best book ever – Shantaram

On the recommendation of Dave Adlard, I downloaded Shantaram by Gregory David Roberts from Audible.com — cost about US$12. Unabridged, 944 pages, that’s 43 hours!

I cherished every minute, listening on my iPod Nano while hiking this summer.

Dave knew I would love the setting of the book — Bombay, India and Afghanistan — and its epic themes.

Crime and punishment, passion and loyalty, betrayal and redemption are only a few of the ingredients in Shantaram, a massive, over-the-top, mostly autobiographical novel.

Shantaram is the name given Mr. Lindsay, or Linbaba, the larger-than-life hero. It means “man of God’s peace,” which is what the Indian people know of Lin.

What they do not know is that prior to his arrival in Bombay he escaped from an Australian prison where he had begun serving a 19-year sentence. He served two years and leaped over the wall. He was imprisoned for a string of armed robberies performed to support his heroin addiction, which started when his marriage fell apart and he lost custody of his daughter.

All of that is enough for several lifetimes, but for Greg Roberts, that’s only the beginning.

The convict flees to India to escape his past, the first day “meeting the two people who will largely influence his fate in the city. One is a young tour guide, Prabaker, whose gifts include a large smile and an unstoppably joyful heart.”

Prabaker is one of the great characters of literature, I feel.

“The second person he meets is Karla, a beautiful Swiss-American woman with sea-green eyes and a circle of expatriate friends. Lin’s love for Karla—and her mysterious inability to love in return—gives the book its central tension.”

It’s a massive read. A book of philosophy. A book which can change your life.

The narrator Humphrey Bower was the highlight for me. He is fantastic at dozens of different accents, helping me keep straight the many characters of different ethnicities.

A Novel

Shantaram: A Novel

Shantaram is a novel. But the parallels to the author’s life are striking. Roberts was an escaped Australian convict. He fled to India. He was recaptured in 1990 and returned to Australia to serve his sentence. And write.

The book will certainly appeal more to men than women. Ladies should wait for the movie — scheduled for release in 2008 starring Johnny Depp.

Even better news, for me, is that Roberts is writing a sequel.

I can hardly wait.

UPDATE: Rick’s favourite books of all time

Amazon takes aim at iTunes

Apple is well known for disregarding the competition.

But when an 800lb gorilla like Amazon walks in the room, even Steve Jobs takes notice. Amazon.com is now the new go-to music store. (Unless they don’t have the track you want, of course.)

iTunes will have to respond.

Remember when Amazon.com was just a bookstore? On Tuesday morning, the online retailer launched the public beta of its much-anticipated rival to Apple’s iTunes Store: Amazon MP3, which features over 2 million songs free of digital rights management copy protection, which means they’ll play on any computer, music player, or music-enabled cell phone. …

Each song is encoded at 256kbps, the file quality that Apple offers for its DRM-free iTunes Plus premium music selections, which it sells for $1.29 apiece rather than its usual 99 cents. Amazon’s pricing for Amazon MP3 ranges from 89 cents (including the top 100 best-selling songs) to 99 cents; albums are priced from $5.99 to $9.99.

It goes without saying that Amazon is aiming squarely at Apple, and it’s attempting to hit the digital music monopoly where it hurts–with regard to pricing, file quality, and versatility, all of which have come under scrutiny by critics. But this could also be a painful blow for eMusic, the online music store that has made a small name for itself by selling exclusively DRM-free music.

Amazon launches beta version of DRM-free music store | Webware : Cool Web apps for everyone

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AmazonMP3 beta

I expect Audible.com is scrambling too. Everyone knows what Amazon did to competing book stores.

Nokia leapfrogs iPhone – ya right

Nokia is a great company. No doubt.

There’s no way an upstart could walk in and beat them at their own game.

Right?

So why does Robert Scoble prefer his iPhone over the more expensive N95?

Nokia has a bunch of new devices that I want to try. I have both an iPhone and a Nokia N95. I am keeping track of how often I pick up either device. The iPhone is winning. Bigtime.

Nokia tries to get leadership position back from iPhone « Scobleizer

Here’s Nokia’s vision of the future. Their next great phone.

Click PLAY or watch it on YouTube.

Look familiar?

As they have before, Apple has reinvented and, thus, reinvigorated an industry. This time the mobile phone industry.

Nokia is chasing Apple. Not the other way around.

Stop the presses … Nokia just opened a “music store”. What innovation!

satellite radio is AWESOME

I’ve yet to meet anyone who tried satellite radio who later canceled the service.

I’m listening to SIRIUS RADIO right now.

The Coffee House station (Acoustic rock, singer-songwriter, a favourite of Dave and Lisa Adlard) is terrific. It’s only one of 69 streams of music and 65 streams of sports, news and entertainment.

Fantastic.

Perhaps commercial-free is the way to go for the internet too. Simply PAY for what you want to see.

Most of the channels are also available to subscribers via internet, as well.

Cost about $13 / month.

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SIRIUS radio Canada

is Digg the next Pownce?

Yesterday I asked is Digg the next Facebook?

I should have asked, is Digg the next Pownce?

Digg founder Kevin Rose’s other start-up Pownce similar to Facebook.

There is no stopping Kevin Rose. Digg is still the cutting edge Web 2.0 news site.

In addition, more new Digg features are on the calendar: in late October, the long-awaited “Digg Images” section, where people will be able to submit and vote on images rather than news stories, will launch. Later this year, the site will release a recommendations engine that sounds much like StumbleUpon, as well as a way for people to craft customized e-mail alerts.

By allowing individual Diggers to shape their identities–and their methods of news consumption–on the site, the company may be doing some image therapy, whether intended or unintended. Digg, touted upon its launch as a small media revolution, has become wildly popular (the company’s statistics say 19.3 million unique visitors in August) but nevertheless has gained a reputation as being a geek hub–its audience is often compared to that of veteran “nerd news” sites like Slashdot and Fark.

Stories about the likes of Linux and HD DVD often dominate the front page, and if there’s any kind of iPhone news, forget about finding much else in the top 10. But that could change with extensive customization features that will allow relative Luddites to block out the swarms of Apple and Google junkies, as well as more detailed profiles that highlight individual Digger identities rather than allowing the community to blend into an amorphous mass of vociferous tech newshounds.

And that might be exactly what Digg needs.

The company is certainly highlighting its desire to retool its reputation. “Digg has made great progress expanding beyond its roots in tech news: page views of content related to technology currently represent only 12 percent of all page views on Digg,” the company said in a statement Wednesday. “This trend, which started about a year ago when nontech content submissions first outnumbered tech content submissions, continues to grow as the Digg user base becomes more diverse.”

Digg turns its social networking up a few notches | Webware : Cool Web apps for everyone

Digg the next Facebook?

I check the social networking site Facebook everyday.

Digg, the social news site, not nearly as often.

But I may get more into Digg now that they’ve added social networking features that look a lot like Facebook, but better.

The Digg team is excited to launch new Digg user profiles later tonight, the first of many cool new features rolling out this year.

We’ve completely revamped our profiles from the ground up – making it easy for you to share your favorite stories and discover new interesting content by seeing what your friends are digging. It’s also even easier to find and add friends on Digg.

To see what I’m talking about, watch the short video tutorial on the Digg blog:

Digg the Blog – VIDEO – Kevin Rose

Trent Reznor is cool, Prince a sell-out

At a concert in Australia the lead singer of Nine Inch Nails urged fans to steal his music on-line because his record label refused to drop the price of their CDs Down Under. (video – YouTube)

I’ve mentioned this before:

The ABSURD retail pricing of Year Zero in Australia. Shame on you, UMG. Year Zero is selling for $34.99 Australian dollars ($29.10 US). No wonder people steal music. Avril Lavigne’s record in the same store was $21.99 ($18.21 US).

RickMcCharles.com

In contrast, Prince is getting in bed with the TelCos, and suing YouTube.

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The controversial one is about as hip as the Village People these days.

Both are trying to fix the hopelessly broken music industry business model. But Prince — formerly a leader in the industry — could not be more wrong this time.

Buy Nine Inch Nails. Boycott Prince.

Year Zero

Cold Stone ice cream MMMMMM

I was just introduced to Cold Stone.

This is the way ice cream should be prepared!

You get to choose the exact ingredients you wish.

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… Cold Stone’s name comes from the frozen granite stone used to mix candy, nuts, or other toppings into various flavors of ice creams.

… Almost 1400 franchises are now in operation. Cold Stone Creamery is now the 6th best-selling brand of ice cream in the U.S. and now operates stores in South Korea, Japan, Puerto Rico and Taiwan (since june 2007). The company was also named the 11th fastest-growing franchise by Entrepreneur Magazine in January 2006. …

Its current competitors in the field of premium ice cream (ice cream defined as having more than 12 percent butterfat) include Carvel Ice Cream started in 1934, MaggieMoo’s (opened in 1989) and Marble Slab Creamery (opened in 1983).

All ice cream creations are offered in three sizes: “Like It” (5 oz), “Love It” (8 oz), and “Gotta Have It” (12 oz). There is also a kids’ size (3 oz). …

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Cold Stone Creamery – Wikipedia

Is Apple the New Microsoft?

(I’m hanging out with a friend who works for Microsoft this weekend and hearing really good things about the company. They hire good people.)

An article by Mike Elgan is being much debated right now:

PC World – Is Apple the New Microsoft?

Ten years ago, Microsoft was the company everyone loved to hate.

The most vociferous Microsoft haters slammed the company for being a greedy industry bully that used its monopolistic, clunky, copycat operating system to force software on users and coerce partners into unfair licensing deals.

Don’t look now, but the role of the industry’s biggest bully is increasingly played by Apple, not Microsoft. Here’s a look at how Apple has shoved Microsoft aside as the company with the worst reputation as a monopolist, copycat and a bully. …

PC World – Is Apple the New Microsoft?

I’ve only barely followed the controversy over the shocking $200 price reduction on the iPhone — then Steve’s open letter semi-apology and $100 rebate.

But — if you ask me — this “controversy” is so perfect for Apple that it may have been scripted right from the beginning.

Business students will be studying how Apple used HYPE to jump into the driver’s seat in a new, highly profitable business niche for many years to come.

And I, for one, will be buying an iPhone when it goes on sale in Canada.

To compare Apple to Microsoft is ludicrous, by the way.

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