ter Hundreds exposed to gas after deadly leak at Indian chemical factory By www.theguardian.com Published On :: 2020-05-07T17:10:25Z Gas from LG Polymers plant in Andhra Pradesh leaked into nearby homes while families sleptAnalysis: 36 years after Bhopal, another case of history repeatingAt least 11 people have been killed and hundreds more taken to hospital after a gas leak at a chemical factory in south-east India. A plastics plant owned by South Korea’s LG Corp started leaking styrene into the surrounding residential area at about 3am on Thursday. Some people were enveloped as they slept, while others collapsed in the streets as they tried to flee the area on the outskirts of the coastal city of Visakhapatnam. Related: 'Bhopal’s tragedy has not stopped': the urban disaster still claiming lives 35 years on Continue reading... Full Article India South and Central Asia World news
ter Colombian Peso(COP)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:52 UTC 1 Colombian Peso = 0.0002 British Pound Sterling Full Article Colombian Peso
ter [Football] Indian Football Drops to 0-2 After Loss to Robert Morris By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Tue, 11 Sep 2012 08:15:00 -0600 It was a beautiful Saturday afternoon as the Indians prepared to take on the Robert Morris Eagles for Haskell Football's Home Opener. This would be the second time the Indians would take on the Illinois team. The Indians lost in their first match-up against the Eagles in 2011, which would play a recognizable tune in 2012. Full Article
ter [Football] Indian Football Equals Youth, Strength, and Determination By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Mon, 24 Sep 2012 08:25:00 -0600 (LAWRENCE KS) As the sun set Saturday over Memorial Field, the Indians and Bacone College kicked off game four of Haskell Football's season. Athletes and fans were pulling for a win against our rival Warriors. The Indians came out hard and fought endlessly through the night, but in the end, it would be experience that would win the game. Full Article
ter Uruguayan Peso(UYU)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:51 UTC 1 Uruguayan Peso = 0.0187 British Pound Sterling Full Article Uruguayan Peso
ter Uzbekistan Som(UZS)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:50 UTC 1 Uzbekistan Som = 0.0001 British Pound Sterling Full Article Uzbekistan Som
ter Italian duo lose senior season after helping FIU find beach volleyball success By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 1 May 2020 09:03:58 EST FIU's Margherita Bianchin and Federica Frasca opted to stay in South Florida rather than return to Italy, where the coronavirus struck ahead of the United States. Full Article
ter The best college sports prospects we ever saw: The Answer, Buster Posey and Andrew Luck By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 08:57:13 EST ESPN's colleges writers and reporters reflect on the phenoms they had a chance to cover before they were famous. Full Article
ter Why a buzzer-beater is Pomona-Pitzer's lasting memory By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 08:40:50 EST Senior Jack Boyle's game-winning buzzer-beater sent Pomona-Pitzer to the Division III Sweet 16. But due to the pandemic, it would be his last shot. Full Article
ter Russian Ruble(RUB)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:50 UTC 1 Russian Ruble = 0.011 British Pound Sterling Full Article Russian Ruble
ter NHL, NHLPA cancel international games in 2020 By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 09:46:48 EST The NHL has postponed its international games in 2020, the league and players' union announced in a joint statement on Friday. Full Article
ter Caps place Leipsic on waivers after comments By www.espn.com Published On :: Fri, 8 May 2020 11:32:42 EST The Washington Capitals placed forward Brendan Leipsic on waivers for the purpose of terminating his contract. Full Article
ter Iraqi Dinar(IQD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:49 UTC 1 Iraqi Dinar = 0.0007 British Pound Sterling Full Article Iraqi Dinar
ter Cayman Islands Dollar(KYD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:48 UTC 1 Cayman Islands Dollar = 0.967 British Pound Sterling Full Article Cayman Islands Dollar
ter Swiss Franc(CHF)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 11:00:02 UTC 1 Swiss Franc = 0.8302 British Pound Sterling Full Article Swiss Franc
ter CFA Franc BCEAO(XOF)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:47 UTC 1 CFA Franc BCEAO = 0.0013 British Pound Sterling Full Article CFA Franc BCEAO
ter Vietnamese Dong(VND)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 11:08:38 UTC 1 Vietnamese Dong = 0 British Pound Sterling Full Article Vietnamese Dong
ter Macedonian Denar(MKD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:47 UTC 1 Macedonian Denar = 0.0142 British Pound Sterling Full Article Macedonian Denar
ter Zambian Kwacha(ZMK)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:47 UTC 1 Zambian Kwacha = 0.0002 British Pound Sterling Full Article Zambian Kwacha
ter South Korean Won(KRW)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 15:20:36 UTC 1 South Korean Won = 0.0007 British Pound Sterling Full Article South Korean Won
ter Jordanian Dinar(JOD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 8:04:02 UTC 1 Jordanian Dinar = 1.1361 British Pound Sterling Full Article Jordanian Dinar
ter Lebanese Pound(LBP)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:45 UTC 1 Lebanese Pound = 0.0005 British Pound Sterling Full Article Lebanese Pound
ter [Haskell Indians] Haskell Athletics Hosts Champions of Character Event to Help Kick off ... By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Tue, 19 Nov 2019 14:50:00 -0600 Full Article
ter Bahraini Dinar(BHD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:44 UTC 1 Bahraini Dinar = 2.1314 British Pound Sterling Full Article Bahraini Dinar
ter Chilean Peso(CLP)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:23:43 UTC 1 Chilean Peso = 0.001 British Pound Sterling Full Article Chilean Peso
ter [Women's Outdoor Track & Field] Snelding, Hall, and Lester made the Javelin finals. By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Mon, 03 Apr 2017 14:15:00 -0600 Baldwin City, Kansas - The Haskell Indian Nations University women's track and field teams competed at the Baker Relays on Saturday. Full Article
ter Maldivian Rufiyaa(MVR)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:59 UTC 1 Maldivian Rufiyaa = 0.052 British Pound Sterling Full Article Maldivian Rufiyaa
ter Malaysian Ringgit(MYR)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:54 UTC 1 Malaysian Ringgit = 0.186 British Pound Sterling Full Article Malaysian Ringgit
ter Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro(NIO)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:53 UTC 1 Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro = 0.0234 British Pound Sterling Full Article Nicaraguan Cordoba Oro
ter A lost leg ... a lost life? What happened after Alex Smith's injury By www.espn.com Published On :: Thu, 7 May 2020 12:24:33 EST The Redskins quarterback's broken leg led to an insidious infection that could have cost him his life. Full Article
ter Netherlands Antillean Guilder(ANG)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:53 UTC 1 Netherlands Antillean Guilder = 0.449 British Pound Sterling Full Article Netherlands Antillean Guilder
ter Estonian Kroon(EEK)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:52 UTC 1 Estonian Kroon = 0.0565 British Pound Sterling Full Article Estonian Kroon
ter Danish Krone(DKK)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:52 UTC 1 Danish Krone = 0.1171 British Pound Sterling Full Article Danish Krone
ter Fiji Dollar(FJD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:51 UTC 1 Fiji Dollar = 0.3578 British Pound Sterling Full Article Fiji Dollar
ter New Zealand Dollar(NZD)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:51 UTC 1 New Zealand Dollar = 0.4948 British Pound Sterling Full Article New Zealand Dollar
ter Croatian Kuna(HRK)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:50 UTC 1 Croatian Kuna = 0.1162 British Pound Sterling Full Article Croatian Kuna
ter Peruvian Nuevo Sol(PEN)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 7:57:03 UTC 1 Peruvian Nuevo Sol = 0.2371 British Pound Sterling Full Article Peruvian Nuevo Sol
ter [Softball] Softball Falls to Southwestern College in Double Header By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Fri, 06 Mar 2020 18:10:00 -0600 Full Article
ter [Haskell Indians] NAIA Eligibility Center FAQ's & Updates By www.haskellathletics.com Published On :: Thu, 30 Apr 2020 12:10:00 -0600 Full Article
ter Dominican Peso(DOP)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Dominican Peso = 0.0146 British Pound Sterling Full Article Dominican Peso
ter Papua New Guinean Kina(PGK)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:46 UTC 1 Papua New Guinean Kina = 0.235 British Pound Sterling Full Article Papua New Guinean Kina
ter Brunei Dollar(BND)/British Pound Sterling(GBP) By www.fx-exchange.com Published On :: Sat May 9 2020 16:21:45 UTC 1 Brunei Dollar = 0.5704 British Pound Sterling Full Article Brunei Dollar
ter SemiEngineering Article: Why IP Quality Is So Difficult to Determine By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Fri, 07 Jun 2019 19:53:00 GMT Differentiating good IP from mediocre or bad IP is getting more difficult, in part because it depends upon how and where it is used and in part, because even the best IP may work better in one system than another—even in chips developed by the same vendor. So, how do you measure IP quality and why it is so complicated? The answer depends on who is asking. Most of the time, the definition of IP quality depends on your vantage point. If you are an R&D manager, IP quality means something. If you are a global supply manager, IP quality means something else. If you are an SoC start-up, your measure of quality is quite different from that of an established fabless company. If you are designing IP in-house, then your considerations are very different than being a commercial IP vendor. If you are designing an automotive SoC, then we are in a totally different category. How about as an IP vendor? How do you articulate IP quality metrics to your customers? This varies greatly by the type of IP, as well. When it comes to interface (hard) IP and controllers, if you are an R&D manager, your goal is to design IP that meets the IP specifications and PPA (power, performance, and area) targets. You need to validate your design via silicon test chips. This applies to all hard PHYs, which must be mapped to a particular foundry process. For controllers that are in RTL form—we called these soft IP—you have to synthesize them into a particular target library in a particular foundry process in order to realize them in a physical form suitable for SoC integration. Of course, your design will need to go through a series of design validation steps via simulation, design verification and passing the necessary DRC checks, etc. In addition, you want to see the test silicon in various process corners to ensure the IP is robust and will perform well under normal process variations in the production wafers. For someone in IP procurement, the measure of quality will be based on the maturity of the IP. This involves the number of designs that have been taped out using this IP and the history of bug reports and subsequent fixes. You will be looking for quality of the documentation and the technical deliverables. You will also benchmark the supplier’s standard operating procedures for bug reporting and technical support, as well as meeting delivery performance in prior programs. This is in addition to the technical teams doing their technical diligence. An in-house team that is likely to design IP for a particular SoC project will be using an established design flow and will have legacy knowledge of last generation’s IP. They may be required to design the IP with some reusability in mind for future programs. However, such reusability requirements will not need to be as stringent and as broad as those of commercial IP vendors because there are likely to be established metrics and procedures in place to follow as part of the design team’s standard operating procedures. Many times, new development based on a prior design that has been proven in use will be started, given this stable starting point. All of these criteria help the team achieve a quality outcome more easily. Then, if designing for an automotive SoC, additional heavy lifting is required. Aside from ensuring that the IP meets the specifications of the protocol standards and passes the compliance testing, you also must pay attention to meeting functional safety requirements. This means adherence to ISO 26262 requirements and subsequently achieving ASIL certification. Oftentimes, even for IP, you must perform some AEC-Q100-related tests that are relevant to IP, such as ESD, LU, and HTOL. To read more, please visit: https://semiengineering.com/why-ip-quality-is-so-difficult-to-determine/ Full Article IP cadence IP blocks Automotive Ethernet ip cores Tensilica semiconductor IP Design IP and Verification IP
ter How to Verify Performance of Complex Interconnect-Based Designs? By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sun, 14 Jul 2019 15:43:00 GMT With more and more SoCs employing sophisticated interconnect IP to link multiple processor cores, caches, memories, and dozens of other IP functions, the designs are enabling a new generation of low-power servers and high-performance mobile devices. The complexity of the interconnects and their advanced configurability contributes to already formidable design and verification challenges which lead to the following questions: While your interconnect subsystem might have a correct functionality, are you starving your IP functions of the bandwidth they need? Are requests from latency-critical initiators processed on time? How can you ensure that all applications will receive the desired bandwidth in steady-state and corner use-cases? To answer these questions, Cadence recommends the Performance Verification Methodology to ensure that the system performance meets requirements at the different levels: Performance characterization: The first level of verification aims to verify the path-to-path traffic measuring the performance envelope. It targets integration bugs like clock frequency, buffer sizes, and bridge configuration. It requires to analyze the latency and bandwidth of design’s critical paths. Steady state workloads: The second level of verification aims to verify the master-by-master defined loads using traffic profiles. It identifies the impact on bandwidth when running multi-master traffic with various Quality-of-Service (QoS) settings. It analyzes the DDR sub-system’s efficiency, measures bandwidth and checks whether masters’ QoS requirements are met. Application specific use cases: The last level of verification simulates the use-cases and reaches the application performance corner cases. It analyzes the master-requested bandwidth as well as the DDR sub-system’s efficiency and bandwidth. Cadence has developed a set of tools to assist customers in performance validation of their SoCs. Cadence Interconnect Workbench simplifies the setup and measurement of performance and verification testbenches and makes debugging of complex system behaviors a snap. The solution works with Cadence Verification IPs and executes on the Cadence Xcelium® Enterprise Simulator or Cadence Palladium® Accellerator/Emulator, with coverage results collected and analyzed in the Cadence vManager Metric-Driven Signoff Platform. To verify the performance of the Steady State Workloads, Arm has just released a new AMBA Adaptive Traffic Profile (ATP) specification which describes AMBA abstract traffic attributes and defines the behavior of the different traffic profiles in the system. With the availability of Cadence Interconnect Workbench and AMBA VIP support of ATP, early adopters of the AMBA ATP specification can begin working immediately, ensuring compliance with the standard, and achieving the fastest path to SoC performance verification closure. For more information on the AMBA Adaptive Traffic Profile, you can visit Dimitry's blog on AMBA Adaptive Traffic Profiles: Addressing The Challenge. More information on Cadence Interconnect Workbench solution is available at Cadence Interconnect Solution webpage. Thierry Full Article Verification IP Interconnect Workbench Interconnect Validator SoC Performance modeling AMBA ATP ARM System Verification
ter USB3, PCIe, DisplayPort Protocol Traffic Finding its Way Through USB4 Routers By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Sat, 01 Feb 2020 16:01:00 GMT USB4 can simultaneously tunnel USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort native protocol traffic through a hierarchy of USB4 routers. The key to tunneling of these protocols is routing table programmed at each ingress adapter. An entry of a routing table maps an incoming HopID, called Input/Ingress HopID to a corresponding pair of Output/Egress Adapter and Egress/Output HopID. The responsibility of programming routing tables lies with the Connection Manager. Connection Manager, having the complete view of the hierarchy of the routers, programs the routing tables at all relevant adapter ports. Accordingly, the USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort protocol tunneled packets are routed, and reach their respective intended destinations. The diagrammatic representation below is an example of tunneling of USB3 protocol traffic from USB4 Host Router to USB4 Peripheral Device Router through a USB4 Hub Router. The path from USB3 Host to USB3 Device is depicted by routing tables indicated at A -> B -> C -> D, and the one from USB3 Device to USB3 Host by routing tables indicated at E -> F -> G -> H . Note that the Input HopID from and Output HopID to all three protocol adapters for USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort Aux traffic, are fixed as 8, and for DisplayPort Main Link traffic are fixed as 9. Once the native protocol traffic come into the transport layer of a USB4 router, the transport layer of it does not know to which native protocol a tunneled packet belongs to. The only way a transport layer tunneled packet is routed through the hierarchy of the routers is using the HopID values and the information programmed in the routing tables. The figure below shows an example of tunneling of all the three USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort protocol traffic together. The transport layer tunneled packets of each of these native protocols are transported simultaneously through the routers hierarchy. Cadence has a mature Verification IP solution for the verification of USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort tunneling. This solution also employs the industry proven VIPs of each of these native protocols for native USB3, PCIe and DisplayPort traffic. Full Article Verification IP DP DisplayPort USB usb4 PCIe tunneling
ter Verification of the Lane Adapter FSM of a USB4 Router Design Is Not Simple By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Mon, 10 Feb 2020 15:19:00 GMT Verifying lane adapter state machine in a router design is quite an involved task and needs verification from several aspects including that for its link training functionality. The diagram below shows two lane adapters connected to each other and each going through the link training process. Each training sub-state transition is contingent on conditions for both transmission and reception of relevant ordered sets needed for a transition. Until conditions for both are satisfied an adapter cannot transition to the next training sub-state. As deduced from the lane adapter state machine section of USB4 specification, the reception condition for the next training sub-state transition is less strict than that of the transmission condition. For ex., for LOCK1 to LOCK2 transition, the reception condition requires only two SLOS symbols in a row being detected, while the transmission condition requires at least four complete SLOS1 ordered sets to be sent. From the above conditions in the specification, it is a possibility that a lane adapter A may detect the two SLOS or TS ordered sets, being sent by the lane adapter B on the other end, in the very beginning as soon as it starts transmitting its own SLOS or TS ordered sets. On the other hand, it is also a possibility that these SLOS or TS ordered sets are not yet detected by lane adapter A even when it has met the condition of sending minimum number of SLOS or TS ordered sets. In such a case, lane adapter A, even though it has satisfied the transmission condition cannot transition to the next sub-state because the reception condition is not yet met. Hence lane adapter A must first wait for the required number of ordered sets to be detected by it before it can go to the next sub-state. But this wait cannot be endless as there are timeouts defined in the specification, after which the training process may be re-attempted. This interlocked way of operation also ensures that state machine of a lane adapter does not go out of sync with that of the other lane adapter. Such type of scenarios can occur whenever lane adapter state machine transitions to the training state from other states. Cadence has a mature Verification IP solution for the verification of various aspects of the logical layer of a USB4 router design, with verification capabilities provided to do a comprehensive verification of it. Full Article Verification IP DP VIP DisplayPort PCIExpress USB Lane Adapter usb4 PCIe usb4 router tunneling
ter The Desperate Passion of Ben Foster By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2008-08-11T10:53:01+00:00 I could barely recognize Ben Foster in 3:10 to Yuma, but I was blown away just the same by him as in his star making turn from Hostage. What makes Foster so special in Yuma? Yuma contains two of Hollywood’s finest: Russell Crowe and Christian Bale. Bale is excellent, Crowe a little too relaxed to be cock-sure-dangerous. Both are unable to provide the powder-keg relationship that the movie demands. Into this void steps Ben Foster. He plays Charlie Prince, sidekick to Crowe’s dangerous and celebrated outlaw Ben Wade. When Wade is captured, Prince is infuriated. He initiates an effort suffused with desperate passion to rescue his boss. Playing Prince with a mildly effeminate gait, Foster quickly becomes the movie’s beating heart. What struck me in particular was that Foster was able to balance method acting with just plain good acting. He plays his character organically but isn’t above drawing attention with controlled staginess. Gradually, Foster’s willingness to control a scene blend in with that of Prince’s. Is the character manipulating his circumstances in the movie or is it the actor playing a fine hand? Foster is so entertaining, the answer is immaterial. Rave Out © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved. India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic Full Article
ter Here Is Why the Indian Voter Is Saddled With Bad Economics By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-02-03T03:54:17+00:00 This is the 15th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India. It’s election season, and promises are raining down on voters like rose petals on naïve newlyweds. Earlier this week, the Congress party announced a minimum income guarantee for the poor. This Friday, the Modi government released a budget full of sops. As the days go by, the promises will get bolder, and you might feel important that so much attention is being given to you. Well, the joke is on you. Every election, HL Mencken once said, is “an advance auction sale of stolen goods.” A bunch of competing mafias fight to rule over you for the next five years. You decide who wins, on the basis of who can bribe you better with your own money. This is an absurd situation, which I tried to express in a limerick I wrote for this page a couple of years ago: POLITICS: A neta who loves currency notes/ Told me what his line of work denotes./ ‘It is kind of funny./ We steal people’s money/And use some of it to buy their votes.’ We’re the dupes here, and we pay far more to keep this circus going than this circus costs. It would be okay if the parties, once they came to power, provided good governance. But voters have given up on that, and now only want patronage and handouts. That leads to one of the biggest problems in Indian politics: We are stuck in an equilibrium where all good politics is bad economics, and vice versa. For example, the minimum guarantee for the poor is good politics, because the optics are great. It’s basically Garibi Hatao: that slogan made Indira Gandhi a political juggernaut in the 1970s, at the same time that she unleashed a series of economic policies that kept millions of people in garibi for decades longer than they should have been. This time, the Congress has released no details, and keeping it vague makes sense because I find it hard to see how it can make economic sense. Depending on how they define ‘poor’, how much income they offer and what the cost is, the plan will either be ineffective or unworkable. The Modi government’s interim budget announced a handout for poor farmers that seemed rather pointless. Given our agricultural distress, offering a poor farmer 500 bucks a month seems almost like mockery. Such condescending handouts solve nothing. The poor want jobs and opportunities. Those come with growth, which requires structural reforms. Structural reforms don’t sound sexy as election promises. Handouts do. A classic example is farm loan waivers. We have reached a stage in our politics where every party has to promise them to assuage farmers, who are a strong vote bank everywhere. You can’t blame farmers for wanting them – they are a necessary anaesthetic. But no government has yet made a serious attempt at tackling the root causes of our agricultural crisis. Why is it that Good Politics in India is always Bad Economics? Let me put forth some possible reasons. One, voters tend to think in zero-sum ways, as if the pie is fixed, and the only way to bring people out of poverty is to redistribute. The truth is that trade is a positive-sum game, and nations can only be lifted out of poverty when the whole pie grows. But this is unintuitive. Two, Indian politics revolves around identity and patronage. The spoils of power are limited – that is indeed a zero-sum game – so you’re likely to vote for whoever can look after the interests of your in-group rather than care about the economy as a whole. Three, voters tend to stay uninformed for good reasons, because of what Public Choice economists call Rational Ignorance. A single vote is unlikely to make a difference in an election, so why put in the effort to understand the nuances of economics and governance? Just ask, what is in it for me, and go with whatever seems to be the best answer. Four, Politicians have a short-term horizon, geared towards winning the next election. A good policy that may take years to play out is unattractive. A policy that will win them votes in the short term is preferable. Sadly, no Indian party has shown a willingness to aim for the long term. The Congress has produced new Gandhis, but not new ideas. And while the BJP did make some solid promises in 2014, they did not walk that talk, and have proved to be, as Arun Shourie once called them, UPA + Cow. Even the Congress is adopting the cow, in fact, so maybe the BJP will add Temple to that mix? Benjamin Franklin once said, “Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch.” This election season, my friends, the people of India are on the menu. You have been deveined and deboned, marinated with rhetoric, seasoned with narrative – now enter the oven and vote. © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved. India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic Full Article
ter Lessons from an Ankhon Dekhi Prime Minister By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: 2019-05-05T03:17:51+00:00 This is the 19th installment of The Rationalist, my column for the Times of India. A friend of mine was very impressed by the interview Narendra Modi granted last week to Akshay Kumar. ‘Such a charming man, such great work ethic,’ he gushed. ‘He is the kind of uncle I would want my kids to have.’ And then, in the same breath, he asked, ‘How can such a good man be such a bad prime minister?” I don’t want to be uncharitable and suggest that Modi’s image is entirely manufactured, so let’s take the interview at face value. Let’s also grant Modi his claims about the purity of his neeyat (intentions), and reframe the question this way: when it comes to public policy, why do good intentions often lead to bad outcomes? To attempt an answer, I’ll refer to a story a friend of mine, who knows Modi well, once told me about him. Modi was chilling with his friends at home more than a decade ago, and told them an incident from his childhood. His mother was ill once, and the young Narendra was tending to her. The heat was enervating, so the boy went to the switchboard to switch on the fan. But there was no electricity. My friend said that as he told this story, Modi’s eyes filled with tears. Even after all these years, he was moved by the memory. My friend used this story to make the point that Modi’s vision of the world is experiential. If he experiences something, he understands it. When he became chief minister of Gujarat, he made it his stated mission to get reliable electricity to every part of Gujarat. No doubt this was shaped by the time he flicked a switch as a young boy and the fan did not budge. Similarly, he has given importance to things like roads and cleanliness, since he would have experienced the impact of those as a young man. My term for him, inspired by Rajat Kapoor’s 2014 film, is ‘the ankhon dekhi prime minister’. At one level, this is a good thing. He sees a problem and works for the rest of his life to solve it. But what of things he cannot experience? The economy is a complex beast, as is society itself, and beyond a certain level, you need to grasp abstract concepts to understand how the world works. You cannot experience them. For example, spontaneous order, or the idea that society and markets, like language, cannot be centrally directed or planned. Or the positive-sum nature of things, which is the engine of our prosperity: the idea that every transaction is a win-win game, and that for one person to win, another does not have to lose. Or, indeed, respect for individual rights and free speech. One understands abstract concepts by reading about them, understanding them, applying them to the real world. Modi is not known to be a reader, and this is not his fault. Given his background, it is a near-miracle that he has made it this far. He wasn’t born into a home with a reading culture, and did not have either the resources or the time when he was young to devote to reading. The only way he could learn about the world, thus, was by experiencing it. There are two lessons here, one for Modi himself and others in his position, and another for everyone. The lesson in this for Modi is a lesson for anyone who rises to such an important position, even if he is the smartest person in the world. That lesson is to have humility about the bounds of your knowledge, and to surround yourself with experts who can advise you well. Be driven by values and not confidence in your own knowledge. Gather intellectual giants around you, and stand on their shoulders. Modi did not do this in the case of demonetisation, which he carried out against the advice of every expert he consulted. We all know the damage it caused to the economy. The other learning from this is for all of us. How do we make sense of the world? By connecting dots. An ankhon-dekhi approach will get us very few dots, and our view of the world will be blurred and incomplete. The best way to gather more dots is reading. The more we read, the better we understand the world, and the better the decisions we take. When we can experience a thousand lives through books, why restrict ourselves to one? A good man with noble intentions can make bad decisions with horrible consequences. The only way to hedge against this is by staying humble and reading more. So when you finish reading this piece, think of an unread book that you’d like to read today – and read it! © 2007 IndiaUncut.com. All rights reserved. India Uncut * The IU Blog * Rave Out * Extrowords * Workoutable * Linkastic Full Article
ter DAC 2015 Cadence Theater – Learn from Customers and Partners By feedproxy.google.com Published On :: Wed, 03 Jun 2015 21:35:00 GMT One reason for attending the upcoming Design Automation Conference (DAC 2015) is to learn about challenges other engineers have faced, and hear about their solutions. And the best place to do that is the Cadence Theater, located at the Cadence booth (#3515). The Theater will host continuous half-hour customer and partner presentations from 10:00 am Monday, June 8, to 5:30 pm Wednesday June 4. As of this writing, 43 presentations are scheduled. This includes 17 customer presentations, 23 partner presentations, and 3 Cadence presentations, The presentations are open to all DAC attendees and no reservations are required. Cadence customers who will be speaking include engineers from AMD, ams, Allegro Micro, Broadcom, IBM, Netspeed, NVidia, Renesas, Socionet, and STMicroelectronics. Partner presentations will be provided by ARM, Cliosoft, Dini Group, GLOBALFOUNDRIES, Methodics, Methods2Business, National Instruments, Samsung, TowerJazz, TSMC, and X-Fab. These informal presentations are given in an interactive setting with an opportunity for questions and answers. Audio recordings with slides will be available at the Cadence web site after DAC. To access recordings of the 2014 DAC Theater presentations, click here. This Cadence DAC Theater presentation drew a large audience at DAC 2015 Here’s a listing of the currently scheduled Cadence DAC Theater presentations. The latest schedule is available at the Cadence DAC 2015 site. Monday, June 8 Tuesday, June 9 Wednesday, June 10 In a Wednesday session (June 10, 10:00 am) at the theater, the Cadence Academic Network will sponsor three talks on academic/industry collaboration models. Speakers are Dr. Zhou Li, architect, Cadence; Prof. Xin Li, Carnegie-Mellon University; and Prof. Laleh Behjat, University of Calgary. As shown above, there will be a giveaways for a set of Bose noise-cancelling headphones, an iPad Mini, and a GoPro Hero3 video camera. See the Cadence Theater schedule for further details. And be sure to view our Multimedia Site for live blogging and photos and videos from DAC. For a complete overview of Cadence activities at DAC, see our DAC microsite. Richard Goering Related Blog Posts DAC 2015: See the Latest in Semiconductor IP at “IPTalks!” Cadence DAC 2015 and Denali Party Update DAC 2015: Tackling Tough Design Problems Head On Full Article DAC Cadence Theater DAC 2015 Design Automation Conference DAC theater