Friday, May 19, 2023

REMEMBERING GORDON MOORE

“The number of transistors on a microchip doubles every two years” - Gordon Moore, 1965

Gordon E Moore was one of those few technocrats who shaped the modern world. His company, Intel Inc, which he set up with former colleague Robert Noyce in the year 1968, had played a major role in the growth of the semiconductor technology, the real heart of computing and ICT.

The prediction that he made in 1965, now called Moore’s Law, an observational hypothesis, is holding good even today (though they say now about it giving way to Neven’s law of quantum computing). Today a 15 core Intel Xeon Server chip holds about 4.3 billion transistors inside it and anyone could guess the processing power the computer that holds it.

Gordon Moore is an alumnus of San Jose University, University of California & Caltech where he completed his PhD. He then joined Nobel laureate William Shockley in Shockley Semiconductor division of Beckman Instruments to build semiconductors. Later, he became part of the ‘traitorous eight’, 8 senior engineers leaving Shockley Semiconductor to start Fairchild Semiconductor.

In the year 1968, along with one of the ‘traitorous eight’, Robert Noyce; Moore set up Intel Inc. While the company had its ups and downs, with the joining of Andre Grove & Craig Barrette, Intel never looked back and became the de-facto CPU of personal computers. By holding close to 90 % monopoly in CPU business of PCs, intel grew ever so fast in the past 5 decades, and is still at the centre of computing inspite of many pretenders, copycats and alternative technology co’s such as Google.

About Moore’s law he said, “Rather than becoming something that chronicled the progress of industry, it became something that drove it”. The law of the founder motivated the company to stay in course with initially the X86 series of microprocessors and then Pentium, Pentium Quadcore, Pentium i3 and now huge Xeon server processors!

Personally I had some experience with Intel Pentium processors as the product manager of HCL Hewlett Packard in the early 1990s. I remember our team being presented by the architect of the processor, Mr Vinod Dham at our labs at NOIDA. Also had the opportunity to work with the Intel India team in releasing our ‘Infiniti’ PCs based on Pentium processor for the India market. And I proudly wore the Intel Pentium T shirt that they gifted to me, with the successful bywords in it, “Intel Inside”!

About the growth of microprocessors Moore said this, “this powerful technology has allowed us to make more and more complex high performance circuits. They are the basis of everything electronics we have, unprecedented in human history”!

This self made billionaire (net worth of 7 billion USD as on Feb. 2023), passed away peacefully on March 24, 2023, at the age of 94 years, surrounded by family at his home in Hawaii.

The colossus of modern technology has called it a day. May his Soul rest in eternal peace!

Adios Gordon Moore

END OF THE DUTCH SUPREMACY IN INDIA.

By 17th century, the Dutch (Holland) had taken over the control of the sea trade with India. This they achieved through Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie (VOC) or simply, the Dutch East India Company. In fact the Company, established in 1602, was the first multinational corporation of the Planet.


Well funded & militarily mighty, VOC held monopoly of the global spice trade in most of the 17 & 18th century. For 2 centuries, it paid avg. 20% dividend to its share holders. Adjusted to inflation, in today’s money, it had a market capitalisation of USD 7 Trillion!

By the early 18th century, the Dutch economic and political power in southern India was at its peak. It threw the Portuguese out, defeated Zamorin of Calicut and even converted the kingdom of Kochi into a vassal state.

In spite of its might, the Dutch Company was brought down to its knees, thanks to the valour of the Travancore King of that time.

in 1739, the Dutch Governor Gustaaf Van Imhoff, during negotiations with Marthanda Varma, the ruler of Travancore, on the Dutch interests in Malabar, threatened the king that if he doesn’t heed, Dutch forces would destroy Travancore.

In his reply, the king quipped: "With all due respect to you sir, in that case, I will certainly invade Holland".

Miffed, the Governor walked off, determined to teach the king of a small kingdom, a lesson. Soon, a large contingent of Dutch forces landed in Colachel port (15 KM away from Padmanabhapuram, the then capital of Travancore) led by Captain Eustachius De Lannoy with intention to make a quick dash & capture the capital.

When the armies met, (‘Battle of Colachel’), the Dutch could not match the fighting spirit of the bare bodied Travancore army & suffered crushing defeat. Lannoy & his deputy got captured. The King forced the Dutch to sign a peace treaty, taking over most of the Dutch assets & spice trade .

Varma made Lannoy a trainer of his forces, to modernise the Army, which went on to be part of ‘Madras Regiment’ of Independent India.

Marthanda Varma indeed had his life moment in world history. But the latter day colonial & Indian historians didn’t think of his feat important enough to give a mention in the country’s history books.

It is often said that history is the biography of the victors. In the case of Marthana Varma, it wasn’t so. In fact same was the case of the Pallavas, Cholas, Pandyas, Cheras, Chalukyas, Rastrakutas, Hoysalas, Vijayanagara & similar South Indian Kingdoms of yore. How many of you know that by 11th century CE, the Cholas were world’s first & largest thalassocracy (marine empire), expanding deep into far east?

The Indian history books have a definite north Indian taste. In my Social studies classes, I could only learn about the Maurya’s, Gupta’s, Khushana’s, the Turkish rulers (Lodhi etc.) & the Mughals.

What do you call it - conditioned learning?

THE CONTRIBUTION OF A VILLAGE SCHOOL’S ALUMNI

My very first alma matter is Lower Primary School in my village, where I studied from 1st to 5th. Located in Trivandrum district, the school locally is called Ottivilakom school, by the place it stood. 4 of us brothers studied here. It was close to our home that is no more, after the demise of our parents, as we were settled far & wide, it was sold.


The thirst for knowledge started here. The teachers were good. Everybody knew everybody & it was carefree learning from 10 am to 4 pm. In those times (1960’s), in the impoverished state of Kerala, all government schools were under the ‘CARE’ (charity) program of US government that ensured that the needy students got uppuma & milk during lunch break.

The original school building got replaced into a concrete structure later. The school was losing students steadily on account of the craze of parents to send their children to English medium CBSE schools which had come up aplenty all around, in private sector.

Late last year I got a call from my Trivandrum city based brother about the school. A new headmistress who had taken charge there, came up with a vision to improve the school and the teaching standards. She contacted and got together the locally available alumni & put before them problems of the school. Those attended the meeting, contacted those located outside and formed a WA group.

The parents, mostly from lower socio-economic strata, were not sending wards to the school, as the school did not have an infrastructure that was student friendly. Though it has a school van, there wasn’t any guarantee that it worked, thus conveyance was always a challenge for the students. She, ably supported by the Panchayat vice president, also an ex student, requested the alumni’s help to improve the facilities. The alumni formed a committee & made a budget for it which came to INR 20 lakhs.

The alumni then came up with individual contributions that came to INR 2 lakhs which took care the school van repairs. That was when my brother called me to come down at my convenience which I did. We looked for other sources of fund. We could contact an alumnus in Dubai and he assured to give a CSR fund of INR 5 Lakhs & work started at the right earnest.

A good connect with the Director of Samagra Shiksha Abhiyan (SSA) fructified in getting a grant of INR 10 Lakhs. Lo & behold, we could do all that we had planned for the school. Class room came into life with creative art work inside. The small playground was improved. Teaching equipments were bought. The staff room got new furniture. The enthusiasm of the teachers to transform the school was very evident.

On Sunday the 30th April, the headmistress and teachers came to the school to receive some of us who chanced to be there. They took us around the school with pride. We felt truly elated to see their happiness,

The alumni could give back something to our alma matter where we learnt to write the very first letter.

THE HOT PLANET

When we read the Indus Valley Civilisation (IVC) history (also called, Harappan), what comes out clearly is that for about 1500 years in BCE, it prospered as a model urban centre and then it disintegrated.


The reason for the degeneration of IVC is not recorded as a major war that it had with any incoming army but climate change. Once a fertile land near Indus River, supplemented by the mythical Saraswati river (Gaggar-Hakra , a river emanating from Shivalik region of Himalayas) that had gone fully dry, the rise in temperature of Indus Valley region made it unliveable a place and the people moved away into other parts of the subcontinent.

I think, we are in for something similar to happen in the coming decade and thereafter, the pace of degeneration of the place we live will be much faster. Many regions of our country could be part of history in another 50-100 years.

I am no soothsayer but going by the scientific reports presented by World Metrological Orgn.(WMO), the prediction is that the annual mean global temperature is expected to rise by 1.5 to 2 degree celsius between 2023 & 2027 as compared to between 2918-2022.

What are going to be the after effects of this for us Indians ?

1. The oceans will go on fire and the resultant El-Nino effect will create a hot and dry global south (India inclusive) and a wet and cold global north

2. Monsoon will bring less than normal rainfall to India

3. Indian agriculture that is greatly dependant on the Monsoon, will suffer hugely on the cultivation output.

4. Heavy usage of temperature reducing mechanisms (air conditioners, chillers, freezers etc.) will emit much more carbon and that in turn will make the weather more hotter.

5. Indian coastline will be tested and it would become unsafe for those who live & work there

6. The ocean fisheries output will be reduced

7. The change in ocean temperature and the resultant speed & strength of ocean current will lead to huge cyclone / tsunami falls across the subcontinent
(Just read about the devastation caused by the recent cyclone Mocha in Myanmar & Bangladesh to understand the impact)

8. The overall resultant effect on Indian economy could be disastrous.

This is an area where governments of the countries should combine to resist anything that is worsening the global weather any further. Other than ‘lip service’, there isn’t anything happening in this front, though huge conferences are happening all over the planet.

Knowingly, we are inviting the monsters to come in, to destroy humanity.

EUSTACHIUS BENEDICTUS DE LANNOY

E.B. De Lannoy was the commander of the Dutch East India company Navy that fought King Marthanda Varma in 1741 at Colechel beach, now in Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu, earlier part of the Travancore Kingdom.


The Dutch Governor Imhoff, not happy with King for not protecting the Dutch interests, wanted to defeat him and the job landed on Commander De Lannoy. In spite of having superior fire power, his forces went down to the King’s army of native men (called ‘Nair Pattalam’) who were ably assisted by the local fishermen whose guerrilla tactics against Dutch navy on the sea was instrumental in the defeat.

De Lannoy and his deputy were caught & imprisoned in Udayagiri Fort of the King. Slowly De Lannoy could move into the good books of Marthanda Varma who asked him to train and modernise his Nair Pattalam. Having done a great work, the King‘s confidence in De Lannoy increased tremendously so did the loyalty of De Lannoy to the King, to the extent that De Lannoy went on to become The King’s army chief with a title of ‘Valiya Capithan’

In the later expeditions of the King across Kerala, which resulted in Travancore expanding into a huge state almost upto Trissur and also in fighting the army of Tipu Sultan; the valour and war intellect of De Lannoy was evident. The Nedumkotta (rampart) that he asked the army to build from Pallipuram (Vypin) upto Western Ghat, of more than 40 KMs in length was the product of De Lannoy’s military genius, that became Tipu’s Waterloo in Kerala.

It was a very strange case of an adopted foreigner completely becoming loyal to the King. The King’s attitude and behaviour to him also added to consolidate the relationship. De Lannoy served both Marthanda Varma and his successor, Rama Varma valiantly. He settled in Udayagiri (very close to the Padmanabhapuram palace of the Kings) and passed away there itself. Out of sheer respect, the King built the church and the burial place for De Lannoy at Udayagiri fort (see photos below). Time had dilapidated the edifices, of course.

Let us also know two additional curious inputs about De Lannoy.

1. De Lannoy was able to instil the faith of Jesus in Neelakantan, a court officer of the palace and converted him to a Christian. Neelakantan became Devasahayam and a martyr later and is now adorned as a Saint by Pope Francis.

2. E B De Lannoy was part of the Delano family (De Lannoy family) and is an ancestor of US President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.

Read the English translation of what is written on his tomb in Udayagiri.

“Stand Traveller! Here lies the Eustachius Benedictus De Lannoy, who was commander of the general Travancore army and for nearly 37 years with greatest faithfulness served the King, who by strength and fear of his armies, subjugated all kingdoms from kayankulam to Cochin. He lived 62 years and died first day of June 1777. May he rest in peace!”

Later, his wife and son were also interred on both sides of him.

VASCO DE GAMA - THE MAN WHO STARTED EUROPEAN COLONIALISM IN INDIA

For eons, Europeans have been getting the supply of black pepper, cinnamon & spices from India via Arab traders. They were looking for a sea route to India so that they could directly do profitable business with it, avoiding the middlemen. In those times, the GDP of india exceeded 30% of the global figure. No wonder the European were desperate to reach it.


Many of the European nations, mostly Spain, Portuguese, France, Dutch and British were making attempts to reach India by sea and we had known the attempt of Columbus of Spain! It was at the same time that Vasco da Gama of Portugal sailed to the tip of Africa and went round of Cape of Good Hope to take up north easterly sea route to the coast of Malabar on May 1498 CE.

Opening up of direct sea route with India improved Portugal’s economy tremendously. Gama took 3 voyage courses to India, beginning in 1497, 1502 and 1524. On his last voyage, he fell ill and died in Cochin. Landing of Gama in Kappad, Kozhikode at the end of 15th century CE was the beginning of European colonialism in India. The violence and hostage-taking methods employed by Gama and his successors on India's indigenous kingdoms were truly brutal, that set the pattern for European colonialism in india.

From the Portuguese the control of the sea route and trade power shifted to the Dutch by 17th century and later permanently to the British with some feeble attempts by the French too, in between.

Considering his contribution to the country’s economy, by 1524, Vasco da Gama was anointed as Viceroy of Portugal to India by the Portugal Monarch. After he passed away in December 1524, he was interred inside the St. Francis Church at Fort Kochi which is the very first European church in India, consecrated in 1503 CE. From his tomb here the remains were taken and buried at the Jerónimos Monastery in Lisbon, later

The photos below show the Church which though started as a Catholic Church, is now occupied by the Church of South India which follows the Protestant Christian system. Prayers happen in the church even today. The Portuguese occupied the church between 1503 & 1663 CE. The Dutch took It over from them in 1664 and used it for their prayers upto 1804 CE. From the Dutch the British took control of it and after India’s independence, it was handed over to the Church of South India.

Fort Kochi is declared by the government as as heritage locale and many of the old infrastructure is maintained in its original form. It attracts tourists from across the world. While the European tourists visit all those edifices with utter reverence due to its global historical importance, many of locals do not give it a damn.

The fact is, history sleeps in the church. In this very first European church of India, the man who converted India into a European colony for close to 400+ years; lived, prayed and rested. His tomb stone  is still here.