In 1996, I was granted a short audience with Prime Minister Basdeo Panday to discuss some comments he had offhandedly made about learning Hindi using a computer. He entered the room cautiously with an equally wary and alert aide. Even as he sat, it was clear that he was ready to get up and leave if he thought he was going to be blindsided by a reporter who had used a subterfuge to get access.
Instead, the aide had to keep reminding the PM that he had other appointments, so engrossed did he become in discussing his computing adventures. It came as no surprise to me that he would be the first Prime Minister to authorise the removal of duties on the import of computers. Mr Panday was many things, but he was absolutely a computer nerd.
Basdeo Panday passed away on January 1, 2024. BitDepth#47 was first published in mid-1996.
I wasn't sure what to expect. Like everyone else, I had read of his plans to learn the Hindi language from a computer tutorial and I had been impressed with his new IBM Thinkpad, the ultimate portable computing accessory for the successful executive. He does, after all, have our nation's ultimate job description, a mandate to lead us all to glory and fortune and I looked forward to meeting our first visibly computerised Prime Minister.
'I was hungry for information about this new technology,' said Prime Minister Panday, his voice an enthusiastic growl. 'I had become increasingly aware of the pace of progress and computer development and I realised that I would have to become a part of it.' Hardly out of character for the man whose passion for information was clear ever since his childhood in Princes Town. Four years ago, while part of the Opposition, he began pursuing his new education in earnest.
He began by working with a word processor, a move that immediately improved his approach to Budget Speech replies and brought great relief to his family.
'I would get crazy when it was time to prepare my reply to the budget speech. My family would steer clear of me for days. I'd be working eighteen hour days, writing everything out by hand then waiting for it to be typed, then revising it.' At this point, Mr Panday sort of blanched and twisted his face tightly at the memory.
'Once I became comfortable with the word processor, everything changed. I'd begin writing the reply weeks in advance, using information that was public knowledge, just waiting for him to deliver the actual numbers in Parliament. From that point on, I'd say my productivity increased by at least a hundred and fifty per cent.'
Today, his family doesn't just enjoy a happier patriarch, they too are involved with computers. There are four computers available in the Panday household, used in rotation by Oma, Mr Panday's wife, and his daughters.
There's an ageing 386 which was originally outfitted with the Hindi language programme, but the language software has a hardware component which filled the sound card slot. This did not sit well with a family using CD ROM titles regularly and in the long run, the sound card we