not millions of individuals from all their worldly bonds and set them totally, unconditionally free.
Who in his right mind would want to imprison animals at such a hallowed precinct?
I see Buddhist temples as places that should enable people to free themselves from worldly bonds.
Does it make any sense to keep animals in captivity at such places?
 
Let us examine what the Buddha has said about conduct towards living beings.

In ‘Karaniya Metta Sutta’ (Discourse on Loving Kindness) he says:
"Just as a mother would guard her only child at risk to her own life
Even so towards, all beings
Let one cultivate loving kindness."
 
In Dhammapada, the Buddha declares:
"All are afraid of the rod all, fear death.
Taking oneself as an example, do not beat or kill."
 
And in Vasala Sutta (Discourse on Outcasts), he pronounces:
"Whosoever in this world kills living beings,
Once born or twice born (i.e., first born is an egg and then born for a second time as a hatchling),
In whom there is no sympathy for living beings
Know hint an outcast (untouchable). "

As such, it is with dismay that I learn that it has become a fashion among certain influential Buddhist monks to raise baby elephants at their temples.

 Story
Recently a baby elephant was being transported from one temple to another without obtaining required official approval.
The driver of the truck and the mahout were brought before a court of law and charged with cruelty to a captive elephant. The accused pleaded guilty and were fined. Although only the driver and mahout were hauled up before courts; the calf was being transported at the behest of two highly influential Buddhist monks.
What is most disturbing is that the poor animal was being raised in captivity at the temple of one of those eminent monks.
The observers say, the baby elephant cannot be more than three years old although in its adoption papers its mother’s name has been given as `Kale Alma’, which died about six years ago. The baby has been separated from its mother long before it reached the recommended age for weaning at the expense of its well being.

Besides, it is no secret among elephant lovers that the process euphemistically referred to as taming is cruel. Baby elephants are made to obey a mahout’s orders by keeping them in close confinement, withdrawal of food and water, and by constant merciless beating.

Bearing in mind the Buddha’s words on how to treat all sentient beings; even if we disregard the treatment meted out to this poor baby elephant at the temple and dwell only on this nightmarish episode of transporting it in the cover of night, the implications are appalling.

By cruelly inflicting untold misery on it and thereby placing the life of the cub in danger, the first precept of abstaining from killing has been violated.. Secondly, the cub was robbed of the inalienable right to roam freely in its natural habitat.
Thirdly, false information was furnished about the mother of the animal.
Fourthly, this cruel act had the blessings of individuals intoxicated with political power.
In this preposterous exercise, three or four out of the five basic precepts were violated.
That being so, the consequences of meting out cruel. treatment to the baby elephant at the temple on a day to day basis are unthinkable.

Perhaps it was on witnessing such conduct by certain monks that the late Dr. E.W. Adikaram is supposed to have remarked, "It is my ardent wish that these monks would one day embrace Buddhism!"


Animal lovers may shout from the rooftops.
But it is the Buddhist clergy who must finally decide whether the practice of keeping animals in captivity and separating them fro their mothers at a very tender age is consistent with the teachings of the Enlightened One.
 
Until then there the status quo will remain.
 
Let us fervently hope that this cruel practice will be abandoned before long.

 

NEMO! Who was he?

 Monday, October 15, 2012
NEMO! Who was he?

NEMO!
Who was he?
I only knew about the Waltz Disney character the Fish but never knew the name NEMO had a long history.
Below is a reproduction of Google’s contribution  to Winsor McCay on his 107 birth day anniversary.

Please Go and Visit Google and Doodle please.

Google Doodle
Winsor McCay

The Google Doodle tribute to Winsor McCay
Google has celebrated the 107th anniversary of Winsor McCay's Little Nemo in Slumberland with one of the search engine's most elaborate doodles ever.
The doodle recreates the adventures of the main fictional character from the illustrator's comic strips, which first appeared on 15 October 1905 in the New York Herald.
Widely regarded as one of the great figures in the comics form, McCay's bold and stylistic innovations in the early part of the 20th century redefined what the medium could do and set a standard followed by Walt Disney in decades that followed.
Born in Michigan in either 1869 or 1871 – the date is disputed – McCay received some basic art training while attending business school before going to work in the printing and engraving industry in Chicago. He later moved to Cincinnati, where his first major comic strip series was A Tale of the Jungle Imps by Felix Fiddle, which appeared in the Cincinnati Enquirer over more than 40 instalments.
Little Nemo, based on the adventures of a boy of around six-years-old, ran in the New York Herald from 1905 to 1911. The strip, which ran only on Sundays, features Nemo's adventures as he tries to reach the Princess of Slumberland, daughter of King Morpheus, who desires Nemo for a playmate.
McCay was hired by William Randolph Hearst in 1911 and went to work on Hearst's New York American, a morning newspaper, as an editorial cartoonist. He also started to experiment with animated cartoons and creating the classic Gertie the Dinosaur as well as a short Little Nemo film.
McCay died on 26 July 1934 of a cerebral embolism.


Moment Meditation

 Wednesday, December 5, 2012
Moment Meditation
If I am asked what is meditation?
I would try to answer it by saying,
Moment gained is moment lost in Meditation,
Moment not gained or lost is the the true
Focus of attention in Meditation.
Equally, it is not a void or an empty phenomena or vacuum,
But the height of intense attention
That is not measured in seconds
But by nanoseconds of intensity,
Which is very difficult to achieve
In a world of distraction.

One should try to see
Its own application
In a moment of meditation.

Flight from Otago, New Zealand to Buenos Aries in Argentina and Falklands

 Tuesday, January 1, 2013
Flight from Otago, New Zealand to Buenos Aries in Argentina and Falklands
For New Year this is my first dream and the dream flight I accomplished.
I had a dream.
Myself and one of my friends decided to fly from New Zealand, Otago to Falkland through Buenos Aries.
Flying from West to East was not interesting and only 14 hours of flying.
Only one airline on show.

We decided to fly from East to West through Ceylon.

We did not have any direct flights to Katunayake and had to detour from Singapore to Colombo.

The cost was beyond our imagination and we decided to charter flight our own plane.

We decided to train as pilots and mapped our route and also where to refuel.

We started from Otago but before we could land on Christchurch, I was woken up by the mosquitoes.

It was a very sweet dream and we did not have any hitches on our plan and the dream hours were very short compared to the boring one stop flights with no leg space to stretch.

Thank god, they have hipped the air fares, if I had this dream when I was younger I would have actually spend all my money to accomplish it.

Below is some information with the Airlines that fly from various airports from Buenos Aires to various destinations.
Think twice before flying any ware with various pit stops since no airline in the world is capable of covering the globe.

They have their own routes to dominate but cannot fly outside the targeted zone.

It is far better to take a rocket plane (when available for commercial flights) and finish the flying in 6 hours.

Note there are no American Airlines in the list.


Aerolineas Argentinas  Auckland To $desLocName  AKL To EZE  $1043  13h 40m

South African  Johannesburg to Buenos Aires  JNB To EZE  $926  10h 25m

Emirates Johannesburg to London Heathrow Airport (LHR)1-stop (Dubai Airport )

Singapore Airlines Singapore Changi International Airport to Joburg (SIN to JNB)
non-stop (10h50m)

South African Airways Singapore Changi International Airport to Joburg (SIN to JNB)
non-stop (10h50m)

Johannesburg To Singapore  JNB To SIN  $2015  10h 48m

Singapore Air  Singapore To Auckland  SIN to AKL  $5439

British Airways  Singapore to Auckland  SIN To AKL  $1508  13h 15m

South African  London To Johannesburg  LHR To JNB  $941  11h 15m

Emirates  London To Johannesburg  LHR To JNB  $916  19h 19m

Air France  London To Johannesburg  LHR To JNB  $903  14h 3m


Rebirth Across the Border

 Sunday, February 3, 2013
Rebirth Across the Border
This is going to be a short chapter in my nook “Rebirth Revisited”.
I wanted to write a short essay on reconciliation on the National Freedom Day but I felt for some reason it is a waste of time.
Just reciting National Anthem in two or three languages may give some symbolic value but that symbolic value will vanish into the thin air moment the music stops. Reconciliation is much about attitude and tolerance towards diversity and it is not a political Tele Drama.
 It is cannot be forced fed like a bitter medicine.
So I decided to use Professor Bono’s Lateral Thinking Philosophy instead of the Vertical Thinking Philosophy of our politicians.
I had a good night sleep and some beautiful dreams, when I woke up late, just felt like writing what came to my mind spontaneously.
If is What If Philosophy of mine.
It is, what if the rebirth concept is a true?
It is in that context.
What if some of the dead during the conflict are reborn again in this island or abroad?
Those reborn will be 3 years old now and are ready and shaping up to tell us the real on the spot story of the dying moment.
Are we ready to listen to the story of the dead now, reborn?
Well, that is a good piece for writing.
Then, the next question is how many of them will be able to remember the dying moment.
My guess is one in a thousand birth one will be able to re-telecast it.
Then how many died at that time.
It is anybody’s guess and let us not split hair on it.
Assuming 100,000 there will be 100 of rebirth stories with the assumption all are reborn as humans. But according to the scriptures it is very unlikely all will be born human since when one dies of intense hate and grief they are more likely to end up in lower reams.
So let me be reflective and a handful of 5 to 10 who were reborn will be able to remember the dying moment.

I wish for my writing they be born like this.
1. A military recruit dies in conflict and he is born in Killinochchi to a Tamil parents who are Hindu.
2. A LTTE combatant who dies is born into a family in the deep south Hambantota to Sinhala parents who are Buddhists.
3. A Tamil civilian caught up in the conflict is born to a Muslim parents.
4. A Tamil civilian caught up in the conflict born to a family of mixed parentage in Colombo.
5. A military recruit dies in conflict and he/she is born in Canada to Tamil parents who are Christians.
6. A military recruit dies in conflict and he/she is born in UK to Sinhala parents who are Christians.
7. A LTTE combatant who dies is born into a family of Sinhala parents who are now domiciled in USA.
8. A LTTE combatant who dies is born into a family of Tamil parents who are now domiciled in USA.
9. A LTTE combatant who dies is born into a family of American parents who believe in rebirth.
10. A military recruit dies in conflict and he is born into a family of American parents who do not believe in rebirth.
The vagaries will extend beyond the 10 listed above but that is not the intention of this discussion.

If one is to investigate the rebirth story which family would volunteer to go through this ordeal of knowing the tragedy at hand?
My guess is nobody except probably the family in Colombo with mixed parentage and the American parents for publicity and curiosity.
Then have we got some mechanisms to verify these data.
Will the military give sanction to go ahead with the investigation?
Will the Sinhala or Tamil parents go through this trauma?
It is anybody’s guess but most of them will do all that is possible to suppress the rebirth story for different reason.
They might very well say it is childhood fantasy.
Nobody will be ready to listen to the story of the dead person.
But I wish the LTTE combatant who is born to a Sinhala family would learn Sinhala, Tamil and the link language English and record his story for posterity and take up politics and become very vocal in reconciliation.
Similarly an army recruit who is born to a Tamil family would learn Sinhala, Tamil and the link language English and record his story for posterity and take up politics and become very vocal in reconciliation.
The way how we handle reconciliation, I think we will have to wait for another 20 years for those reborn characters mentioned above to take up the reins of tolerance, understanding and the futility of racism.
It is too late, by then we will have reignited another conflict under the shadow of religion.
All the signs are ripe for the latter scenario since our politicians refuse to be sensitive to human suffering whether they believe in rebirth or not.
They only want to cling on to power.
That is the name of the game.
Racism and religious fanaticism they breed.
They are grounds they encourage for their own survival and not reconciliation.

Postscript.
If one reads the recorded rebirth stories, there are plenty in the first and second world war stories; it is more than likely this is the correct time for them to resurface in this country. If one is interested in rebirth is they should have zealous and scientific approach to investigation of these stories since there will be lot of suppression by adults and teachers around them.


Internet Banking

 Internet Banking 
Danger not Evaluated; The WARNINGS not Heeded


This should be read in conjunction with Bugger the Bankers.

I will only give only a glimpse of it.
The reader should update his or her own risk element, if not on daily basis but on monthly basis.

Let me dispense with the underline presumptions.
There are two presumptions.

One is that computers never make mistakes and better than humans.
Computers make huge mistakes whereas humans make small mistakes, like counting the balance.
Computer can make million of mistakes in a fraction of a second but human can make only one mistake at a time, which many of us do not guard against.
Humans try to prevent repeating the mistake, whereas computers keep on doing the same mistake million times.

(No fortune company will come out with the true facts, like the Ponsi scheme that went round globally without any hindrance, till the banking started collapsing.
We have too many banks .
What we need is a few banks with credibility.)

Like me forgetting, to take the balance after payment is made.
The cashier, if he or she is a good one will promptly return the money.

Computers will never gives back the money that was wrongly paid (server administrator can safely transfer it in seconds to some far away destination without any trace of the transaction) or comes behind you with the correct balance in hand.

The sever administrator can swindle any excess, knowing very well that somebody has made a mistake.

This happens in big shopping networks and that is why the items and articles are more expensive than in the open market.
They never audit or declare these frauds fearing that they will loose the market.

Banks are no different.

They only see one side of it.
The customer side.
Never its own staff.
If they make a mistake they will hide it by all means like a cat covering its poo.

The second premise is very simple.
Majority (99%) including me is very bad at balancing accounts on daily basis.
The bank jump into your shoes under this pretext and may even one day ruin you.

In fact, I managed without a bank account for nearly six years when I returned from abroad with six credit cards.
That was only period in my life, I never asked for a loan and did not make a single mistake.

I was doing my own banking and balancing my accounts.

But I have one cardinal principle.
That is, I may not make mistakes on a daily basis but one day I will make a huge mistake.
I will guard against that mistake which will ruin me.
It will last good for me.

I have also another resolution.
My maximum loss should be theoretically not more than Rs.100,000/= (never a million which young ones are enticed and coaxed into by all commercial banks).

Each one should have a credit limit which he or she can bear, which is usually three to ten times the basic salary (not the total salary).

If one exceeds that limit, he or she on his or her own peril one day, one has to blame oneself not the bank or the creditors.

The day I make that big mistake, I will close all my accounts and delegate my finances to someone whom I can trust.
The problem is finding one whom I can trust in this blessed Buddhist country.

So if you do Internet Banking,  the moment (fraction of a second) you press the button,  you are taking a big risk.

The song bugger the bankers is making a huge impact globally and the banks are hell bent on promoting their vices on many new form of advertisements and in many fronts.
Even children not born are not spared.

Do not fall to their trappings which are worse than Merchant of Venice..

That is, promote free spending with a noose around your neck.
I felt like writing this having seen a young mother with her baby attended by her mother did not check the bill when she was making her payment.
In my medical career I have seen many nursing mothers making big mistakes that include caring for the baby, let alone finances.


Myths, Mirage and Marriage

 Sunday, February 24, 2013
Myths, Mirage and Marriage
 It is said married life with kids (not without) prolong one´s life of existence.
I reproduce here posted in asokaplus at wordpress where no one visits.
I cannot remember when I posted this or ever had written this being a married man.
All the same it is worth repeating with some editing and formatting.
The 3Ms here have common ancestry.
None of can be achievable and each one of them is shrouded in mystery.

For example one who is lost and disorientated in desert sand would not know for certain he is arriving at a water hole or not.

Myths of can be expanded to any direction or dimension one who is seeking the miracle go to any extent to believe what in reality is not achievable and where there the reality is the major casualty.

Some common practices and beliefs merge into day to day life sometimes almost imperceptible to reality.

Marriage is an institution that has gained such a reputable credence that writing anything against is amounting to desecration and sacrilegious.

That is the myth I am going to expose and explode.

There is no intention of disrupting any healthy harmony that may exists in any relationship or institution.

Healthy relationships can exist and lasting friendships can be developed without this institution existing its power over individuals but when something is institutionalized and when it is bound to the common law and practices and finely tuned with ethical and moral practices of a culture aforesaid myth and mirage also will get entangled with it.

Idea here is to disentangle certain myths associated with marriage.
1. Marriage is a perfect union
2. Marriage works because of give and take
3. Marriage is a stable institution
4. There is freedom in marriage
5. It does not grow old but remain live
6. It gives security
7. It has common goals
8. It makes life complete
9. Without this institution human relationships cannot be developed
10. Everyone must commit to this institution at one stage of his or her life

This list can go on but suffice is to disentangle the entangled myths.

These arguments are not for one who is already entangled since with the wedlock there is a legal deadlock.

This is for one who leaps into deep water without addressing his or her own issues.

The first casualty in war is truth.

Similarly the first casualty in marriage is freedom.

If you love freedom and lot of hobbies thinks twice before taking the plunge.
1. The first casualty is your hobbies.
2. The second casualty is your friends.
If you have lot of friends and love their company think twice.
3. Third casualty is one’s finance (unless both are bankers with good investment funds for life like the Murdoch).
If you cannot manage finances alone two of you will not mange it better.
4. Fourth myth is the stability and security.
There are no institutions in this world which is stable and secure.
Even the best banks can bust.
In marriage finances would bust first, especially when the kids come home.
5. It makes life complete is the biggest myth of all.
It makes simple life more complicated in marriage life and you never complete the set targets or your obligations, even if you live beyond 100 years.
6. In marriage more you give in more you have to give and less you have to take.
One never get a chance to take in, if you are the giver.
It is like putting water into a bucket with hole in the bottom.
7. Marriage does not get old.
It is not true it is the institution that gets older by the minute.
Moment you tie your nuptials and finishes the honeymoon it is old enough to be called a marriage.
That is why we have so many marriage jubilees from its inception.
This is written with the impending royal wedding in mind.

As long as you are a commoner please do not do what royals do.
Remain a commoner for life and you may advise the royals (couples) in trouble.
Better still you become a divorce lawyer.
Hope the royal couple reads this one day after the honeymoon (too late by then).
I wish Good Luck to them all the same.

Linux Code of Conduct and its strength-Gparted included

 Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Linux Code of Conduct and its strength
Gparted included
Linux has a strict code of conduct.
Sometimes it may be its weakness too.
I was down with flu and could not do anything constructively for a few days and decided to invest my time on a spare computer on which I had forgotten the password for the root or the administration work.
On does not have to use root unless there is a major mishap and that was the reason for forgetting it.
Linux does check its partitions on mount and start up and this computer also had some problem with a partition installed with a different operating system.
In other words the second IDE hard disk had faulty segment.
So I decided to erase everything and start afresh.
In this situation best utility is Gparted, a Debian based live distribution which is known for its breezy partitioning and formatting.
So I partitioned the normal disk which was piece of cake.
But when I tried to partition the IDE disk there was some problem.
I could not format, probably the segment which was defective was hindering the progress and was left with a situation where I did not have a partition table to mount any distribution.
It got stuck at fstab.
Unable to mount the defective disk I could not even install on the normal sata disk.
I went back to partedmagic and tried to rectify.
It did the partitioning on the first go but did not detect the sector which was defective.
Then I mounted Gparted and tried to reformat the possible defective segment and it got stuck.
The ReisereFS partition type is probably highly journalized it detected the faulty segment/sector.
I could not format and left without a partition table.
Back to square One.
After one night toiling and I gave up, with the flu making me irritable, after mounting Gparted several times.
In this situation I always press Ctrl + Alt+F1 to see what was wrong.
Only one sector was defective.
I never realized Gparted and ReiserFS were that finicky about partitioning and formatting.
In this situation what I do is to format with less restrictive swap partition and leave that portion virtually not utilized.
Other option is to keep that portion not allocated which not a good option.
Finding one sector out of sea of little segments was a difficult preposition anyway.
The third option was for me to physically remove the hard disk.
This has not happened after I started using Linux, for over a decade.

I had to resort to windows less finicky partitioning which include ntfs.
I keep a windows 7 starter DVD without registering with the windows (then one cannot reuse it ) and installed it in my computer but it detected all the partition as normal and healthy.

Fortunately it did not detect the faulty sector. I was in business again.

Windows cannot read the partition details written in Linux.
That is another reason for me  not using Windows.
I deleted the most likely partition and installed the Windows 7.
Otherwise (if I do not install windows) I will not have a partition table.
Then I booted up Gparted and located the segment to about 6 GiB of the 80 GB IDE disk.
Tthen I installed Ubuntu 13-04 on the normal disk.
I won’t install any on the IDE disk but keep it as a place to store old files.
Lesson here is one does not have to discard a disk with few isolated (this was second hand disk I bought with an old IBM computer) segments gone defective.
If you are not storing any critical data on this disk, it is not a big deal.

That is the advantage of Linux.
It detects even the tiniest of defects when formatting and discard them outright.
Windows formatting cannot approach anywhere near that precision.
One should never install an operating system on a bad disk.
My Sata disk was almost new.
One can use the small SSD disk for operating system only and use other/ old disks can be used for data storage.
That is the current recommendation anyway till price of SSD comes down drastically.
I am not going to throw away a disk with only one sector defective.

Mind you, I mounted a external USB hard disk and  recovered all the critical or useful data from the defective partition before going through with partitioning with Gparted.
This is the first time I had a problem where I had to tease my brain to get an old IDE working for me.
While I am typing this I am installing at least three(3) operating systems in one disk.
If one system goes down I use the other system to recover my files.
This is something windows cannot boast.
I am also immune to copying an image of my system (probably useful for servers but not for my desktops).
Once the system is old it is far better to reinstall since the old system will slow down with junk history to rewrite every time it boots up.
I do that every year or at worst, 18 months the most.
My installation has finished on the other computer, so let me stop here.


Vanilla-the Orchid, I struggled to make some saplings

Sunday, June 16, 2013

Vanilla-the Orchid, I struggled to make some saplings
It took almost six months for me to understand this wonderful plant.
It has a beautiful flower but it is famous for its smell of its pod.
If one keeps a pod inside your tea, it gives a wonderful flavour and aroma.
Vanillin is a simple phenolic compound and artificial flavour is nowhere near its natural compound.
It reminds me of the organic chemistry practicals as a school kid when we could smell and identify various compounds which I have forgotten now.
Last November, I accidentally found a few branches of Vanilla and and I thought it was piece of cake to get a few saplings from the branches I selected in a heap of branches.
I can pick a branch that would be young enough to plant I never thought, I had to wait nearly four months to see any sign of success.
First time, I cut the branches to various sizes to see from which node the young shoot will sprout.
Second time, I bought few more branches and the results were equally bad.
Then I went to the web and did a search and found unless one has young leaves at the end they won’t grow.
All the shoots I had were, without the young leaves.
I knew I was taken fora  sucker by the vendors in the city.
I demanded, I need few shoots with the top leaves remaining but not chopped off.
For my luck I met the old gentleman who comes to the city with Vanilla pods and sell them seated on the pavement.
I told him my plight, sure enough the next load of cutting he sent me two with leaves on the the top.
To my surprise when I came home to plant them, I noticed two of my original shoots showing signs of young buds.
1. If one wants to succeed one needs at least one foot long branch with young leaves on top.
2. One must not chop the top off like when one plants shoots as vegetative growths.
3. They should be grown in shade with lot of humidity.
4. They should be planted with other plants which need lot of water and and transpirate water around them giving lot of humidity.
In my case tomato plants and a particular water plant (name I do not know) did give the company for the young shoots.
I have found even the amazon plant is a good company by accident.
5. No need for rooting chemical.
6. One need lot of patience.
The fourth batch of shoots even with top chopped off I managed to get saplings.
The secret is that the bottom part of the shoot have to be (at least one foot) flat on the ground covered with little soil.
The top part has to be anchored erect on a pole or stick and that curvature gives the signal for shooting.
That is my observation.
 
The hormones are produced somewhere round the bend in the inter-node stem.
That is my observation and all my fourth round shoots are now showing (after about six weeks delay) signs of budding shoots, HAVING APPLIED THE SCIENTIFIC OBSERVATION ABOVE.
.
7. when the shoots come out it needs a stick to anchor.
8. It is better to grow the anchor plant in anticipation of the young shoot. It is vital for its needs.
The anchoring roots get hod of the closet anchor.
This orchid is a plant in between orchid and a runner.
It has a 90 degree orientation.
The flat portion is like any other vegetative plant.
The erect portion is the true orchid.
It is really a hybrid plant A cross between a runner and an orchid.
It needs lot of water and humidity when young.
I will report to you when it starts flowering probably in another six months.
I have changed to orchids since the Kandy weather is now  coundusive for them and its climate has drastically changed in the last five years.

 

What if one wants to try Linux?

 Thursday, July 25, 2013

 25-07-2013

 
What if one wants to try Linux?
 
This is a short recipe but the steps are far too many.
1. Decide what one needs
List the utilities one needs
Web browsing using only a cloud utility
Anonymous web browsing
Needs a word processor free of copyright, for example LibreOffice
Needs a photo editor
Video/Audio player +++++

2. Decide on the CD/DVD image (DVD is preferable) of the distribution

3. Download preferably a torrent file which checks the file integrity and checksum

4. Decide on the hardware Laptop (never use a secondhand laptop) PC or self assembled PC.
Old secondhand PC computers with updated RAM (minimum of 1 GIB is my recommendation) with a graphic card of 256 to 512 MB is a good choice especially if it is the spare computer one is going to use it as.

On board Ethernet card is mandatory.

If there is no spare computer to download or the download speed is slow like in the developing world one has few options.
I do not download or test distributions now to save my electricity bill.
If I can save one month's of electricity bill I can buy the Linux magazine for a whole year.
That is what I do now.
One can visit and browse the Linux Magazine site and buy old copies of the magazine with Linux DVDs in them.
If you do so and buy a magazine copy, go for the copy with Knoppix DVD (as an extra copy) and a another copy of your desired distribution.

My approach.
One has to decide on either 32 bits or 64 bits (can have more RAM) version.
I will have five to six distributions in one box, few for my use and others for testing.
1. Knoppix CD (not DVD)
2. Gparted CD.
3. Linux Mint KDE (15)
4. Peppermint 4
4. Kiwi Linux
6. SuSe Linux KDE
7. PCLinux LXDE
8. Tails
9. Kali Linx
10. Debian 7.0
11. Pinguy Linux and many more

STEP 1
I boot up the Knoppix 7.0 CD.
This is to check my hardware.
This is the best Live CD to check on my hardware and it never fails.
If you buy the Linux magazine one is able to read the articles (questions and answers mostly) written by Knoppix himself.
I use this CD to partition my hard disk using Gparted.
It needs a rerserFS partition and a swap partition (onw has to use sufficient capacity for the DVD).
Then I install Knoppix CD version on the hard disk (follow the instruction while installing).

STEP 2
Then I boot Gparted Linux CD (Gnome Linux) and verify what was done and format all the partitions, (except where Knoppix is installed) for my need (read my articles on partitioning).

STEP 3
Then I install one by one all the distributions and see which one has the best GRUB utility.

Suse has the best configuration, partitioning and Grub file.
Peppermint comes close second but has very few utilities (cloud friendly Google based).
No word processors, torrent or disk burners.
Kiwi is pretty good alternative to Ubuntu

STEP 4
Redo the Step (three) 3 so that I get the best start up grub file that boots all the distributions.

I do this once a year and I have finished that cycle a few hours ago and I installed (downloaded) all the missing files of Peppermint except one that creates (it is not available in graphic form) an iso image of my final upgraded distribution.

Few comments worth mentioning.
 
1. use a router and not a telephone hookup.

2. Do not listen to guys/girls who test them on virtual machines.
There is a big difference in performance in actual hardware than in a virtual machine.

3. Do not install while connected to the Internet, it takes hell of a long time.
It is a waste of time.

4. Use SATA with at least 150 GB not IDE of 80GIB.

5. Do not use more than 15 partitions (SuSe cannot detect more than that).

6. Have three partitions for your most used Linux distribution.
/root., /home and /var and the rest of the distributions can be installed in one or two partitions.

5. Have two users always, one for root or administrator and one for regular user with good passwords.
 
All my users name come from the primate family from chimp to bonobo to gorilla.

Ubuntu forums tells me that their password file is compromised and that means my account too.
So strong password is mandatory now with lot of hackers out there.
Once one is familiar with a distribution try to stick with it without upgrading if the system is running well.

6. Do the preparation in mid July and not in December when everybody is on leave.
We were on a long industrial action in 2012 and I had nothing to do except fiddling with Linux and that was a discovery I made quite fortuitously.
Before that I did it on December and found that I had to re-install some f them in April or May.
Linux distributions tend to mature by mid year, strangely enough!

Why I hate Face-Book?

Friday, August 2, 2013

Why I hate Face-Book?
About three years ago unwittingly  I joined the Facebook and there is noway I can opt out.
I am one who spent lot of time on the web promoting Linux, Cloud Computing and Blogging for fun.
I have many connections including Dropbox, JoliOs-JoliDrive, Ubuntu One and Wordpress in addition to Google.
None of the above providers insist that I use them obsessively and neurotically.
In fact I have not used Dropbox for a long time and my password had expired but they did not remind me of that fact.
Just as good to illustrate the difference between a service of a professional cloud server (dropbox) and a social media (facebook) with very little relevance to my day to day work.
To illustrate the point I get an invitation from some unknown baby (under two years) Deelip Kalum to join his page (these parents do not understand principle of privacy and little child’s rights).
I stop writing a stinker bud did the same to two of my friends to get the message across to all and sundry.
 
The Message went like this,
I rarely use Facebook.
Fortunately, I have given very little information about me on the page.

In fact, I hate it since I cannot opt out or log out.

It is like the a “Pissige Pala Malla”-literally means the “mad woman’s belongings"-life jacket of survival of the illiterate- and I just keep it running by default for my friends to realize that I do EXIST in the sea of JUNK world.

After hour an half of searching I could not sign off or opt out.
I am really hooked to my grave with Facebook.
Will you be sending some “Flowers or Wreath"?
Thanks a lot social media.
What are going to do when I am dead?

Will you be willing to join me in Hell (or Apaya).
At the moment I am in connection with the Apaya Computer Administrator sort this out before my departure..

His administration of my Facebook from Hell will be Handy with Gory pictures.

Please note that individuals are not allowed to communicate in Apaya by email.
I have already figured out a way to deal with my email (dead email) after my death but not FACEBOOK.

Managing Passwords

 

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Managing Passwords
I think Ubuntu One and few others give concern for good password management.
Naming others would be improper since they are not Open Source based.

What goes behind them and whether they share them with the NSA or a corrupt regimes is open for debate.

I have personnel reason to believe they do and my own experience with institutions specially corrupt or vested interests, is on the affirmative.

They are hell bent to breach any privacy one may have.
The reason being that they do not want to be exposed of their sordid acts.
They are paranoid and it is a disease.

Fact that this blog post exists is due to the interference with my blog post elsewhere and a site that lacked good security protocol.

They were dysfunctional over more than a year and I do not use the site anymore.
My writings were very docile innocent and not politically involved.
They were bit humorous and the basic ingredients were satire.

Unfortunately for me, out of the top ten, my writings (I was involved in initial setup) filled the top eight and the administrator got paranoid and blocked my name.
I still continued to write (very little traffic) in spite of noticing the administrators handiwork, since my idea was not to reach the top ten.
They used my birthday as a discriminator.
Who says there is no discrimination in web hosting and social media.
But my writings were there for anybody to read in spite of blocking the rating.
 
I have collated them and recently deleted 75% of the original writings from that site.
Some of them are now in digital output for posterity, in a book form.

This preamble is necessary since when one opens one’s heart and not the mind in the web, one has to be prepared for insults and discrimination.
Sadly now governments and secret agencies are doing things that one would not suspect 30 years ago.
Technocrats and not the real hard working guys who fill these posts and operating from air conditioned cubicles and are scared to be on the beat and foot.
 
Invariably paranoia develops.

So I think it is necessary to have a bit of paranoia when one enters the web with email to begin with.

How does one have a good password?
 
How one can remember a password with 14 to 16 characters (what banks employ now for an account, with the help of computers)?

To begin with one has to train the brain to remember.
I have a suggestion elsewhere (under web etiquette) that  I do not want to repeat here.

Beginning,

Step 1
One has to remember in blocks of three or four.
To train your mind try to remember your VISA card number.
Front four are almost specific and easy.
The last four should be your next attempt.
Do this every time when you go to the bank or to the till.
Do not worry if you forget.
When you can remember the first and the last lot of four numbers, try the other two lot not in specific way.
Suddenly part of the brain not utilized before get a rush of blood and new neurone networks.
Person with any age with firm resolve can do that.
This subconscious repetitive acts can be easily extended to one's password.

I used to remember all the telephone numbers of my friends by heart in good old days and friends are the ones, one frequently ring and (telephone charges were relatively expensive, then) the brain stores them for good.
 
I stop doing that when cell phones came into existence.
 
One has to have one’s own trick for remembering blocks of three or four.

Try to associate them with pictures, names, pets etc.
 
Your pet fish or dog or cat would have a secret code attached.
Every time you feed them repeat the code (in mind) mentally in no time it get fixed as a long term permanent memory.

Step 2
 
Come with a phrase to include all the 10 to 16 characters in one’s password.
This is the hard part but it can be done.

Step 3
Use elements that one never forgets (unless one has Dementia).
Birthday is an easy one to remember.
 
Use only two numbers from it, not all.

Step 4
Unfortunately this cannot be used if one is English but I will give some hint for them too.
For Sinhala U Mata Banna, or Muta Mata Gahanna Hithenawa or Even Puke Ariya are good enough relatively used rephrases one can remember in trans-literate content, which the English Search engine might have trouble in figuring out.
From that phrase  one can choose four characters (even more if the phrase is carefully constructed) easily.
For English user, one good example is to go to alchemy and remember few Elements from the Tables.
Elements like Argon, Neon, Nitrogen,Bromine could be used at lib.
Or even one can use pentagon, hexagon, octagon or any other scientific or mathematical elements.
 
Again one only remembers four characters.

Step 5
If one has ever used a password before which one has remembered with repeated usage, use the same in the middle or rearrange it and put it in the middle.
 
Which will easily give you at least six characters.

You already got 12 characters now.
 
Step 5
Use two capital letters easy to access from the keyboard as the leader or the end of the password or leader and end, depending one is right or left handed.

Step 6.
If the web site requires you to use an alphanumeric pick an alpha numeral to satisfy them.
You got 16 in all and 14 probably is adequate.

Step 7
Do not tell your method to anybody.
Do not share your password even with your spouse.
One day you me be divorced!
That is real and if you have time read my book on “Myths, Miracles and Marriage”.
Usually perfectly normal people become paranoid after getting married.
That is my medical experience.
It is often the people who are near and dear (sometimes, so called friends) who steal your password, not a rouge who breaks in for quick takeaway and getaway.

Keep the record of the method in a secret hiding place that you only have access.
In case one day you forget.
The best place to HIDe t is your brain.
Not even a brain surgeon would not have any access.



When resetting the password.
When you change the password, drop two and take two from your birthday.
Pick four alternative block of four from your catch phrase.
Jumble your original password or add a new one.
Follow the rest as required and one may be able to go on till eighty to ninety since you practised your own method and is almost specific to YOUR BRAIN which a hacker may not be able to penetrate or crack.

Unless you are one of twins there are no two people alike.
Even in them their are subtle differences not due to genetics but the brain behaves differently, even in twins.

Foot Note
But beware your doctor with a short memory or who is cash strapped who might steal your birth day or the catch phrase that you utter to him every time you visit.
Remember doctors forget their passwords more often than their patients.
They will never tell you.
That is why they record every word you utter and then get the vital diagnosis
wrong.
In this computer age doctors have become robots (unlike good old days) and not real humans.
If they ask you do you forget your passwords
Straight away say NO.

The stupid guy will ask you to state the password and put it in his computer memory which is not protected from hackers.
Even the nurse can steal it, if she/he is inclined.

I trust my doctor does not apply to passwords when you do visit him/her, next time, round.
That includes me too.
I might do that, catch your password, certainly not to steal but because my brain is getting absent minded I might put that in my computer, easily accessed even by a little kid.
Do not worry, I do not practice now by choice not by design anyway.
You are safe with me, my dear.

Digital or Print Books?

 

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Digital or Print Books?
Dilemma!

This is a comment I posted to Amazon.

First of all let me say that the introduction of Match Book (I prefer to call it Matchbox) was a great IDEA.

But I could not edit my titles until yesterday since there was no new option available (for already published books) without editing almost the entire title.
 
But yesterday I got a WARNING from you that my book on Meditation would be taken away from the store since the Pricing of the Digital book was higher than the Print version.

I am not in agreement on this issue for number of reasons.

I will enumerate this for your consideration.

Number 1

People on the this side of the world have no access to digital books.
Less than 10% have Internet access (wired or wireless) but almost 90% have cell phones.

Number 2
Even those who have cell phones 80% do not know how to use the phone for digital access and Internet.
This is mainly due to lack of command in English.

Number 3
Due to above reasons I would prefer  to have the Print form less expensive than the Digital form.
Not all Titles (my choice) but a few of them.

Number 4
I am conceptually for Paperless World (save the rain forest) but we are not yet ready.

Number 5
Sri-Lankan government is politically backward and give FREE books to all primary students (I call it a political gimmick) which are about 30 years outdated (more in Science).
 
For example if I ask  students when they entire the university how the Island of Sri-Lanka was formed in a geographical point of view, none can answer.
 
Geography is not taught properly.

They only know what is in the books (PRINTED) given FREE by the government and none of the books are in Digital form and the contractors (I do not call them publishers) will never allow them to get converted to Digital form in a hurry.

Number 6
Unlike India Our Cell Phone Region is banned for Amazon to enter due to political reason (they fear American Influence).
The know it is going to be  a complete white wash in cricketing parlance.

For a trial period I want the Print Form (let me decide) to be cheaper.
 
I have not targeted any book at the moment with Sri-Lankans in mind.
I just write for fun and not solely on monetary value.
 
Number 7
That is why I like the Match Book (I prefer t5o call it Matchbox) since a wealthy reader from US can donate the print form, ideally  to a KID in Sri-Lanka, since he may not need it in his book shelf.
It will ignite a chain reaction of reading habits (in English) in this part of the world starved of good books (strike a match of enthusiasm).

Call it Matchbox, will YOU!

In that context Amazon does not lose much (postage is Heavy if the reader decides to post it to a institution here) on the deal to begin with.
 
I will have few targeted BOOKS of mine  FREE in Match Book, so a poor reader gets a chance to read what a wealthy reader reads in Americas.


On a minor note my download speed was cut down (I used more than 20 GiB of downloads this month and I am punished for my small indulgence ) to 5kb /sec  (I pay for 50 units/sec).

 Visitors here know I download Linux distributions for testing.


I was all up yesterday night updating my Titles and Upload speed is much slower, mind you.

Your 5 day deadline was like a shock to me.
 
Thank god I did (NOT) have a heart attack but I enjoyed every minute of my exercise.
 
I am joking!

Parafox with much appreciation of all what you do in Amazon Books.
 
Thank you Guys/Girls at Amazon.

Baby Elephant’s Dream

 Baby Elephant’s Dream

I was born free
In the Jungle
To roam about
As any other
Jungle being

Soon it was not to be
My mum was shot at
She was mortally wounded
I was in tears
I wanted my mum
Back again

Not a foster mum?

Yes my aunties
And the rest of the gang
Were of towering help
In my grief
Till it was declared
An “Amnesty” for
My mum’s exterminators

I too was shot at
I felt numb and
I  wished and thought
About my death

But it was a dream!

When I was woken up
I was out of the jungle
In another plane
And another place
With strange people
Around me
Holding something
I had never seen before

There was something
Which looked
White inside
But tasted awful
But I preferred
A little bit of water

Then I was rounded up
Put in a moving object
I felt dizzy
All the same
On this unguided tour
Which I hated

I was taken
To a place where
Many of my kind
Was incarcerated
With very little
Rebellion!
To my surprise
 
Soon I was declared
An orphan
The name of the place
I heard was Pinnawala
 
I wished
And wanted to be dead
Never to be born
Again
In this Paradise Island

Pavans and Poverty

 Wednesday, November 27, 2013
Pavans and Poverty

Poverty
We have a population of over 6 billion.
It is going to be 8 billion by 2020.
25% of the world population, equivalent to 1.5 billion earn less than $1 dollar a day.
50% of the world population, equivalent to 3.0 billion earn less than $2 dollar a day.
Most of them (60% in Asia) are in Asia and Africa.
Unfortunately these very same people are subjected lack of sanitation and water which lead to infections.
Worldwide 2 to 3 billion will feel the effect of shortage of fresh water (NOT POLLUTED) in 2020.
This will increase the water borne disease by many folds.
As at present millions die of water borne diseases.

Latest is the contamination of water by industrial affluents which include heavy metals and insecticides.

With all these UNO is only worried about Human Rights of smaller nations.
By their inaction WHO/UNO violates the rights of every child born to this century.
Aids is increasing fast in Africa and Asia.
In Africa AIDS was spread by roaming armies (including in Congo) due to internal conflicts.
In Ceylon when “Pavans” were there administering “Peace” in the North,
nearly 1000 Tamils women / a month came to Colombo for abortions.
The killing/ assassination of Rajiv Gandhi was directly related to this.
Nobody has done any study on how many were infected with AIDS with the help of “Pavans”.

Why I stopped Drinking Tea

 

Why I stopped Drinking Tea

I used to drink over 20 cups when the blend was pretty good with excellent flavours. But all that changed when all the local blends got adulterated.

Let me bare the facts.

All the good tea is auctioned in the bourse and what was not purchased is sent back to the dealer.       The Local vendor guy mixes this with tea dust that was used as manure, in the good old days and wraps it with Kheels, ARPICO and other supermarkets brand names. The locals have no option but to drink this dirt tea daily. Just like all the high grown tea, the high quality rice is exported and rice with high content of arsenic, especially the brown rice is left for local consumption. I do not eat local rice for over twp decades due to high content of arsenic. I am trying to convince the rest not to eat rice albeit in a subtle manner. If one is eating rice one has to sock the rice the day before for the arsenic to filter through to the water. Arsenic is water soluble and this water should be discarded and the filtered rice should be cooked with fresh water.

Rice is a staple diet, the prevention of this addiction to rice is very difficult. Not eating rice is the best health advice that I dispense as a doctor of yore but only in private circles.

So, tea is out  and the rice is out.

Any other option left?

Thankfully Ceylonese coffee is still very good not like the dirty horrible Indian Nescafe.

I was a coffee addict and it took many years of sustained effort to wean myself off from addiction to coffee. I was a living example of caffeine syndrome which I read in a nursing journal.

I have found  a good Thai Brand of coffee which is pretty good.

I am back to original myself except no lack of sleep. Unlike my dog my liver can deal with any amount of alcohol and coffee. That was an ominous sign in twilight years.

So, I decided to cut on caffeine.

Starting with Coca-Cola it also contains caffeine

There is not a single brand of soft drink without caffeine in the local market. That is the very reason our youth are bad in sports including cricket.

The good old king coconut is not within the reach of the poor since our developers are clearing the remaining coconut plantations and there is no regeneration program in sight for coconuts.

I would wound up this piece with banana cakes.

Except in one place in Kandy all the banana cakes are horrible. I had a good hope that UNP would resurrect the economy. I was sadly a big mistake. They are not worth the paper money they print from borrowed money.

But Mesna Tea is the best in Kandy and they make a good Banana cake and Cheese cake to go with.

Everything, is horrible including food, life style and politics in Ceylon under NPP/JVP regime. 

It is becoming a Province in India.