Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

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6 years, 8 months ago

24 and anti-terror policy

Gaming takes up the bulk of the argument in The Military-Entertainment Complex, but Lenoir and Caldwell also highlight the ways in which the legacy media of TV and film have likewise buttressed the Pentagon’s propaganda aims in post-9/11 America. They develop an illuminating analysis, for example, …

—p.10 The Baffler No. 39 - The Organization of Hatreds War Games (6) by Scott Beauchamp
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6 years, 8 months ago

India's multilateral relations and software services

[...] the pursuit of better access to visas for short-term skilled migration has led the Indian negotiating team at the WTO to side with the developed world in promoting full-scale liberalisation of services. Such liberalisation measures are not necessarily in the interests of the rest of the India…

—p.93 Dot.compradors: Power and Policy in the Development of the Indian Software Industry Lessons from the Lies: What Does IT Mean? (87) by Jyoti Saraswati
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6 years, 8 months ago

IT diffusion and anti-piracy laws

[...] FDI in ITES and It will not automatically lead to greater IT diffusion [...] part of the 'business-friendly environment' allegedly required to develop an Indian-style software industry is the strong enforcement of anti-piracy software laws. [...] As NASSCOM became dominated by TNCs (including…

—p.89 Lessons from the Lies: What Does IT Mean? (87) by Jyoti Saraswati
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6 years, 8 months ago

from domestic to transnational ownership in India

This change from domestic to transnational ownership [...] is a concern for the long-term development of the industry, as well as for India more broadly.

[...]

Second, a captive-dominated industry primarily exporting ITES is far less embedded in the economy and therefore less developmental as…

—p.81 The Indian Mutiny: From Potential IT Superpower to Back Office of the World (79) by Jyoti Saraswati
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6 years, 8 months ago

a feeder system from the Majors to the Giants

[...] Having secured their control of NASSCOM, and through NASSCOM the IT policy agenda, the Giants felt suitably emboldened to change tack in their recruitment. They stopped employing entry-level professionals and started poaching experienced employees of other software firms, in particular from I…

—p.73 Passage to India: The Giants in the Land of the Majors, 2000-2010 (67) by Jyoti Saraswati