Qpedia - "Who, what, why etc etc"

We, the quizzers @ at an "esteemed" IT company, Calcutta, meet for half an hour every thursday to take a break from monotony of our daily job. This meeting known as "Thursday Thriller" (popular version: "TT") is an occasion, where one of us conducts a quiz( a lone-wolf type) and as for the rest of us, we simply have fun. This blog will bring those "fun-filled moments" to the rest of universe. Enjoy The Qpedia ?!

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Answers to "The Tenth Entry"

Here are the answers to the tenth one:

0. ?! or the Interrobang.
1. Shock and Awe
2. Mahatma Gandhi
3. Don Quixote
4. Col Bogey's march from Bridge on river Kwai
5. Doordarshan
6. Who wants 2 be a millionaire
7. Fanaa.
8. Mountain Dew
9. "Lovely planet" mistaken for "Lonely Planet"
10. X = Orkut Boyakkuten, Y=Orkut and Z= Google, obviously.
11. Pi day ( 3.14 1 59)
12. Hari Sadu
13. Neil o'Brien
14. Guernica bombing thence the painting by Picasso
15. U2's song Where the Streets have no name ..as described by Bono
16. Earl of Huntingdon, Robin Hood
17. Bite a bullet

That's all for now, folks!

The Tenth Entry

On one of the Thursdays....Quiz master was Supriyo Saha [He started with this quote and even the idea of beginning quiz with question number 0 was his idea.]

A quiz is a conglomeration of several wise fools presided over by the wisest fool trying to convince the rest how foolishly unwise they are.
- H.E., St Supriyo, 2006 AD
0.
As the head of an advertising agency, a certain Martin Speckter believed that advertisements would look better if advertising copywriters conveyed surprised queries using a single mark. He proposed the concept of a single punctuation mark in an article in the magazine TYPEtalks in 1962. Speckter solicited possible names for the new character. Contenders included rhet, exclarotive, and exclamaquest, but he settled on X. The French equivalent is "point exclarrogatif". Graphic treatments for the new mark were also submitted in response to the article. In 1966, Richard Isbell of American Type Founders issued the Americana typeface and included X as one of the characters. X was in vogue for much of the 1960s, with the word X appearing in some dictionaries and the mark itself being featured in magazine and newspaper articles. The symbol failed to amount to much more than a fad, however and couldn’t become a standard punctuation mark. Although most fonts do not include the symbol, it has not disappeared appearing in some places.
1.
Rapid Dominance is defined by its authors, Harlan K. Ullman and James P. Wade, as attempting "to affect the will, perception, and understanding of the adversary to fit or respond to our strategic policy ends through imposing a regime of X." Further, Rapid Dominance will "impose this overwhelming level of X against an adversary on an immediate or sufficiently timely basis to paralyze its will to carry on . . . [to] seize control of the environment and paralyze or so overload an adversary's perceptions and understanding of events that the enemy would be incapable of resistance at the tactical and strategic levels."
Introduced in a report to the United States' National Defense University in 1996, Ullman and Wade describe it as an attempt to develop a post-Cold War military doctrine for the United States. Rapid Dominance and X, they write, may become a "revolutionary change" as the United States military is reduced in size and information technology is increasingly integrated into warfare. X is most consistently used by Ullman and Wade as the effect which Rapid Dominance seeks to impose upon an adversary. It is the desired state of helplessness and lack of will. It can be induced, they write, by direct force applied to command and control centers, selective denial of information and dissemination of disinformation, overwhelming combat force, and rapidity of action.

2.
When X died, a particular newspaper of his country carried this obituary of him on a black-rimmed (and otherwise blank) editorial page:
X has been killed by his own people for whose redemption he lived. The second crucifixion in the history of the world has been enacted on a Friday- the same day Jesus was done to one thousand nine hundred and fifteen years ago. Father, forgive us."
3.
Maharana Chetak
Alexander Bucephalus
Siddhartha Kantaka
X Rosinante

4.
X’s composer was Lieutenant F J Ricketts (1881-1945), a military bandmaster who was Director of Music for the Royal Marines at Plymouth. As Service personnel were not encouraged to have professional lives in world outside, Ricketts published X and his other compositions under the pseudonym Kenneth Alford.
The story goes that there was this fiery colonel (in the 1914 war), nicknamed Y while Ricketts was stationed at Fort in Scotland. One of the composer's recreations was playing golf and it was on the local course that he sometimes encountered the eccentric colonel. One of the latter's peculiarities was that instead of shouting 'Fore' to warn of an impending drive, he preferred to whistle a descending minor third. This little musical tag lingered in the mind of the receptive Ricketts, and thus got created X.
5.
This yogic siddhi helps the sadhu to see things/events happening at another place in all 3 worlds (illustrated by Sanjay in Mahabharata). What is the name of the power brought to one by this siddhi?

6.
Music/Lyrics: Cole Porter
MIKE: Who has an itch to be filthy rich?
LIZ: Who gives a hoot? For a lot of loot?
MIKE: who longs to live. A life of perfect ease.
LIZ: And be swamped by necessary luxuries?
MIKE: __________________
......
MIKE: Who wants to wallow in champagne?
LIZ: I don't.
MIKE: Who wants a marble swimming pool too?
LIZ: I don't.
BOTH:
And I don't
'Cause all I want is you. …………….
7.
X is loosely a Sufi term for extinction. It means to annihilate the self, while remaining physically alive. Persons having entered this state are said to have no existence outside of and unity with Allah. X may be attained by constant meditation and by contemplation on the attributes of God, coupled with the denunciation of human attributes. It is a sort of mental, yet real, death. It is the final passage which leads to the summit of the Stages. It liberates man from all contingency outside of his spiritual quest; his ultimate aim is the Truth. That implies perfect control of himself: in words, deeds and thoughts. It is at this price that he attains an interior spiritual state where he becomes the pure and clear mirror in which the lights of Truth are reflected in all their splendour. Perfection is reached by the regular practice of concentration, passing through three grades of development: X-fi-Shaikh (annihilation in the astral plane), X-fi-Rasul (annihilation in the spiritual plane) and X-fi-Allah (annihilation in the abstract).After passing through these 3 grades, the highest state is attained of Baqaa-bi-Allah, annihilation in the eternal consciousness
8.
X was originally southern and Irish slang for homemade whiskey, or poitín as it is called in Ireland. An
1882 song from Ireland "The Rare Old _____ _____" (Lyrics: Edward Harrigan; Music: Dave Braham) begins thus
Let grasses grow and waters flow
In a free and easy way,
But give me enough of the rare old stuff,
That’s made near Galway Bay,
Come gougers all from Donegal, Sligo and Leitrim too,
And we’ll give them the slip and we'll take a sip,
Of the rare old ____ _____.
9.
Space Captain Lyrics (Joe Cocker and Leon Russell)
Once I was traveling across the sky
This ____ _____ caught my eye
And being curious I flew close by
And non I'm caught here
Until I die
Until we die
Learning to live together ………
Somebody misheard the above song and chose the mistaken name to name something. What?
10.
X developed Y as an independent project while working at Z, the outgrowth of a company policy whereby all employees at Z can spend 20% of their time working on personal interests. Z follows the principle where each employee can divide his time in 70:20:10. 70% on his/her core business, 20% on some stuff of their interest but related to Z’s core business of search and 10% time on absolutely anything. Originally from the Turkish city of Konya, he obtained a B.Sc. degree in Computer Engineering and Information Science from Bilkent University in Ankara, and earned a Ph.D. in Computer Science from Stanford University.
Research papers
Exploiting Geographical Location Information of Web Pages
Focused Web Searching with PDAs
Power Browser: Efficient Web Browsing for PDAs
Efficient Query Subscription Processing in a Multicast Environment
Research paper: Accordion Summarization for End-Game Browsing on PDAs and Cellular Phones
Efficient Web Form Entry on PDAs
Seeing the Whole in Parts: Text Summarization for Web Browsing on Handheld Devices
Power Email: Efficient Email Entry on Pen-Based Handheld Devices

11.
What is celebrated every year on March 14th, at exactly one minute before two o'clock in the afternoon?
12.
Print ad:
Kaun Hai Yeh X?
X saw you flirting with the new girl in marketing.
X knows you play Solitaire on the computer.
X put a firewall on your Yahoo messenger.
X could be standing right behind you and watching you read this.
13.
Member of Parliament (11th Lok Sabha NOMINATED)
Date of Birth : 10 May 1934
Place of Birth : Calcutta (West Bengal)
Marital Status : Married on 23 May 1959
Children : Three sons
Educational Qualifications: MA, Calcutta University
Profession: Publisher and Educationist
Permanent Address: 7/2Y, Jamir Lane, Calcutta-700019, Tel. (033) 4404126
Positions Held
1977-91 Member, West Bengal Legislative Assembly
1987-91 Member, Library Committee, West Bengal Legislative Assembly
1996 Elected to Lok Sabha (Eleventh)
Literary, Artistic and Scientific Accomplishments
Chairman (i) Council for the Indian School Certificate Examination; and (ii) Inter State Board of Anglo-Indian Education; columnist in English/language newspapers viz. "Asian Age" and "The Statesman"
Social and Cultural Activities
Member, Governing body of several leading schools; received several awards including National Literacy Employees Award for service to the youth
Special Interests
Anglo-Indian history, collecting interesting Trivia information, social work, and travelling
14.
The success of a prior operation at Durango on 31Mar 1937 compelled Col Von Ricthofen to authorise this opn. on 26apr. The mission was carried out using 3 Junker 52 squadrons and 1 Heinkel 111 squadron and was particularly successful in its objectives. This episode spurred X to create Y which he once rather poetically described as "...cries of children, cries of women, cries of birds, cries of flowers, cries of timbers and of stones, cries of bricks, cries of furniture, of beds of chains of curtains of pots and of papers, cries of odors which claw at one another cries of smoke pricking the shoulder of cries..."
15.
X was purportedly inspired by the social situation in Belfast. The creator(s) put it thus:
"X ...is like a sketch — I was just trying to sketch a location, maybe a spiritual location, maybe a romantic location. I was trying to sketch a feeling. I often feel very claustrophobic in a city, a feeling of wanting to break out of that city and a feeling of wanting to go somewhere where the values of the city and the values of our society don’t hold you down. An interesting story that someone told me once is that in Belfast, by what street someone lives on you can tell not only their religion but tell how much money they're making — literally by which side of the road they live on, because the further up the hill the more expensive the houses become. You can almost tell what the people are earning by the name of the street they live on and what side of that street they live on. That said something to me, and so I started writing about a place X..."
16.
A gravestone in Yorkshire, erected in 1247, bore the following inscription:
Here underneath dis laihl stean
las Robert ________________
neer arcir yer az hie sa geud
And pipl kauld im __________
Sick utlawz as he an iz men
Il England nivr si agen
Obit 24 kal Decembris 1247?
17.
The origin meaning of this phrase meaning to make up one’s mind to go through an unpleasant situation/experience’ dates back to the days when the wounded had to be treated without anaesthetics/painkillers. The victim would then be given an object to help him brace himself for the impending pain. What phrase?

Answers to "The Ninth Entry"

Here are the answers to ninth one:

1. Steve Jobs.
2. Apple computer and Macintosh.
3. Hobbes from Calvin and Hobbes.
4. Rise in travel and tourism industry of New Zeland after release of LOTR trilogy movies.
5. Raphael Nadal's pirate pants.
6. These word are coined after name of some island. (Actually in case of bikin, it's an atoll, to be precise). Lesbos is an island somewhere near to Greece and Serendip is old name of island of Sri Lanka or Ceylone.
7. FedEx
8. This is the first instnace of a civil disobedience.
9. Good Morning Vietnam.
10. He was the only one who knew how to operate a coffee vending machine.
11. Seinfeld.
12. Who wants to be a millionaire?
13. Deep Purple.
14. Sudoku.
15. X- physics and hence Metaphysics.
16. Walkman.
17. Tractor maker was Lamborghini and super car maker was enzo ferrari. After this incident Lamoborghini started making supercars.
18. The song by U2 "the ground beneath her feet" has its lyrics written by Salman Rushdie.
19. A Passage to India.
20. Casablanca.
21. Midnight's Children.
22. Alfredo Di Stefano.
23. Jesus Christ lizard.

That's all for now, folks.

Monday, November 20, 2006

The Ninth Entry

On one of the Thursdays...Quiz Master was Niraj Chaudhary

1. Who recruited youngest president of Pepsi at that time John Sculley by saying, "Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life, or do you want to change the world?"

2. This is part of an advertisement. Fill in the blanks.
"Big Brother": "Today, we celebrate the first glorious anniversary of the Information Purification Directives. We have created, for the first time in all history, a garden of pure ideology. Where each worker may bloom, secure from the pests purveying contradictory thoughts. Our Unification of Thought is more powerful a weapon than any fleet or army on earth. We are one people. With one will, one resolve, one cause. Our enemies shall talk themselves to death and we will bury them with their own confusion. We shall prevail!"
Announcer: "On January 24th, ______________ will introduce _______________. And you'll see why 1984 won't be like '1984'."

3. To whom the following quote is attributed :"Van Gogh would have sold more paintings, if they had tigers in them."

4. What do you understand by term "Frodo-economy?"

5. What's the latest addition to Wimbledon Museum?

6. For an etymologist, what's common to the words bikini, serendipity and lesbian.

7. The company chose its name because it thought that people would have more faith in it, if they thougt that it has government connection. Later they shortened the company name and hence removed a big scarlet part of logo. It saved around $1000 on paintjobs on every tractor trailer. Which company?

8. When American philosopher Henry David Thoreau ran into the local tax collector who asked him to pay six years of delinquent poll taxes (1846). Thoreau refused because of his opposition to the Mexican-American War and slavery, for which he spent a night in jail. This is first instance of what?

9. This movie was advertised with punchline "The wrong man. In the wrong place. At the right time." It was based on an American radio jockey Adrian Cronauer, posted in Vietnam.

10. Among all the people who came to audition for the role of Gunther in sitcom 'Freinds' why was James Michael Taylor chosen?

11. Which sitcome is also referred to as The Show about Nothing?

12. A song composed in 1956 by Cole Porter goes like this: "___ _____ __ __ _ ___________? I don't. (...) And I don't 'cause all I want is you." Fill in the blanks to name the TV show, that got its name from the this song, ironically though.

13. Fill in the blanks (its a song by Pete deRose):
"When the ____ ______ falls, Over sleepy garden walls.
And the stars begin, To flicker in the sky
Through the mist of a memory, You wander back to me.
Breathing my name with a sigh.

14. A Japanese publisher Nikoli Co. Ltd owns a trademark, "Suuji wa dokushin ni kagiru", while the same is referred to as ‘nanpure' by other Japanese publisher. What?

15. Greek philosopher Aristotle produced a number of works, collectively know as, say X. In the library of Alexandria, those works of Aristotle, which were kept after X, were referred to by librarians as the "books that come after X" and hence the name of work came?

16. What could have been known as Sound About or Stow Away for pure grammatical reasons?

17. A wealthy tractor manufacturer, who also possessed a super car, went to manufacturer of that super car to complain about quality of car's clutch. The manufacturer told him "what does a tractor manufacturer knows about making super cars, go and drive tractors". This even led to something big in automobile industry. Identify both the parties.

18. Connect U2, the Irish Rock Band and Salman Rushdie.

19. This book has been divided into three parts: temples, mosques and caves. Its also beem made into a movie with Indian connection. Which book?

20. From Paris to Marseilles to Otan to ___________ to Lisbon. The route was followed by many in pre-WWII Europe as an esacape route to 'New World' ie America. Fill in the blanks.

21. "…because it is the privilege and the curse of ___________ ___________ to be both masters and victims of their times, to forsake privacy and be sucked into the annihilating whirlpool of the multitudes and to be able to live or die in peace."
Fill in the blanks to get the title of the book, this is an exceprt from.

22. How this guy missed world cup editions of soccer is part of legends now. He played for Spain in ’50, but authorities found out that he has also represented Argentina in the past and hence barred from taking part. In next edition, ’54 ,authorities agreed, but Spain didn’t qualify. In ’58 he played for Argentina and Argentina refused to take part in world cup due to political reasons. He was injured for ’62's edtion and in ’66 he was 40. Identify.

23. This lizard known scientifically as Basilisk Lizard with scientific name Basiliscus basiliscus, have webby feet and hence it can run on water when scurrying at a good speed. What is it commonly known as?

Answers to "The Eighth Entry"

Here are the answers to the eighth one:

1. Vajpayee (All these are surnames originated from the different forms of "kingly" yagyas in the ancient times. chakravaerty from "rajachakeravarty yagya", Rajadhyaksha from "Rajasuya Yagya", Ashwin Rao from "Ashwamedh Yagya and Vajpayee from "Vajpeya Yagya").
2. Kamasutra. One of the 64 arts a lady needs to know is cryptography.
3. Election of the pope in vatican city.
4. Roja.
5. The "cross".
6. Zakir Hussain-the tabla maestro.
7. Madhuri Dixit as featured in M F Hussains Paintings.
8. H5N1 virus (Bird Flu).
9. Types of Quarks.
10. Ram killed Baali in Ramayana, shooting him with an arrow, hiding behind the bushes. Baali re-incarnated was the hunter, Ram ( Vishnu) re-incarnated was Krishna.
11. Blue-tooth technology.
12. Braille.
13. Outlook follywood awards.
14. Arthur Conan Doyle.
15. Religious Controversy. Jyllends Posten was the Danish newspaper carrying Prophet's cartoons. Minelli is the french company recently took out shoes with images of ram.
16. Allahabad, Nasik, Ujjain and Haridwar. The sites of the Mahakumbh Mela.
17. Pakistan.
18. X= Basil D Oliviera. This resulted in the cricketing ban on Y=South Africa.
19. Alice in Wonderland Syndrome.
20. No other words in English rhyme with these.
21. Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose.
22. PINCODE in India.
23. A series of football matches and unruly crowd behavior!
24. No child labour involved.
25. The wood of the cross came from Aspen which was used in Jesus' s crucifixion. Thats why they "tremble in shame".
26. Earlier US crossover points were called "Alpha" and "Bravo". Charlie was the next corresponding to "C" in international phonetic alphabet code.
27. Mangal Pandey.
28. First words spoken on the telephone by A G Bell.
29. Olympian. The frou greek national festivals.
30. Supposedly contains formula 7X. coke's secret formula.

The Eighth Entry

On one of the Thursdays....Quiz Master was Anindya Bhattacharjee.

1. Chakravarty, Rajadhyaksha, AshwinRao. What comes next?

2. One of the earliest instances of cryptography in India is called 'Mlechha Vikalpa', in which the letters of the alphabet are randomly paired against each other and substituted. In which text can you find a reference to this?

3. The person voting, after marking his ballot puts it on a plate and raises it to show everyone that he is not casting multiple votes. Then it is put in a spherical container. As the ballots are counted, they are stiched into a thread and burnt. What is being described here?

4. Recently Time magazine came out with its top 10 movie soundtracks of all time. Which indian movie finds a place in it? (circa March, 2006)

5. The four elements Earth, Air, Fire and Water gave rise to which ancient symbol?

6. The role of young salim in Mughal e Azam was played by Jalal Agha. Before him, who was offered the role?

7. You can find me as Radha with Krishna, as Menaka with Vishwamitra, with Meryl Streep and Clint Eastwood and also as playing tennis at the Wimbledon. Who am I?

8. The protein's Haemaglutinin and Neuraminidase for the outer "spikes" of what?

9. Up, down, charm, strange, bottom and top are types of what?

10. Krishna's death, at being shot an arrow from behind the bushes by a hunter is the consequence of which incident in indian mythology?

11. King Harold Blatand sopposedly gives his name to which modern day technology?

12. CHarles Barbier designed this as Napoleon wanted a code of communication for his army which would be silent and workable at night. It was called "night writing". Later on it evolved into what?

13. Best Actor: Uday Chopra, Best Actress: Antara Mali, Best Film: Mr. Ya Miss, Which awards?

14. In an english county match played at the crystal palace in 1900, W.G. Grace scored 110 and then was caught by Storer. Who was the bowler?

15. Connect Minelli and Jyllends Posten.

16. After the churning of the ocean, the nectar, that was found, was hidden by the "devatas" from the "asuras". Where and what originated from this incident?

17. This word was coined in a pamphlet called "Now or Never" taken out by a group of cambridge students in 1933. Chaudhary Rehmat Ali reportedly coined it. Which word?

18. In 1968/69 this player X wasn't picked to tour a country Y, inspite of his string of good performances. He was replced by Tom Cartwright but when the latter got injured X found his way in the team. Now country Y refused to play with X in their opponents team, though X originally hailed from Y.
Identify X and state the significance of this incident.

19. Microspia is a medical condition in which the person affected sees things either too small or too big. What is the alternate name of this disease which is derived from a literary masterpiece?

20. Month, Orange, Silver, Purple---what connects these english words?

21. Whose unfinished autobiography is "An Indian Pilgrim" ?

22. What was introduced on 15th august 1972 in india ?( the occasion was the 25th anniversary of indian independence)

23. 1969 El Salvador ang Hondurous fought a 4 day war. What had caused it?

24. What does the "rug-mark" or "kaleen" mark on carpets signify?

25. What is the origin of the phrase "trembling like an aspen tree" ?

26. Why is the east-west Berling crossing called checkpoint charlie?

27. Only two people in the history of 34th native infantry regiment were executed. One was Ishwari Prasad. Who was the other?

28. "Mr. Watson, Come here, I want you" -- what is the significance of this phrase?

29. Ishmian, Pythean, Nemean, ---what comes next?

30. The Bank of Georgia has only one branch and thats in Atlanta. What does it reportedly contain?

Answers to "The Seventh Entry"

Here are the answers to seventh one:

1. The first heart transplant by Dr. Christian Bernard
2. Somnath - These are the pilgrimages looted by Nadir Shah.
3. It's Moron.
4. Dr Benjamin Spock of child care fame.
5. Bachchan (What else ?)
6. Douglas Jardine.
7. Mount Kailash.
8. Four Corners of the Earth.
9. Mridangam.
10. Copernicus.
11. Arun Gawli.
12. She is the person for whom Rajiv Gandhi was promoting, when he got killed.
13. Wales. Connection : These are all the titles bestowed on Prince Charles. eg. Prince of Wales, Duke of Cornwalls
14. The Thin Red Line.
15. Bunty and Bubbly.
16. All ex-wives of Salman Rushdie.
17. Sonu Nigam.
18. Bart Simpson.
19. The capital of Brunei - Bander Seri Bagwan (the monkey who was god)
20. Forms of Tandaw - Shiva's dance of destruction.
21. Mafia.
22. Monica Lewinsky and you know the (in)famous dress.
23. Holika and hence the festival of Holi.
24. The Urchins of Baker Street.