It’s mad, ad world
Forty years ago, the world was used to controversial ads. Campaigns on toasters, vacuum cleaners and even cigarettes, aimed at the kind of man who didn’t mind coming back home to a woman in an apron, a warm meal and beer… every single day.
Vintage roadies
Nobody had turned its engine on in a hundred years. There were parts missing, or simply stolen, and what was once a Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, was now two seats and a steering wheel resting on rims.
A Sunday of LAN wars
Some years ago, before the world went mad, computer games were a huge part of daily life — for some. Now in the year 2012, former hardcore gamers roam the planet disguised as techies, lawyers or dentists. A small group, however, has planned a resistance, of sorts.
Modi malnutrition quote unpalatable
Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi was on Thursday, under fire for his “malnutrition is due to fashion statements” remark during an interview with an American daily. The Wall Street Journal had quot
Where has privacy gone?
The future has much to scare us with — global warming, a rock from space, an outbreak of bird flu, the next Emraan Hashmi movie and hey, EXIF.
Grape expectations
So, we’re talking 100-year-old recipes, cellars, dusty bottles, fresh farm produce, and a touchscreen — weird mix, some would say. But that’s what is the latest in wine technology.
Class of 2.0
Li’l Jack will be waking early. His tablet PC has already downloaded the day’s lessons while a few beeps on mum’s computer let her know if any one of his teachers is on a day off.
A tablet for boredom
George Ninan was in a state of near panic. The 27-year-old programmer had prepared himself for a 14-hour train journey but not for the two-hour delay that was now facing him.