Dec 31, 2005

Welcome 2006!!!!

Assamees -- Rongaali Bihur xubhessaa lobo
Bengali -- Shuvo Nabo Barsho
Farsi -- Sal-e no mubarak
Gujarati -- Natal ni shub kaamnao & Saal Mubarak
Hindi -- Naye Varsha Ki Shubhkamanyen
Kannada -- Hosa Varushadha Shubhashayagalu
Marathi -- Nveen Varshachy Shubhechcha
Malayalam -- Puthuvatsara Aashamsakal
Oriya -- Sukhamaya christmass ebang khusibhara naba barsa
Punjabi -- Nave sal di mubarak
Sindhi -- Nayou Saal Mubbarak Hoje
Tamil -- Eniya Puthandu Nalvazhthukkal
Telugu -- Noothana samvatsara shubhakankshalu
Thai -- Sawadee Pee Mai
Turkish -- Yeni Yiliniz Kutlu Olsun
Urdu -- Naya Saal Mubbarak Ho

Dec 30, 2005

One year...

I just realsized that it is one year since I started blogging.

quote

"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It is not just in some of us; it is in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."
-- from movie "Coach Carter" [The passage quoted from Marianne Williamson]

Dec 28, 2005

Exploring FireFox

I never really got hooked to firefox...

But today I have done some exploring and liked these few listed here

Wizz RSS
IE Tab

Let me see maybe I will switch to Fire Fox(I have done this before and end up going back to Opera)

Cartoonist take on 2005

And many more from NPR.org

Dec 27, 2005

A positive move...

Stigma bogs down pre-marital HIV screening from The Hindu

But what about other states????

Most brides-to-be still shy away from seeking a pre-marital health screening of their suitors for HIV/AIDS, despite growing evidence about women being infected by their spouses.

A strong undercurrent of stigma and little power to decide about their life are preventing young women from insisting on a health report of the prospective groom before agreeing for marriage.


...

There are already 275 such centres across Tamil Nadu where anyone can get their blood tested for Rs. 10 besides free counselling.

Quantum Theory

Quantum Trickery: Testing Einstein's Strangest Theory from NYTimes

I just can't sum up this article. Full article is must read.

Nary a week goes by that does not bring news of another feat of quantum trickery once only dreamed of in thought experiments: particles (or at least all their properties) being teleported across the room in a microscopic version of Star Trek beaming; electrical "cat" currents that circle a loop in opposite directions at the same time; more and more particles farther and farther apart bound together in Einstein's spooky embrace now known as "entanglement." At the University of California, Santa Barbara, researchers are planning an experiment in which a small mirror will be in two places at once.

Niels Bohr, the Danish philosopher king of quantum theory, dismissed any attempts to lift the quantum veil as meaningless, saying that science was about the results of
experiments, not ultimate reality. But now that quantum weirdness is not confined to thought experiments, physicists have begun arguing again about what this weirdness means, whether the theory needs changing, and whether in fact there is any problem.

...

The Silly Theory

From the day 100 years ago that he breathed life into quantum theory by deducing that light behaved like a particle as well as like a wave, Einstein never stopped warning that it was dangerous to the age-old dream of an orderly universe.

If light was a particle, how did it know which way to go when it was issued from an atom?

"The more success the quantum theory has, the sillier it seems," Einstein once wrote to friend.

The full extent of its silliness came in the 1920's when quantum theory became quantum mechanics.

In this new view of the world, as encapsulated in a famous equation by the Austrian Erwin Schrödinger, objects are represented by waves that extend throughout space, containing all the possible outcomes of an observation - here,
there, up or down, dead or alive. The amplitude of this wave is a measure of the
probability that the object will actually be found to be in one state or another, a suggestion that led Einstein to grumble famously that God doesn't throw dice.

Worst of all from Einstein's point of view was the uncertainty principle, enunciated by Werner Heisenberg in 1927.

Certain types of knowledge, of a particle's position and velocity, for example, are
incompatible: the more precisely you measure one property, the blurrier and more
uncertain the other becomes.

In the 1935 paper, Einstein and his colleagues, usually referred to as E.P.R., argued that the uncertainty principle could not be the final word about nature. There must be a deeper theory that looked behind the quantum veil.

Imagine that a pair of electrons are shot out from the disintegration of some other particle, like fragments from an explosion. By law certain properties of these two fragments should be correlated. If one goes left, the other goes right; if one spins clockwise, the other spins counterclockwise.

That means, Einstein said, that by measuring the velocity of, say, the left hand electron, we would know the velocity of the right hand electron without ever touching it.

Conversely, by measuring the position of the left electron, we would know the position of the right hand one.

Since neither of these operations would have involved touching or disturbing the right hand electron in any way, Einstein, Podolsky and Rosen argued that the right hand electron must have had those properties of both velocity and position all along. That left only two possibilities, they concluded. Either quantum mechanics was "incomplete," or measuring the left hand particle somehow disturbed the right
hand one.

But the latter alternative violated common sense. Such an influence, or disturbance, would have to travel faster than the speed of light. "My physical instincts bristle at that suggestion," Einstein later wrote.

Bohr responded with a six-page essay in Physical Review that contained but one simple equation, Heisenberg's uncertainty relation. In essence, he said, it all depends on what you mean by "reality."