Search Me

Thursday 22 November, 2007

History ...

Couple of days back, one of my colleagues asked me, "Do you know why they teach us history in school??". I replied promptly, "Of course, so that we do not repeat the mistakes made in history!!!". The discussion went on, after all we needed something to discuss, to take our mind of the just about ok food we were eating for lunch. The topic went on, with both of us putting across some or the other anecdotes, details of which I would put across, some other day.

When I was sleeping later that night, I was again struck by that question.

Indeed, if we look around us, we don't really seem to have learnt our history well enough. Or maybe, we think that we are intelligent enough, to not repeat the mistakes and end up overlooking the steps that we take, which result in us repeating mistakes from history. I don't have the patience or the energy to fill up this space with different events. But if every one of us ponders over their past, they would see a lot of mistakes they have repeated.

No wonder there goes a saying that "History repeats itself!!!"

Monday 12 November, 2007

Om Shanti Om!!!

What a load of crap!!!

Farah Khan could have done better!!! The only promising part about the movie is "Deepika Padukone".

The movie is a useless rehash of the countless reincarnation movies available in Bollywood. Though it has a stark resemblance to the classic "Karz". 

I am not gonna waste my time and effort in writing about this movie. Agreed I njoyed some parts of the movie, the songs etc. But after half time the movie goes into a downward spiral. The nuisance value just increases!!!

An interesting aspect I want to share is this. The title song "Om Shanti Om" which has lots of stars coming in for a guest appearance was quite good. And in this song, I almost blacked out SRK. From my perspective He just dint exist in any frame of the song. I was just too busy looking at the other actors/actresses. Ditto for the song, Dard-e-Disco. Wasn't looking at SRK at all, was looking at the other dancers. Almost all the songs, that's precisely what I was doing!!!

Catch it on a DVD later sometime, when you have absolutely nothing to do....

Times rated it as 3.5/5 I say 2.5 would suffice!!!

Tuesday 25 September, 2007

Hey RAM!!!

This is a forward I received in my mail box today!!!
I do not know who has written it.
But its worth reading... :)
The Lord surveyed the Ram Setu and said "Hanuman, how diligently and
strenuously you and your vanara sena had built this bridge several
centuries back. It is remarkable that it has withstood the ravages of
the climatic and geographical changes over centuries. It is indeed an
amazing feat especially considering the fact that a bridge at Hyderabad
built by Gammon using latest technology collapsed the other day even
before they could stick the posters on its pillars."

Hanuman with all humility spoke "Jai Sri Ram, it is all because of your
grace. We just scribbled your name on the bricks and threw them in the
sea and they held. No steel from TISCO or cement from Ambuja or ACC was
ever used. But Lord, why rake up the old issue now."

Ram spoke "Well, Hanuman some people down there want to demolish the
bridge and construct a canal. The contract involves lot of money and lot
of money will be made. They will make money on demolition and make more
money on construction. "

Hanuman humbly bowed down and said "Why not we go down and present our case"

Ram said "Times have changed since we were down there. They will ask us
to submit age proof and we don't have either a birth certificate or
school leaving certificate. We traveled mainly on foot and some times in
bullock carts and so we don't have a driving license either. As far as
the address proof is concerned the fact that I was born at Ayodhya is
itself under litigation for over half a century, If I go in a
traditional attire with bow and arrow, the ordinary folks may recognize
me but Arjun Singh may take me to be some tribal and, at the most, offer
a seat at IIT under the reserved category. Also, a God
cannot walk in dressed in a three-piece suit and announce his arrival.
It would make even the devotees suspicious.

So it is dilemma so to say."

"I can vouch for you by saying that I personally built the bridge."
"My dear, Anjani putra, it will not work. They will ask you to produce
the lay-out plan, the project details, including financial outlay and
how the project cost was met and the completion certificate. Nothing is
accepted without documentary evidence in India. You may cough but unless
a doctor certifies it, you have no cough. A pensioner may present
himself personally but the authorities do not take it as proof. He has
to produce a life-certificate to prove that he is alive. It is that
complicated."

"Lord can't understand these historians. Over the years you have given
darshan once every hundred years to saints like Surdas, Tulsidas, Saint
Thyagaraja, Jayadeva, Bhadrachala Ramdas and even Sant Tukaram and still
they disbelieve your existence and say Ramayana is a myth. The only
option, I see, is to re-enact Ramayana on earth and set the government
records straight once for all."

Lord smiled "It isn't that easy today. Ravan is apprehensive that he may
look like a saint in front of Karunanidhi. I also spoke to his mama
Mareecha, who appeared as a golden deer to tempt Sita maiyya when I was
in the forest and he said that he won't take a chance of stepping on
earth as long as Salman Khan is around."

Thursday 20 September, 2007

NEWS AHOY!!!!

Do you remember the days when we dint have so many news channels? We had the one and only one Doordarshan news. This was available in both Hindi and English. As for the international news, we had good old Pranoy Roy hosting "The world this week" on Fridays.

But now, I hate to even accidentally land on any news channel while surfing. Practically every news channel is dishing out some trash or the other. I somehow feel that these media personnel are so full of themselves these days, that they can go any length to get that coveted big story. One of the worst lines "You saw it first on ... TV". It doesn't matter what has happened, whether my neighbors cat  farted, whether its a natural calamity, whether its a terrorist attack, no matter what it is, the most important thing is, "You saw it first on ... TV". What's with these media folks???

This seems to be the case everywhere. For some stupid TRP ratings, the media streams painful images repeatedly. The case I am referring to being the tapes of the Virginia Tech student who went on that inhuman massacre. Then there was Anna Nicole Smiths death and the subsequent custody battle that her boyfriend was battling out against some lawyer for her child. One news channel was almost dedicated to covering her. For Gods sake, she was a drug addict and an adult movie actress. By providing her a non stop obituary, the media is doing nothing but glorifying her acts and her life!!! Is this right??? How does the impressionable teenage mind react to this kind of news? Is the media aware of the repercussions of its news hunt? Who cares, the TRP's and the increasing bottom lines due to the increase in advertising are more important.

 The media which is supposed to be the watch dog, has gradually become a monster out on hunt. Preying upon anything and everything which would give them something to talk about.

Another example, Adnan from Mumbai, the financial capital of India, was murdered by a bunch of idiotic guys. The reason, they had kidnapped him and asked for ransom, but due to incessant media coverage the kidnappers got scared, they killed Adnan. If the media had not been so ruthless in its coverage, maybe the Police could have got him back safe.

I wish the media regulates itself. There is no point in bringing a legislation to regulate the media.

Thursday 6 September, 2007

STATE OF AFFAIRS!!!




The above dilbert comic strips conveying the exact state of affairs.

Wednesday 5 September, 2007

Aspirations

Individuals, once they join an organization have an ambition that they want to reach the top echelons of the organization they belong to. Well, yes, baring a few exceptions, who are content with what they do and do not want to rise into the upper echelons, the so called corridors of power. They are the blessed ones. Truth has dawned upon them, that in this game, the prince is but a pauper!!!

Most of us think that once we get the designation of a supervisor, we are all set to arrive in the big bad corporate world.

Just then, we hear a big bell DINGGG!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

We still report to another person, who happens to be our supervisor. Hence, the arrival of "The Person" into the arena gets delayed by some period. Thus begins the quest for ascent into the next level of the hierarchy. The concerned individual thinks that the moment he/she goes to the next level, this bigger, meaner, smarter individual would redefine the way things work. Uh oh, did we hear the big bell again???

The answer is yes. Unfortunately, more often than not, the individual meets another bigger, meaner, smarter person awaiting the new jackass!!!

For those who go on to the top positions of an organization, they end up being answerable to the share holders. One of these share holders could in fact be an employee of the same organization.

My take being that this cycle has no end!!! No body is truly king!!!!

Of course there are exceptions, royalty for that matter is such a parasitic institution.

Tuesday 3 July, 2007

Who would be the First Citizen???

The Presidential elections are around the corner. The electoral college is going to put its "supposed" intelligence to test. Well, not really... the fate of the fabulous Rashtrapati Bhavan has been decided.

Its going to be the wonderful Pratibha Patil. The one lady who believes in ghosts and spooks, and has spooked out a co-operative bank, and also has been accused of shielding her brother from accusations of murder.

WOW!!! Feels so wonderful, that the countries highest office is being occupied by such a luminary. Wonder if we could have some exorcists to keep her company, in case she starts doing a Whoopi Goldberg (from the 1990 movie Ghost). Now that this has struck me, it would indeed be wonderful.

It would be welcome experience if the spirits of  Dr. Radhakrishnan S. , Dr. Rajendra Prasad, or Indira Gandhi etc, could come down and possess her!!!

I am just not able to comprehend why they would want this lady as the President of India? If its really a  matter of showing that women are really empowered in today's India, wouldn't Dr. Kiran Bedi be a wonderful choice? Perhaps, Dr. Kiran Bedi would have been a choice of the intelligentsia. But the current sequence of events indicates that the electoral college does not have any. Maybe it has few.

So given an option I wonder if we still would have Pratibha Patil as our President. Apart from our honorary electoral college,( yeah right, honorary!!),  we have a celebrity who is also vouching for her.

I used to think Preity Zinta was a sensible lady, but I guess sometimes sensibilities do take a backseat...

This is what she said...

'' I support the candidature of Ms Patil. It has nothing to do with politics. It is for the first time that a woman has got the chance to adorn the highest seat of power and I think our country is ready for it''.

As I said, she just blurted out in the spur of the moment, I would like to believe that. If not then she needs to keep her mouth shut and stop thinking. This is the trouble when people who are not supposed to think start thinking!!!

Wednesday 20 June, 2007

Familiar Thoughts ???

What you would be reading now is my take on the Individuals who change jobs. Changing it frequently or not is immaterial, or maybe it is not. But I leave it up to the reader to decide about it.

What causes a motivated employee to call it a day and move on to "supposedly" greener pastures? Well,  as a common phrase goes, Its not the last straw which breaks the camels back, but the ones before that.

This is not a rehash of the countless emails that one gets being in a typical IT organization. Rather, this is a reflection of my thoughts on what is happening around me.

An employee, after slogging it out, and gaining the trust of the client and getting in more projects expects that he would be given a better remuneration or be suitable awarded. However, the amount he would get would be just about a tad bit more than the folks who did not put in similar effort. Or he would end up getting peanuts for whatever efforts he has put in. This kick starts the thinking process, which questions the intelligence of putting hours of hard work. Then there are the usual pot shots that the supervisor/manager would indulge in. Comparison is a wonderful way, by which they either belittle or destroy an individual. But giving the devil its dues, it is helpful in some cases.

In a nut shell, these behavioral patterns displayed by supervisors/managers, serves only one purpose, i.e. to increase the probability of an individual leaving the organization, and add to the attrition rate of the organization.

I am aware that in the long run, money cannot be the only motivating factor. After spending few years in an organization, an individual would want vertical movement as well. But this is not true for everyone. Some folks might just be content with a good raise every year or every appraisal cycle, commensurate with their performance. This of course doesn't happen. The entire process, almost always, if not every time is skewed in favor of the so called favorites. The reasons why certain individuals are favorites and certain are not, are obscure to a normal individual.

Once the affected individual leaves the organization, the "HR" goes on a wild goose chase to get the right individual. The entire exercise of getting the right candidate would have been avoided, if the person who quit, was not forced to do so. The reasons are varied, and personal reasons for quitting, cannot be avoided. But individuals who quit because of work related reasons, by individuals, I mean, good resources who quit because of work related reasons, should raise the alarm bells. It should be reason enough for the organization for a process of introspection.

Phew, that takes some load of me...

Saturday 28 April, 2007

Atto Rik Sha

This is an incident that a occurred few months back. Before I start, a little information about what the premise is.

In Bangalore there was a move to replace all the analog autorichshaw meters with digital meters. These were "supposed" to be "tamper proof".

Well, fine Wednesday morning, after I was in office for almost the entire tuesday night, I go out hunting for an auto. I am waving at almost every auto to stop.

Few stop, and say they need Rs.100 for traveling 6 km. The standard fare being Rs 5/Km. It now stands at Rs. 6/Km.

Finally, after waiting for a good half hour, I get one guy. He just asks me Rs. 10 over and above, what the meter(digital) would display. In a firm and angry tone, I told him, nothing at all. Only what the meter displays. The response, left me stunned.
"क्या साब, दस रुपया एक्स्ट्रा देदो ना साब, येह मीटर दिगिटल हैं साब, इसको मैं
चेध कर बढ़ा भी नही सकता, देदो ना साब"

For those who don't know Hindi, this guy was asking me to pay him extra coz he was forced into being honest, as the digital meter dint give him an opportunity to tamper around, as he would have with an analog meter.

Finally I did make it home safe and sound, without giving any extra money.

naaaaaaaaa, I had to give him some extra amount, since the guy dint have a change.
-----------------------------------------------------------

Another snippet.

This was when my wife, was my girlfriend. She was going to her examination hall in an auto.
This auto guy was "a complete cartoon". In his own words, he had a degree in MRA,
Masters in Rickshaw Administration.

Sunday 15 April, 2007

300

Yes, I know, late for a review about this movie. But nevertheless, my opinions about the movie I just saw.
The movie, well not historically accurate, but yes some what close to it. An exaggeration to make it even more spectacular. Visually spectacular, a definite yes.

Visually I would say this movie is amazingly shot. But the violence is sometimes quite over the top. Haven't seen many movies before this which show the entire sequence of a person being beheaded. The action sequences are just awesome. I have seen the behind the scenes footage of this movie and I would say its definitely a lot of hard work. The movie has been made as close as possible to the comic strip its been derived from. The training that the warriors had to go through is so strenuous. Overall I would say its definitely worth watching. Though you might wanna avoid making accurate references to actual historical events. Just enjoy it as a visually spectacular and excessively violent movie.

Though, this does make me wonder, if this simple story of 300 warriors who stop the raging Persian army can be made so visually spectacular, the treatment of our own mythologies of Mahabharata and The Ramayana and many others could be made so much more wonderful.

Wish some major Hollywood studio decides on doing this.

I.S.T

I.S.T also known as Indian Standard Time. Well this is defined as UTC + 5.30 (UTC a.k.a Coordinated Universal Time, a.k.a GMT (Greenwich Mean Time)).

A brief description of time is

IST) is the time observed throughout India, with a time offset of UTC+5:30. India does not observe daylight saving time, (DST) or other seasonal adjustments, although DST was used briefly during the Sino–Indian War of 1962 and the Indo–Pakistani Wars of 1965 and 1971.[1] In military and aviation time, IST is designated E* ("Echo-Star").[2] Indian Standard Time is calculated on the basis of 82.5° E longitude, which is just west of the town of Mirzapur, near Allahabad in the state of Uttar Pradesh. The longitude difference between Mirzapur and the United Kingdom's Royal Observatory at Greenwich translates to an exact time difference of 5 hours 30 minutes. Local time is calculated from a clock tower at the Allahabad Observatory (25.15° N 82.5° E) though the official time-keeping devices are entrusted to the National Physical Laboratory, in New Delhi.

The above is an extract from wikipedia.

Now coming back to my blog... Over the world, IST is not understood as above, but as (GMT+5.30) + increments to it as per own convenience.

Imagine, you have something important to be done say @10:30 a.m. and this task is dependent on some other person, who though he/she might be competent, has a tendency to miss timings.
So what happens is that you end up missing the deadline. period.
I can go on about different scenarios which folks miss the timings, but this wont change the situation overnight.
I do not know what is it that makes folks insensitive about the value of the time of another person.
Is it because of the चलता है attitude inculcated in us since time immemorial?

I DO NOT KNOW!! BUT IT SURE DOES SUCK!!!

Tuesday 3 April, 2007

2 Guys, A Girl and a Pizza place.

Now that I have your attention, lets replace "A Girl" with a bottle of whiskey.
Aha...I never realized, that I am replacing one intoxicant with another!!!. And of course, lets drop the pizza place, not that when two guys are drunk to the hilt, they bother whether they are in a pizza place or a strip joint or dipping their head in the rest room(YUCK!!!)

Now to disclose the identity of the two guys. No!!! I am not doing that, for fear of my own well being and of course a humble request from them as well.

The whiskey was Canadian Mist.

I have seen what liquor can do to ppl. Not that I hadn't seen drunken folks before, but I had never been witness to a man drinking and going berserk.

I witnessed a sort of de-evolution. Here was a man, going back to his primeval times, the whiskey had triggered the mutant gene in him. Behold!!! for he had become an APE!!!!

He was banging down chairs on the floor like some gorilla playing with a log of wood, he was jumping around the whole room. The mention of members of the opposite sex elicited an amazing response. It was similar to that of a full grown gorilla with over charged testosterone. This was a full blown display of the awakened basic instinct which was lying dormant in him.

I wish I could capture in film, these moments of whatever you might think of it as.


I am sure many folks out there have plenty of bizzare tales about ppl drunk as though there is no tomorrow.

But this sure was a first for me.
And it pretty much strengthens my resolve to never take up drinking.

Saturday 10 March, 2007

The Trouble With India

When foreigners say Bangalore is India's version of Silicon Valley, the high-tech office park called Electronics City is what they're often thinking of. But however much Californians might hate traffic-clogged Route 101, the main drag though the Valley, it has nothing on Hosur Road. This potholed, four-lane stretch of gritty pavement -- the primary access to Electronics City -- is pure chaos. Cars, trucks, buses, motorcycles, taxis, rickshaws, cows, donkeys, and dogs jostle for every inch of the roadway as horns blare and brakes squeal. Drivers run red lights and jam their vehicles into any available space, paying no mind to pedestrians clustered desperately on median strips like shipwrecked sailors.

Pass through the six-foot-high concrete walls into Electronics City, though, and the loudest sounds you hear are the chirping of birds and the whirr of electric carts that whisk visitors from one steel-and-glass building to the next. Young men and women stroll the manicured pathways that wend their way through the leafy 80-acre spread or coast quietly on bicycles along the smooth asphalt roads.

With virtually no mass transit in Bangalore, Indian technology firm Infosys Technologies Ltd. spends $5 million a year on buses, minivans, and taxis to transport its 18,000 employees to and from Electronics City. And traffic jams mean workers can spend upwards of four hours commuting each day. "India has underinvested in infrastructure for 60 years, and we're behind what we need by 10 to 12 years," says T.V. Mohandas Pai, director of human resources for Infosys.

India's high-tech services industry has set the country's economic flywheel spinning. Growth is running at 9%-plus this year. The likes of Wal-Mart (NYSE:WMT - News), Vodafone (NYSE:VOD - News), and Citigroup (NYSE:C - News) are placing multibillion-dollar bets on the country, lured by its 300 million-strong middle class. In spite of a recent drop, the Bombay stock exchange's benchmark Sensex index is still up more than 40% since June. Real estate has shot through the roof, with some prices doubling in the past year.

But this economic boom is being built on the shakiest of foundations. Highways, modern bridges, world-class airports, reliable power, and clean water are in desperately short supply. And what's already there is literally crumbling under the weight of progress. In December, a bridge in eastern India collapsed, killing 34 passengers in a train rumbling underneath. Economic losses from congestion and poor roads alone are as high as $6 billion a year, says Gajendra Haldea, an adviser to the federal Planning Commission.

For all its importance, the tech services sector employs just 1.6 million people, and it doesn't rely on good roads and bridges to get its work done. India needs manufacturing to boom if it is to boost exports and create jobs for the 10 million young people who enter the workforce each year. Suddenly, good infrastructure matters a lot more. Yet industry is hobbled by overcrowded highways where speeds average just 20 miles per hour. Some ports rely on armies of laborers to unload cargo from trucks and lug it onto ships. Across the state of Maharashtra, major cities lose power one day a week to relieve pressure on the grid. In Pune, a city of 4.5 million, it's lights out every Thursday -- forcing factories to maintain expensive backup generators. Government officials were shocked last year when Intel Corp. (NasdaqGS:INTC - News) chose Vietnam over India as the site for a new chip assembly plant. Although Intel declined to comment, industry insiders say the reason was largely the lack of reliable power and water in India.

Add up this litany of woes and you understand why India's exports total less than 1% of global trade, compared with 7% for China. Says Infosys Chairman N.R. Narayana Murthy: "If our infrastructure gets delayed, our economic development, job creation, and foreign investment get delayed. Our economic agenda gets delayed -- if not derailed."

The infrastructure deficit is so critical that it could prevent India from achieving the prosperity that finally seems to be within its grasp. Without reliable power and water and a modern transportation network, the chasm between India's moneyed elite and its 800 million poor will continue to widen, potentially destabilizing the country. Jagdish N. Bhagwati, a professor at Columbia University, figures gross domestic product growth would run two percentage points higher if the country had decent roads, railways, and power. "We're bursting at the seams," says Kamal Nath, India's Commerce & Industry Minister. Without better infrastructure, "we can't continue with the growth rates we have had."

The problems are even contributing to overheating in the economy. Inflation spiked in the first week of February to a two-year high of 6.7%, due in part to bottlenecks caused by the country's lousy transport network. Up to 40% of farm produce is lost because it rots in the fields or spoils en route to consumers, which contributes to rising prices for staples such as lentils and onions.

India today is about where China was a decade ago. Back then, China's economy was shifting into overdrive, but its roads and power grid weren't up to the task. So Beijing launched a massive upgrade initiative, building more than 25,000 miles of expressways that now crisscross the country and are as good as the best roads in the U.S. or Europe. India, by contrast, has just 3,700 miles of such highways. It's no wonder that when foreign companies weigh putting new plants in China vs. India to produce global exports, China more often wins out.

China's lead in infrastructure is likely to grow, too. Beijing plows about 9% of its GDP into public works, compared with New Delhi's 4%. And because of its authoritarian government, China gets faster results. "If you have to build a road in China, just a handful of people need to make a decision," says Daniel Vasella, chief executive of pharmaceutical giant Novartis (NYSE:NVS - News). "If you want to build a road in India, it'll take 10 years of discussion before you get a decision."

Blame it partly on India's revolving-door democracy. Political parties typically hold power for just one five-year term before disgruntled voters, swayed by populist promises from the opposition, kick them out of office. In elections last year in the state of Tamil Nadu, for instance, a new government was voted in after it pledged to give free color TVs to poor families. "In a sanely organized society you can get a lot done. Not here," says Jayaprakash Narayan, head of Lok Satta, or People Power, a national reform party.

Then there's "leakage" -- India's euphemism for rampant corruption. Nearly all sectors of officialdom are riddled with graft, from neighborhood cops to district bureaucrats to state ministers. Indian truckers pay about $5 billion a year in bribes, according to the watchdog group Transparency International. Corruption delays infrastructure projects and raises costs for those that move ahead.

Fortunately, after decades of underinvestment and political inertia, India's political leadership has awakened to the magnitude of the infrastructure crisis. A handful of major projects have been completed; others are moving forward. Work on the Golden Quadrilateral -- a $12 billion initiative spanning more than 3,000 miles of four- and six-lane expressways connecting Mumbai, Delhi, Kolkata, and Chennai -- is due to be completed this year. The first phase of a new subway in New Delhi finished in late 2005 on budget and ahead of schedule. And new airports are under construction in Bangalore and Hyderabad, with more planned elsewhere. "We have to improve the quality of our infrastructure," Prime Minister Manmohan Singh told a gathering of tech industry leaders in Mumbai on Feb. 9. "It's a priority of our government."

Singh, in fact, is promising a Marshall Plan-scale effort. The government estimates public and private organizations will chip in $330 billion to $500 billion over the next five years for highways, power generation, ports, and airports. In addition, leading conglomerates have pledged to overhaul the retailing sector. That will require infrastructure upgrades along the entire food distribution chain, from farm fields to store shelves.

Envisioning a brand-new India is the easy part; paying for it is another matter. By necessity, since the country's public debt stands at 82% of GDP, the 11th-worst ranking in the world, much of the money for these new projects will have to come from private sources. Yet India captured only $8 billion in foreign direct investment last year, compared with China's $63 billion. "Having grandiose plans isn't enough," says Yale University economics professor T.N. Srinivasan.

Just about every foreign company operating in India has a horror story of the hardships of doing business there. Nokia Corp. (NYSE:NOK - News) saw thousands of its cellular phones ruined last October when a shipment from its factory in Chennai was soaked by rain because there was no room to warehouse the crates of handsets at the local airport. Japan's Maruti Suzuki says trucking its cars 900 miles from its factory in Gurgaon to the port in Mumbai can take up to 10 days. That's partly due to delays at the three state borders along the way, where drivers are stalled as officials check their papers. But it's also because big rigs are barred from India's congested cities during the day, when they might bring dense traffic to a standstill. Once at the port, the Japanese company's autos can wait weeks for the next outbound ship because there's not enough dock space for cargo carriers to load and unload.

India's summer monsoons wreak havoc, too. Even relatively light rains can choke sewers, flood streets, and paralyze a city, while downpours are devastating. Two years ago, Florida-based contract manufacturer Jabil Circuit Inc. saw shipments of computers and networking gear from its plant near Mumbai delayed for five days after an epic storm. "In our business, five days is a really long time," says William D. Muir Jr., who oversees Jabil's Asian operations.

Companies often have no choice but to make the best of a bad situation. Cisco Systems Inc. (NasdaqGS:CSCO - News), the American networking equipment giant, has had a research and development office in India since 1999 and already has 2,000 engineers in the country. To supply the country's fast-growing telecommunications industry, Cisco decided last year to try its hand at making some parts locally. In December it contracted with another company to build Internet phones in the southeastern city of Chennai. Although Cisco says the quality of the workmanship is up to snuff, it has to fly parts in because the ports are so slow -- and getting them to the factory right when they're needed is proving nettlesome. "We believe in manufacturing in India, but we don't believe in logistics in India -- yet," says Wim Elfrink, Cisco's chief globalization officer. Elfrink adds that unless the Chennai operation demonstrates it can run as efficiently as Cisco setups elsewhere, it won't go into full production as planned this summer.

Even the world's largest maker of infrastructure equipment is constrained by India's feeble underpinnings. General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE - News) last year sold $1.2 billion worth of gear such as power generators and locomotives in India, more than double what it billed in 2005. To meet that surging demand, it is scrambling to find a location where it can manufacture locomotives in partnership with India Railways. But when GE dispatched three employees to survey a potential site the railway favored in the northern state of Bihar, the trio returned discouraged. It took five hours to drive the 50 miles from the airport to the site, and when they got there they found...nothing. "No roads, no power, no schools, no water, no hospitals, no housing," says Pratyush Kumar, president of GE Infrastructure in India. "We'd have to create everything from scratch," including many miles of railroad tracks to get the locomotives out to the main lines.

But there is a silver lining for GE and other international giants: India's infrastructure deficit could yield huge opportunities. American executives who traveled to India last November on the largest U.S. trade mission ever were tantalized by the possibilities. Jennifer Thompson, director of international planning at Oshkosh Truck Corp. (NYSE:OSK - News), viewed construction projects where swarms of workers carried wet concrete in buckets to be poured. That told her there's great potential in India for selling Oshkosh's mixer trucks. "There are infrastructure challenges, but we see a lot of opportunities to help them meet those challenges," she says.

That explains why so many multinationals are flocking to India. Take hotel construction: In a country with only 25,000 tourist-class hotel rooms (compared with more than 140,000 in Las Vegas alone), companies including Hilton (NYSE:HLT - News), Wyndham (NYSE:WYN - News), and Ramada have plans for 75,000 rooms on their drawing boards. Or consider telecom. Because of deregulation and ferocious demand, India boasts the fastest growth in cell-phone service anywhere, with companies adding some 6 million new customers a month. No wonder Britain's Vodafone Group PLC (NYSE:VOD - News) just ponied up $11 billion for a controlling interest in Hutchison Essar, India's No. 4 mobile carrier. U.S. private equity outfits also want in on the action. On Feb. 15, Blackstone Group and Citigroup announced they are teaming up with the Indian government and the Infrastructure Development Finance Corp. to set up a $5 billion fund for infrastructure investments in India.

But while the laws of supply and demand would argue that India's infrastructure gap can be filled, that logic ignores the corrosive effect of the country's politics. To gain the favor of voters, Indian politicians have long subsidized electricity and water for farmers, a policy that has discouraged private investment in those areas. That's what wrecked the now-infamous Dabhol Power plant. In the late 1990s, Enron, GE, and Bechtel spent a total of $2.8 billion building a huge complex near Mumbai capable of producing more than 2,000 megawatts of electricity. But a government power authority set prices so low that it was uneconomical for Dabhol to operate, and the whole deal fell apart. (The plant, taken over by an Indian organization, now runs only fitfully.) A 2001 law was supposed to create a framework to support private investment in power generation. But according to American construction company executives, it's not working well. "Everybody knows what needs to be done, but they h ave great difficulty doing it," says one of the Americans. "If the party in opposition offers subsidized power, the party in power has to give subsidized power to get reelected."

Politicians who refuse to play the game pay a steep price. N. Chandrababu Naidu, the former chief minister of the state of Andhra Pradesh, transformed the state capital of Hyderabad from a backwater into a high-tech destination by building new roads, widening others, and aggressively carving out land for factories and office parks. Google (NasdaqGS:GOOG - News), IBM (NYSE:IBM - News), Microsoft (NasdaqGS:MSFT - News), and Motorola (NYSE:MOT - News) have all built R&D facilities there.

His reward? Voters tossed him out of office two years ago. During his decade in power, Naidu didn't do enough for rural areas, and his challenger promised to channel state funds into irrigation projects and electricity subsidies. "Naidu thought economics were more important than politics. He was wrong," says V.S. Rao, director of the Birla Institute of Technology & Science in Hyderabad. Naidu, 56, is plotting a comeback in elections two years hence. This time, he's preaching a new gospel. "You can't just target growth," says a chastened Naidu. "You have to create policies that make the wealth trickle down to the common man."

But even when politicians say they're beefing up infrastructure, it rarely helps the poorest Indians. Agriculture is stagnant in part because of a lack of the most rudimentary of roads to get to and from fields. N. Tarupthurai, for instance, scratches out a living from a five-acre plot in Jinnuru, a village in northeastern Andhra Pradesh. But his fields are more than a mile from the nearest paved road, so each day the 40-year-old Tarupthurai must carry his tools, seeds, fertilizer, and crops down a dirt path on his back or on his bicycle. "I have asked for a road, and the government says it's under consideration," says the mustachioed, curly-haired farmer. Then he shrugs.

One reason little practical help makes it from the seats of power to India's impoverished villages is that so much money gets siphoned off along the way. With corrupt officials skimming at every step, many public works projects either go over budget or are never completed. "You figure that 25% of the cost goes to corruption," says Verghese Jacob, head of the Byrraju Foundation, which promotes rural development. "And then they do such a bad job that the road falls apart in one year and has to be patched over again," Jacob says as he jostles along in a car on a potholed byway outside Hyderabad.

None of the solutions to India's infrastructure challenges are simple, but business leaders, some enlightened government officials, and even ordinary citizens are chipping in to make things better. The most potent weapon India's reformers have against corruption is transparency. Last October a new right-to-information law went into effect requiring both central and state governments to divulge information about contracts, hiring, and expenditures to any citizen who requests it. The country is also putting to work its vaunted technology prowess to police the government. Officials in 200 districts are using software from Tata Consultancy Services Ltd. to help monitor a government program that offers every rural household a guarantee of 100 days of work per year. Most of this labor goes into public works. To minimize "leakage," the TCS software tracks every expenditure -- and makes all of the information available real-time on a Web site accessible to anyone.

Sometimes frustrated Indians take matters into their own hands. Tired of spending four-plus hours a day in traffic, Aruna Newton last fall helped organize something of a women's crusade to speed up infrastructure improvements. Nearly 15,000 volunteers now monitor key road projects and meet with state officials to press for action. They even enlisted the state chief minister's mother, who helped get his attention. "It's about the collective power of the people," says Newton, a 40-year-old vice-president for Infosys. "I just wish building a road was as easy as writing a software program."

Increasingly, companies trying to expand in India have the government as a willing partner rather than a roadblock. The state of Andhra Pradesh rolled out the red carpet last year for MAS Holdings Ltd. of Sri Lanka, South Asia's largest garment manufacturer. It promised subsidized electricity, new access roads, and even a deepwater port if the company would place a huge industrial park on the southern coast. Now MAS Holdings plans to build a cluster of factories that will eventually employ 30,000 production workers. And it chose India over China. "The government support was absolutely vital," says John Chiramel, India director for MAS Holdings. "If we can work together, there's no stopping growth in this country."

A key to getting massive projects off the drawing boards is forming public-private partnerships where the government and companies share costs, risks, and rewards. In 2005, India passed a groundbreaking law permitting officials to tap such partnerships for infrastructure initiatives. Developers ante up most of the money, collect tolls or other usage fees, and eventually hand the facilities back to the government.

The first project to take advantage of the new law is the $430 million international airport scheduled to open next year in Bangalore. The facility is designed to handle 11.5 million passengers per year -- nearly double the capacity of the overburdened existing airport. It will be owned by a private company, which will turn it over to the Karnataka state government after 60 years. Global engineering and equipment giant Siemens (NYSE:SI - News) is helping to build the facility, and Switzerland's Unique Ltd. will manage it. These companies are also equity investors. The state had to contribute just 18% of the cost. Without such an arrangement, Karnataka wouldn't be getting a new airport.

A lot of India's hopes rest on the airport deal's success. If it proves the viability of public-private partnerships, more such ventures could come pouring in. A visit to the site instills confidence. Project manager Sivaramakrishnan S. Iyer is a crusty veteran of mammoth infrastructure ventures throughout South Asia and the Mideast. Wearing a scuffed hardhat, with a two-day growth of white stubble on his face, he surveys the site from a 2.5-mile-long bed of crushed granite that will be the runway. Work goes on seven days a week, 18 hours a day. Iyer is intent on wrapping up on schedule in April, 2008. "We have the will to do it, and it will be done," he says.

Will the airport open on time? That's not within Iyer's control. Two government authorities are responsible for building the road that leads to the airport, and they're locked in a dispute over how to do it. Work hasn't started.

And so it goes in India. Unless the nation shakes off its legacy of bureaucracy, politics, and corruption, its ability to build adequate infrastructure will remain in doubt. So will its economic destiny.

Saturday 10 February, 2007

Am Back!!!

Well, its not really a slumber. I have been travelling and getting used to a different culture. Getting over my jet lag etc etc. This was my first travel overseas, it was pretty ok. The airline (Lufthansa ) was good, the immigration officer at Chicago was polite and courteous.

Over all, the journey has been good. Phoenix, Arizona is a nice place.

Of the first few things that struck me was that the roads here are so damn wide and good. Then another interesting aspect, is that people in the streets acknowledge you, smile back at you. You do that back in India, ppl think who the heck is this wierdo!!!



So far not much site seeing done.

But yeah, been to the snowbowl@Flagstaff, AZ. Now I dunno why its called snowbowl, presumably because of the snow I guess. Never seen so much snow..well being from Mumbai (Bombay) I have never seen snow like this except in movies. So it was fun for a while.


But in due time, the cold really caught on to me...started feeling really numb.
But then got a little acclimatized and finally helped put a head on the snowman couple of my colleagues were building.
An interesting thing is that, one colleague wanted to make a snowwoman, and the other one a snowman. Imagine what happens when both channel their efforts at the same snow....err.. thing ...

Well the effort was hillarious none the less. The upper part was that of a snowwoman, and the lower part that of a snow man. To avoid being kicked by the locals on account of whatever, we quickly made it a snowman... This was it... Then the ritual to demolish the snowman..well all said and done, we finally made it back to the Hotel after almost 4 hours of driving.

Friday 19 January, 2007

CBB is that such a big deal??

Celebrity Big Brother?? Is that such a big deal?? Well I was wondering whats happening to all these news channels? I guess somebody finally put pen to paper...and it was as below!!!

Found an interesting review on Mouthshut – details below:

So behold we have another WORLD Crisis….Coz poor Shilpa Shetty is being victimized on the Oh-So-classy Big Brother…..in simpler words for all you not-so-alarmed people out there…she is being Racially discriminated against …. Oh-the-disaster !!!! what will we do??? How will we survive??? HELP!!

So this was the top story of the week.. hell it is so important that this can be easily said to the top story of the year…!!! And its only January

Let me give you a glimpse of all the other not-so-important stories that we are constantly bombarded with

Dafur – 400,000 people dead

- This is termed as one of the most gruesome periods in the region. 400,000 dead, and countless displaced. Have you heard?? Thousands of orphaned children, and incidents of rape and murder are a common site.

In the name of ethnic cleansing, Arab militiamen, known as the Janjaweed, are massacering the people of Dafur. The Janjaweed have terrorized the Darfur region by raping women, burning villages, killing Muslim religious leaders, destroying mosques, ruining food stocks, and murdering men women and children alike.

But hey this is not as horrfying as SHILPA SHETTY being called a ‘PAKI’……Save Shetty ….screw Dafur…its not that Important.

Iraq – Almost a civil war – Yeah here is another not-so-important piece of news that we hear about everyday. According to the site http://www.iraqbodycount.org/ around 60,00 Iraqis are dead, some wonderful stats can be found also on http://www.icasualties.org/oif/

The Sunnis kill the Shias, who kill the Sunnis back, till each of them have bodies piled up in stacks, and blood everywhere, dismembered parts lying for the dogs and other scavengers to find. In this wonderful situation also throw in the inherent hatered for Kurds and wht you have my friends is present day Iraq.

And to top it all off, the US is planning to deploy 20,000 more troops to the region for sacrifice (oops!!) …oh I mean to stabilize the region.

But SHILPA SHETTY being called a DOG…How dare they!!!!...hey media…stop boring us with Iraq…tell us more about the DOG incident

India – Reservation Issue – So the bill has been passed, and the polititians have included the Creamy layer, just to ensure that there is no doubt left in our minds as to who exactly this reservation policy is to benefit.
Thousands of students whose voice of reason was met with brutal police force stand witness to exaclty how deaf our political system has become to the real isssues faced by a citizen.

It works in Tamilnadu they say 69% reservation!! So why cannot 50% work in the country???? In Tamilnadu they count 80% of the population as Minority !! so the 20% so-called-upper class are still Majority over the 80% minority???? Hmmm

So now that the bill has been passed and merit rendered useless, we can rejoice coz the foundation has been laid for mediocracy

Still this is not as important as SHILPA SHETTY being called a FAKE….she and fake…NEVER…poor thing!

Global Warming – Doomsday is approaching -

So the Ice shelves are melting, a gigantic piece the size of 11,000 football fields, just broke away from the Canadian mainland in record time. The Artic Ice has shrunk by 250 million acres.
60,000 people die every year from the effects of global warming, from malaria to malnutrition, children in developing nations seemingly the most vulnerable. These numbers could almost double by 2020. Severe weather patters emerging all around the globe, Floods in Thailand, Hurricanes in America, Typhoons in the East. Hundreds and thousands of people without food water or shelter, and so many on the other extreme living in conditions of drought

Not Important!!! What is important is that SHILPA SHETTY is crying…!!! God I cant stand it.

So shrug aside the bodies found in the Nithari connection, the many children molested and killed; But please cover every precious drop that cascade down SHILPA SHETTY’s cheeks.

Don’t tell me about the million of children who are financially exploited as labor, denied and education and robbed of their childhood. But do tell me how hurt SHILPA SHETTY was when the housemates rejected her Chicken

Don’t tell me about the about the father and mother who cannot afford to spend time with their kids coz they barely can afford to survive on both their salaries… But please publicize the measly 3 Crores that SHILPA SHETTY is getting paid to go thru this torture . (Somebody please start a petition to pay that poor girl atleast 15-20 Crores…she deserves better)

Shilpa is constantly taunted, because she has SERVANTS, she is taunted about her accent. But thank god the Indian government has taken up the issue….how could they have been blind to the utmost important issue for so long…I demand answers!!!

And………..I rest my Case!!!!

Thursday 18 January, 2007

Slow Down Culture

A very interesting article!!!!

An interesting reflection. : Slow Down Culture
It's been 18 years since I joined Volvo, a Swedish company. Working for them has proven to be an interesting experience. Any project here takes 2 years to be finalized, even if the idea is simple and brilliant. It's a rule.
Globalize processes have caused in us (all over the world) a general sense of searching for immediate results. Therefore, we have come to posses a need to see immediate results. This contrasts greatly with the slow movements of the Swedish. They, on the other hand, debate, debate, debate, hold x quantity of meetings and work with a slowdown scheme.
At the end, this always yields better results.

Said in another words:
1. Sweden is about the size of San Pablo, a state in Brazil.
2. Sweden has 2 million inhabitants.
3. Stockholm, has 500,000 people.
4. Volvo, Escania, Ericsson, Electrolux, Nokia are some of its renowned companies.

Volvo supplies the NASA. The first time I was in Sweden, one of my colleagues picked me up at the hotel every morning.
It was September, bit cold and snowy. We would arrive early at the company and he would park far away from the entrance (2000 employees drive their car to work). The first day, I didn't say anything, either the second or third. One morning I asked, "Do you have a fixed parking space? I've noticed we park far from the entrance even when there are no other cars in the lot." To which he replied, "Since we're here early we'll have time to walk, and whoever gets in late will be late and need a place closer to the door. Don't you think? Imagine my face.

Nowadays, there's a movement in Europe name Slow Food. This movement establishes that people should eat and drink slowly, with enough time to taste their food, spend time with the family, friends, without rushing. Slow Food is against its counterpart: the spirit of Fast Food and what it stands for as a lifestyle. Slow Food is the basis for a bigger movement called Slow Europe, as mentioned by Business Week. Basically, the movement questions the sense of "hurry" and "craziness" generated by globalization, fueled by the desire of "having in quantity" (life status) versus "having with quality", "life quality" or the "quality of being". French people, even though they work 35 hours per week, are more productive than Americans or British. Germans have established 28.8 hour workweeks and have seen their productivity been driven up by 20%.
This slow attitude has brought forth the US's attention, pupils of the fast and the "do it now!". This no-rush attitude doesn't represent doing less or having a lower productivity. It means working and doing things with greater quality, productivity, perfection, with attention to detail and less stress. It means reestablishing family values, friends, free and leisure time. Taking the "now", present and concrete, versus the "global", undefined and anonymous. It means taking humans' essential values, the simplicity of living. It stands for a less coercive work environment, more happy, lighter and more productive where humans enjoy doing what they know best how to do. It's time to stop and think on how companies need to develop serious quality with no-rush that will increase productivity and the quality of products and services, without losing the essence of spirit.

In the movie, Scent of a Woman, there's a scene where Al Pacino asks a girl to dance and she replies, "I can't, my boyfriend will be here any minute now". To which Al responds, "A life is lived in an instant". Then they dance to a tango.

Many of us live our lives running behind time, but we only reach it when we die of a heart attack or in a car accident rushing to be on time. Others are so anxious of living the future that they forget to live the present, which is the only time that truly exists. We all have equal time throughout the world. No one has more or less. The difference lies in how each one of us does with our time. We need to live each moment.

As John Lennon said, "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans".

Monday 15 January, 2007

An Apartheid Body!!!

Another incident of apartheid comes to face the ICC. This time its some South African playe giving racist abuses to Pakistani spectators.
The International Council for Cricket, well so it says, but its the governing body or rather a protection body only for the white nations of the council.
In spite of the fact that the so called Asian block, is the reason for the cash flows into the ICC, there seems to be absolutely no respect whatsoever for players of non white nations.
The way decisions are given in a cricket match, you would think the umpires have gone blind. And they turn blind only when its the non white player who is at the receiving end. Sachin Tendulkar, one of the most legendary players, has some embarrassing decisions to his name. Namely, shoulder before wicket, pushed out, etc. And what were the umpires doing at that very instance? They were busy doing nothing. Absolutely irritating!!!
Then we have the famous Umpire, Darell Hair. He has an amazing reputation of being able to spot issues or create problems with the Pakistan cricket team or the Sri Lankan cricket team. His friendship with Muttiah Muralitharan is almost a tale of legends!!! Mr. Darell Hair called Murali for a no ball seven times during the course of a match. Even the legendary batsman, the late Sir Don Bradman was quoted as saying "worst example of umpiring that [he had] witnessed, and against everything the game stands for. Clearly Murali does not throw the ball".

If you look at players behaviour, white players are forgiven under the pretext of mere aggression or some other word, while non white players are pulled up for setting up wrong examples for the game. This smacks of double standards!!! The Australian team is the worst example of sportsmanship. They are undoubtedly the best team yet, but does that require them to be shamelessly arrogant? This team has a history of unwanted situations, they get into. I wont waste cyber space with repetitions of their childish behaviour. The West Indian team was also at its peak in the initial years of this game. No one could challenge their skills or the team. Yet, they were never so arrogant. Then what is it that makes this new lot so arrogant?

The BCCI on its part is just a pack on spineless individuals, who do not have any guts to put forth a fight for its players!! The way certain individuals are selected into the Indian cricket team, we wonder if they select the team by drawing lots? Our selectors are the worst!!!
Wonder when things might change. When would fair play prevail? Lets wait and watch!!!

Cleopatra - The Play

Cleopatra, this was the name of the play I saw yesterday. This is not some official review, but some thoughts I would like to write out.
The play was well directed. It seemed just right, though it could do better. The characters were well portrayed by the cast. Personally, I liked the character of Julius Caesar`s son ( I don't recall the name right now). This person was also the director of the play. The rest of the cast was good as well.

One line which would remain etched in memory would be the one said when one of Mark Antony`s key lieutenant switches loyalties to Caesar before the war.
It goes some thing like "Its easy for the wise to betray, for the wise can outsmart their conscience.!!!"

The play does not narrate the entire story of Cleopatra, I believe its expects its audience to be aware of Cleopatra and Julius Caesar`s love story. The play starts from the point where Julius Caesar is no more, and Mark Antony and Cleopatra are in love with each other. This is also about the same time when Rome is faced with external threats. It builds up on Caesars frustration at Mark Antony being lost in love with Cleopatra, ignoring Rome.

The story is built on these premises, and I dont wanna spoil the fun of watching it, by writing all its story!!!
You should be probably going and seeing it for yourselves.

Just one observation... I was hoping that people would know how to behave during a play. We had people who were rude enough to keep their cellphones on full blast during the duration of the play, absolutely rude and uncouth!!!

Monday 8 January, 2007

THE SPOON!!!!

The Spoon
Last week, we went to a new restaurant, & noticed the waiter carried a spoon in his shirt pocket. It seemed a little strange. When the busboy brought our water, I noticed he also had a spoon in his shirt pocket. Then I looked around & saw that all the staff had spoons in their pockets.
When the waiter came back to serve our soup I asked, "Why the spoon?"
"Well, he said, the restaurant's owners hired a Chartered Professional Engineering firm to revamp all our processes. They concluded that the spoon was the most frequently dropped utensil. It represents a drop frequency of approximately 3 spoons per table per hour. If we are better prepared, we can reduce the number of trips back to the kitchen and save 15 man-hours per shift."
As luck would have it, I dropped my spoon and he was able to replace it with his spare. "I'll get another spoon next time I go to the kitchen instead of making an extra trip to get it right now."
I was impressed. I also noticed that there was a string hanging out of the waiter's fly. Looking around, I noticed that all the waiters had the same string hanging from their flies. So before he walked off, I asked the waiter, "Excuse me, but can you tell me why you have that string right there?"
"Oh, certainly!" then he lowered his voice. "Not everyone is so observant.The engineering firm also found out that we can save time in the restroom.By tying this string to the tip of you know what, we can pull it out without touching it and eliminate the need to wash our hands, shortening the time spent in the restroom by 76.39%.
I asked "After you get it out, how do you put it back?"
"Well," he whispered, "I don't know about the others, but I use the spoon."



THATS IT!! Henceforth I am carrying my own spoon to any restaurant!!!

Saturday 6 January, 2007

The Ramayana , A Devi & The Sadhu and list goes on...



The title might make this look like some kinda religious discourse based blog. Albeit NO!!!
Its all about outputs from a new venture between Shekhar Kapur, Gotham Kapoor & Virgin Comics ( Richard Branson ).

http://www.virgincomics.com/preview.html


The results are amazing. The drawings are surreal!! Am impressed. The take on Ramayana is something new. Its a far far fetch from Ramanand Sagar's Ramayana ( Indian audiences would be familiar with it. )

This version of Ramayana is a story told somewhere after 3000 A.D. Have a peak at the graphics below.



























The other one is a story told of Shakti. The storyline is similar to that of Goddess Durga. But again put in a new modern approach. Graphics as below:





The difference between the Goddess
Durga and the characterization of Devi is that she is a mortal, who gets her powers in each birth. Another twist in the story is that Devi is the girlfriend of one of the key henchmen of the villain in this storyline. The Villain is known as Bala, whose background again is that of a fallen angel who rises again, but with powers much beyond the other Gods.



The next in this series is The Sadhu. Look at the graphics below.


This story is set during the Indian Independence struggle. And is based on an english soldier.

I would like to read these comics, especially so for the NRI kids who might be on a staple diet of Marvel & DC comics. Though my statement might be wrong. Another aspect is how this would be welcomed in India? Would the saffron brigade create hurdles? Would self proclaimed champions of Indian culture come out and create effigies ? I would keep a wait and watch attitude!!

Nevertheless comic buffs could visit the link mentioned above and get a glimpse of all thats in store, there is an offering from John Woo, and some other noted guys as well!! On a personal note, am waiting to get my hands on it!!!


Wednesday 3 January, 2007

Anatomy of a cold

for those who think, that I would be discussing what a cold is in biological terms, No, not at all. This is a way to vent out my sheer fustration of suffering from cold.


Cold or Cough or whatever you call it. It can strike you any moment, can catch you completely off gaurd... And once it strikes, there is no escape. Its like a barbaric sworde of armymen who burn and pillage and wreak havoc on places they attack. In the end there are just corpses strewn around.
Similary, once the damn cold attacks, it attacks you, blah blah ( achooo) , etc etc...

And somehow every one in this world has some important thing, which they wish you to attend, when you have a cold. The importance of the task is directly proportional to the nastiness of your cold.


I have emptied almost half of the bottle of pepper powder, but to no effect. The cold still haunts me. The bottle of cough syrups is almost emptied, the medicines are almost over...but the DAMN COLD STILL PERSISTS!!! If only our cricket team could persist so well in the face of adversity.


I sincerely hope, some scientist maps the genetic code of the cold virus and help humanity destroy this virus. Ironically, the cold virus is the one virus which saves all of humanity from being mutated or whatever it was, in one of Robin Cooks novel. I guess it was called "Invasion".


Tuesday 2 January, 2007

Greetings and some Retrospection

We now start the new year...after waiting for exactly a year, I finally get to see the year 2007.
I sincerely hope that his year turns out good.
Unfortunately, for a few folks the new year also started with some bad news

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601101&sid=aVv3D1a8XamM&refer=japan

http://www.irishexaminer.com/breaking/story.asp?j=205806766&p=zx58x747z&n=205807526

May these be the only unfortunate incidents this year.

On the personal front, I have couple of milestones and look forward to successfully achieving them.
In retrospection, last year was an eventful year on the professional front.
We created an entirely new architecture for our project. I revamped the codes, to bring down the processing time to 1 hour from the previous 10 hours. For that I deserve a pat on my back!! (which I did get...along with a kick on my butt!!)
And as we go ahead, we have plenty of technical challenges on our hands. Not to mention the usual story of funds and resource crunches!!!
Plenty of events awaiting to unfold themselves gradually this year!!

Wishing everybody a very happy new year!!