Friday, January 01, 2010

Three most interesting books of 2009

I had a very interesting & absorbing 2009. I was able to complete some really good projects within proper timelines & without any major hiccups (I don’t think any project can be completely hiccup-free). Nevertheless, to keep me going through the year & to have me inspired, I had the pleasure of a few good books. So I just wanted to share with all of you three of the best books of 2009 that I came across and what you can seek from these books.

At the same time, I would like to strongly endorse this new site called Audible (audible.com). Audible offers audio books and was taken over by Amazon, so you can get almost all of the new books in audio format at this site.

The first book that entertained me thoroughly was Outliers by Malcolm Gladwell. Gladwell has this rare skill of presenting very original & fresh ideas through tightly knitted stories. In Outliers, he goes on to explore what exactly are the not so manifest reason behind the most successful of people in all walks of life. Be it Beatles or Bill Gates or Athletes or Lawyers, what separates these outstanding professionals from the other ordinarily successful people in their respective profession. The idea of Ten Thousand Hours from the book has already caught the imagination of popular media and I have heard it in lots of public discourses. The idea says that it takes 10,000 hours of thought initiated actions in any respective line of work to gain maestro like expertise. Do read the book for loads of interesting and original ideas coupled with equally convincing stories.

Another book that I enjoyed very much was the Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson. The author is a well renowned historian who walks you through the history of money from its initial days of coming into existence right through the economic meltdown of 2008-09. He explains most of the important ideas associated with popular financial products, like stocks, bonds, forex, insurance, options etc., along with the history associated to each of them. I think it becomes very easy to understand contemporary financial products if we know the necessity that originated them. The author has drawn profusely from a huge list of other books which gives further credence to the simple explanations he has provided in the book. Anyone who wants to understand the larger picture of global money markets must certainly read this book.

Lastly, I would recommend The Age of Turbulence by none other than Alan Greenspan. Greenspan was the chairman of Federal Reserve Bank in US for almost two decades. Half of the book is like a biography of Greenspan along with his remarks on the economic landscape. Then in the second part of the book, he goes full throttle and that too with utmost candor, on his opinions of the global economic universe. If you are interested in unraveling the economic puzzles of current times, then there is none other available with such an authority. After all he was literally the master of the financial universe for more than two decades.

Wish you all a fabulous new year and I hope there are lots of even more beautiful books coming our way.

Friday, December 11, 2009

In India, Anxiety Over the Slow Pace of Innovation

Hi Everyone! I read this article today & felt like sharing with all of you. Its a good read.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/09/business/global/09innovate.html

Saturday, November 14, 2009

Dutch Disease (The curse of Oil)

I came across an interesting economic phenomenon referred to as “Dutch Disease” in economic parlance. So let me share this concept with you.

The concept states that contrary to the popular belief, natural-resource bonanzas tend to reduce rather than enhance living standards in an economy. Dutch Disease strikes when foreign demand for an export drives up the exchange value of the exporting country’s currency. This increase in the currency’s value makes the nation’s other export products less competitive. Analysts often cite this pattern as a reason why relatively resource-poor Hong-Kong, Japan, and Western Europe have thrived while oil-rich Nigeria and other have not.

Besides distorting the value of currency, natural-resource wealth often has crippling social effects. Easy, unearned wealth tends to dampen productivity, it turns out. Some Gulf oil states have extended so many amenities to their citizens that those without an inbred will to work don’t. Mundane tasks fall to immigrants and guest workers who gladly collect what is to them a good wage. This is easily manifest in a large menial workforce from Indian subcontinent in the Gulf.

Dutch disease primarily afflicts developing countries because resource bonanzas are more apt to dwarf the GDP of a developing country than that of a developed one. But nevertheless it can strike anywhere with pernicious effect. Britain felt this when they discovered oil in North Sea & Russia is still grappling with a milder form of this phenomenon.

Hope you found this as interesting & counter intuitive as I did. I have brazenly stolen this material from Alan Greenspan’s latest book, The Age of Turbulence. I will be sharing other similar findings as and when encountered.

Good day everyone.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Cashflow Quadrant

Cashflow Quadrant (CQ) by Robert Kiyosaki is an extremely fascinating book on the subject of money. It will motivate you and may even provoke (stimulate) you to leave your current job to start your own business. So I just wanted to summarize it for all of you busy-bees out there who will never read it even after my multiple cajoling.

So here is a 3 minute primer on Cashflow Quadrant. Here how it looks like. What Kiyosaki suggests is that there are four completely different mindset and qualities that exist at the 4 quadrants of the CQ. And from his personal and empirical analysis, he has observed that people on the Right side are better off at escaping the rat race than people on the Left side.

Note that the arrows here are suggestive of how you can reach from the LEFT side of the quadrant to the right side. The directions are suggested so as to maximizing your chances of successfully reaching the 4th quadrant of Investor. This is suggested as it takes changing or developing some of your deep seated attitudes before hopping to another quadrant. Just to add to this, no quadrant is, per se, better off than another when it comes to making money. A high paying employee may be sometimes better off than an average investor. But in order to achieve financial freedom, one must have active incomes from at least 2 quadrants. And as I mentioned in the previous blog (Rat Race), your PI > Expenses. So your income coming from quadrant where you active involvement is zero should slowly catch-up and then cross your expenses.

Let me explain this with a simple example. Say your monthly expenses are 50K, so all you need to achieve first to get out of rat race is to generate 50K in passive income. Now you can make this with rents from property, dividends and interests from stocks and bonds, or best of all positive cashflows from your won business. I know it’s a tough call, but just imagine the results.

So I’ll leave that decision to you. I just wanted to introduce you all to the CQ. So if you want more juice, read the book. Else wait for my subsequent posts on money-making. Just to add a final note here. I have myself decided to be out of Rat Race by Dec 2011. So let’s race to hit the escape velocity.....

Happy Reading till next post.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Rat Race

You wake up in the morning, get ready & commute to work. You come back late at night, spend some time with family and you're back to work the next day. Work takes maximum amount of your time and in return you get salary for it. You get so dependent over the time to this salary, that you can't imagine risking it for any other thing. You start learning how to grow in your JOB, how to become a manager one day, how to grow your annual income so that you can buy a fancier car, house or any other gizmo. And then you get a baby, those little cuties that will now start its claims on your income in an exponential manner. Did it ever occur to you that you are running an endless race?

Let me call this a rat race. Did you imagine growing up to be rat like this who keeps chasing salaries at the end of every month for his sustenance? I certainly did not. I expected and still do that any man who is competent enough should have enough time at his disposal for all his pleasures; like spending time with your loved ones, kids, hobbies, movies, games and what not. Ahhh I know some of you will say well work is worship. Well don't read ahead if you're one of the work worshippers. I have better things to worship.

So let me unravel this simple formula to get out of this rat race.

If Your Monthly Income < Your Monthly Passive Income, you're in the rat race.

But if, your Monthly Income > Your Monthly Passive Income, tadaaa you're out of the rat race.

Once you're out of the rat race, you are a free bird. No more getting tied to your work like a donkey. NO more commuting to your office like a herd of sheep. No more accepting all the twits (read management) in your office. You are now a man who can be himself. You are liberated. And I truly believe that now onwards you will be more effective in everything you do, your boring job too if you still wanna do it. Or who knows you might one of those blessed ones, who truly love their jobs.

Let me demystify this further with a simple example. Say your monthly expenses are 50K, so all you need to achieve first to get out of rat race is to generate 50K in passive income. Now you can make this with rents from property, dividends and interests from stocks and bonds, or best of all positive Cashflow from your won business. I know it's a tough call, but just imagine the results. I personally have decided to be out of rat race by Dec 2011.

I'll be posting another blog on the subject of Cashflow very soon. So let's race to hit the escape velocity…….

Happy Reading till next post.


Tuesday, December 09, 2008

A Safer World: Uprooting Terrorism

The city of Mumbai witnessed one of the most brutal terrorist attacks on Wednesday, Nov 26th. The sheer magnitude and manner with which the terrorists entered and attacked the city completely shocked the entire nation. People around the world were taken aback by the sheer audacity with which these young looking men carried their mission, killing roughly 200 people with complete impunity.

The wounds this incident has inflicted on the hearts of my countrymen will not heal in a short span of time. The spirit of Mumbai with which we have often been attributed is nothing but a shameful mask of our indifference and complete apathy. Indians don’t feel the pain till it happens to a member of their family. Kashmir has been burning for almost 3 decades now; Naxalis have been active in the eastern states from time immemorial; but we were never even impacted with the news of such activities. It was all happening at a safe distance from us and  just another piece of statistical information to be read and forgotten.

But this time, the anger is palpable and some really tough questions are being asked. I will not indulge in another set of retorts to reiterate hundreds of such questions which are being posed by every other news channel in the country. As a fellow countryman, I would like to present my perspective on resolving the root cause of Terrorism and how to deal with it.

I believe that one requires immense motivation and conviction to carry out such an heinous act of terrorism. We should peek into the psyche of these young terrorists to find out what provoked them to carry out these acts. I believe that any act of injustice acts as a trigger that stimulates some minds to take such a monstrous path. Let us all be conscious of any perpetrator of such gross injustices, which converts minds to extremism, and stop them. Let us all resolve to strengthen, both in execution and conviction, our Judiciary and Law Enforcement Agencies. Let there be not another Kashmir, Godhra, 1984 Sikh Riots, Orissa Riots or any other similar unfortunate incident in this country.

Secondly, we must beef up our intelligence systems and all law enforcement agencies. Its appalling to even compare the kind of arms our police are using when measured against the Kalashnikovs of the terrorists. The communication networks around the continent must be monitored by intelligent voice pattern matching and recognition systems. It’s an irony that India is the outsourcing and IT hub of the world and we ourselves don’t seem to have any national identity and security system in place. I guess these are extremely achievable goals. 

Lastly, I feel that India must adopt a harsher stand on all insurgency and terrorist incidents. We must not be recognized as a soft state which remains tolerant to such episodes. Also important is the fact that we must contain the virus of corruption which is highly rampant in our country. Corruption acts as a termite hollowing the entire administrative apparatus of our country. All the administrative positions in our country, including the police and law enforcement agencies, have a price ticker attached to them. And if one has to reach these positions, it’s their money and political linkages rather than their sheer capability which becomes the selection criterion. Let all positions be taken by an individual who truly earns it. 

We should all try to build a consensus this time and then create some citizen apparatus to counter this threat to our country. Let there be action and not just empty talks.
Do drop in your suggestions too. 
 


Saturday, November 22, 2008

The Secret

I just completed reading “The Secret”. And I feel the author has done a good marketing maneuver by naming it “The Secret”. It kinda draws you to it. At the core, the book has basically put the old wine in a new glamorous bottle. But then, the age old wisdom needs to be iterated in a newer manner every now and then to appeal to and reach out to the larger audiences.

The core principle the book brings out is the prominence of the Law of Attraction at the thought level. Whatever your predominant thoughts are, you are attracting that into your reality. Its so rightly said in the book, Thoughts become Things. If you really think about it, it’s a beautiful message as it not only helps you to become aware of your thoughts but then also nurture them to carve your future. So now onwards better mind your thoughts and be sure of your wishes because the Universe will respond to it by granting it to you. 

I will recommend the book to all of you who need some refilling of inspiration in your life. The book does a very good job of collating all such related inspirational quotes and structures them in a simple manner. It could be your next bedside inspirational book.

Stay beautiful and keep nurturing better thoughts. 

Saturday, August 09, 2008

Omar Abdullah's Speech

Hi everyone. I just want you all to listen to this speech once. So I'm just pasting the link here as a means to spread this message.

http://in.youtube.com/watch?v=-mr2Fjw5A0A

I seriously doubt the future of our country if this is the way the biggest boardroom of the country is run. When will the ministers of our country realise the gravity of tasks at their hand? When will they rise above realpolitik & stand up to bring forth reforms that will march our country to the path of a developed one. 

Friday, August 01, 2008

I seek some answers

I am a taxpayer. I pay taxes assuming they would be employed to improve the overall infrastructure of the country. But to my dismay, I see the condition of my nation worsening day by day. There are a few eye-catching architectural feats which the Government does boast with extreme vigor but why don’t I see the conditions around my surroundings improve.

I live in Bangalore which is highly regarded as the IT hub of the country. The local government collects considerable amount of taxes but the situation on the ground is worsening. I spend approximately 90 minutes in commuting to my workplace. Ideally it should take a mere 30 minutes. This way I lose an hour of productivity on daily basis. It’s not difficult to calculate the national loss in man-hours if you consider this across all the major Indian cities. At the same time commuting in such coarse traffic is too sapping. You really need to maintain your patience to bear it on a daily basis.

The world is highly competitive place and these issues, howsoever trivial we may consider them, work against our competitive edge. I still believe that India’s major competitive edge is it’s the cost-arbitrage that big multinationals gain by establishing their shops here. I don’t believe in the tremendous talent pool that we Indians often boast off. This will become manifest if you just look at the quality of education in our colleges. Also with the growing salaries of the Indian professional, the cost-arbitrage seems to be diminishing with every passing day.

The Indian markets are attracting lots of foreign & domestic players with an alluring and expanding middle-income group. But I have my own apprehensions regarding the growing incomes of the Indian Professional. Trees never grow to the skies and so will our salaries. If we ever surpass the Global salary standards then we need to surpass the quality of our contribution too at the global level. That again comes back to the quality of our skills as a nation & the fundamentals we put into making that happen. Rising real-estate prices may augur a home-grown subprime crisis of our own. I really get horrified of the day these prices may fall steeply. The day the price of the loans on our houses becomes greater than the house itself, I doubt the readiness of the person to honor his mortgages.

Some people put forth an argument that we are a young (58 years old) democratic nation and these issues shall remain with us. I challenge the notion of our youth by comparing us with countries like Israel, Japan, China and Singapore. We as a nation need to arise & take up the challenge. Let’s ask our Government to provide their annual Balance Sheets. Let there be transparency and accountability in the annual outlays of the Government expenditures. Let me know as a citizen the granular distribution of my taxes to these initiatives.

I just want to take pride in making building my nation. So I seek some answers.

Am I asking too much?

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

An Inconvenient Truth


I saw "An Inconvenient Truth" by AlGore just 2 days back. AlGore received a Nobel in peace for his initiatives in spreading environmental awareness towards global warming. And I must say that the Nobel was one of the major influences for me to watch this presentation by Mr. AlGore.

I've been largely a skeptic of man as the primary causal agent of Global Warming. I'd read about environmental fundamentalists , magnetic tilt of the planet and other similar theories suggesting that man and his actions are just another brick in the lane. But having seen this presentation by AlGore, I must say that I've changed sides. I would suggest all of you to at least have a look at it.

His primary message to all of us is to be cognizant of the facts related to Global Warming and the dire repercussions it may trigger. What's at stake here? The answer is planet Earth, our “pale blue dot” in the vastness of the universe which encapsulates all our history, victories, philosophies, tragedies and accomplishments. We have an obligation to leave it intact, if not more beautiful, to our future generations.

Another vital message he leaves is that it doesn't require monumental programs to combat the threat, but simple initiatives at human level which can spark a revolution to save our planet. Some of these are:

1. Changing our lights to compact fluorescent ones to conserve energy.
2. Driving less and car-pooling to minimize our usage of fossil fuels.
3. Recycling more and more and more. Using less paper. Taking lesser prints.
4. Checking air pressure in out tires.
5. Using less hot water. It takes a lot of energy to heat water.
6. Avoiding products with lots of packaging, especially with plastics.
7. Adjusting you air-conditioners and thermostats.
8. Planting a tree. A single tree will absorb one ton of CO2 over its lifetime.
9. Turning off electronic devices when you're not using them.
10. Being a part of the solution.

You can find more information on the subject matter at www.ClimateCrisis.net.

Have a beautiful day.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Writing...

After a long time I'm trying to pen down some thoughts today. I always love writing as it brings me closer to myself, my inner being. It’s tough to lie to yourself and even tougher to window dress your own perceptions. But then that's what effective fiction writing is all about. One needs to get in the psyche of the characters who he is trying to bring to life with words.

I aspire to write with such panache someday. I hope I do. Life has gotten very busy lately, and for good too. Work has been really occupying all this time and learning has been extremely good. But I sometime miss connecting back to my conscience the way I used to do. I'm not a prolific writer or an artist. I have always needed ample amount of time to create any of my compositions or my simple posts here on Thought Garden.

This post is just a reminder to me and my little audience out there that this log is still alive and I'll be back shortly and with much more to offer.

Thanks.

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Seeds...

Your work is your only means to immortality.

Monday, October 22, 2007

My greatest learning at work so far....

Well it's been more than six months that I've been working. It still comes as a surprise to people who know me closely coz of my legendary laze. But trust me the experience has been an extremely enthralling one. There have been times when you feel like utterly underutilized and bored. But everyone said that enjoy your honeymoon, your time will come. And guess what, it has arrived with a bang.

I'm kinda flooded with projects that consume me both physically & mentally. And that's the best part of a good job, that it challenges your mental faculties with unforeseen problems & issues. So in order to get a grip on things that were driving me crazy, I came up with my simple rules of engagement at work. I just wanted to pen them down, more so to keep reminding me of my tactics to tackle complexity.

Firstly, the most important attribute you should have at the back of your mind is that its not the knowledge that counts, its your ability to learn & apply what you've learnt that counts. Learnability is more important than what you know.

Secondly, always challenge existing ways of work. Don't just work if anything is assigned to you. Understand it, dig the technology, get the perspective and streamline the process. Remember there are no sacred cows. Be very candid with your observation & always never hesitate to "ask". Stay hungry, stay foolish.

Thirdly, work is a verb. Let it be a verb. Its good to strategize, but at the end of the day execution is the best strategy. Action is Salvation. Wow that has some Zen like aesthetics to it too.

Lastly always think whether your deliverables are directly usable & applicable to the senior management. Be it your manager or clients, just ask yourself, "Is my work gonna be useful to them? Will it help them to simplify their work? Can they reuse it with minimal changes?" Results matter, but the presentation & simplicity of your work is paramount too. Reusablity is the basis of effective delegation.

So that's my first dip into the management theory for mere mortals. Do drop in your comments so that you could see more of Drucker & Omhae synthesized for you. Have a challenging day...

Friday, October 12, 2007

What makes a great society?

Today I would like to write about my perceptions on Science, Business & Art. To me, they form the three most important pillars of the cultural acropolis. I’ve always had this belief that science & business are the vanguards of mankind. They take the entire mankind a step ahead every single day. Art, on the other hand, provides pleasure necessary to keep our senses stimulated for any form of significant accomplishment. After all being human entails a heightened emotional existence.

Science envisions & unravels the future through technology, which I regard as its applied arm. By exploring the uncharted realms, it not only adds significant value to our existing way of life but also nurtures our understanding of our very existence. I really have a very strong belief that humans carve the very landscape of this planet, and science has been our toolbox. Science continuously defies the basic tenet of economics that “resources are scarce” by coming with innovative ideas to generate more wealth & prosperity.

Business on the other hand is the true wealth (value) creation mechanism and harnesses available resources in imaginative ways make a prosperous world. And this wealth in turn fosters further research & scientific pursuits. Throughout history, men of nerve and vision have revolutionized our lives and them simpler and better. Some people challenge this perception, but just peek into history and ask, “When did we have an ear of such welfare when we could earn our livelihood through mere mental work?”

Art is mere concretization of one’s beliefs, value systems and perceptions on a canvas. Art directly provides respite, pleasure & stimulation to our senses by pampering to our emotional state. And so I feel it symbolizes the depth of any culture or a society.

Together they form the three critical triads of the society. And any society which ignores any one of these cannot expect an eternal or holistic development. That’s one of the reasons you’ll witness maximum scientific enquiries & works of art during times of great prosperity. Prosperity alleviates man of his basic needs to indulge into the luxuries of his desires.

Oooph… That was deep. Who has time for all this crap? But I just wanted to write about it all. Hope you guys enjoyed it. Do add anything you feel I've missed in my simplistic picture. Have a good day.

Sunday, October 07, 2007

What do I live for?

Let’s start with some of the simplest questions that keep haunting us, perhaps only me, days and nights. Indeed it’s these simple questions which are toughest to answer.

What gives me eternal happiness? What keeps me going? Why do I work where I work? What do I want to become? What’s my greatest passion? What’s my most cherished dream … What do I live for?
Sometimes in our quest for our dreams, we lose sense of what we started this chase for, in the first place. We get entangled in the daily chores of our lives so much that we lose sense of our very existence. We start missing the whole picture, trying to figure out our role in this mosaic of life. The other day I too was facing all these dilemmas. And I just scribbled these lines to challenge my deepest desires. I admit that sometimes I take myself too seriously. But in the course of my small life I’ve learnt one of my biggest lessons, "One shouldn't take oneself too seriously, sometimes." Trust me, it helps.

So here are a few replies from my conscience to the questions I posed. I don’t claim to have a panacea here for all the world’s troubles. These are neither complete nor exhaustive. After all, I’m still a work in progress. So I welcome all of you to add to the "Thought Garden" with your seeds too. But don’t forget to keep it simple.

Mann’s simple rules for a happy life:

- to have someone to love you back with the same intensity that you do & to see her happy
- to see your children admire & love you and regard you as your first heroes in life
- to see your parents contented in your growth and taking pride in you
- to see your siblings loving you without any bias & caring for you
- to see your friends trusting you & confiding in you
- to see your partners & colleagues believing in you & challenging you regularly

I hope these words touched a chord. Now its your turn to seed some thoughts back to the garden. Stay beautiful. Auvoir

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Love Revisited

It’s been such a long time I have contributed anything to the blog, and so I’ll write again on the topic that got me maximum comments. Let’s talk about love gain. I’m not writing this to brew more comments at the blog, but to express my feelings on love, specially now, and for someone really special. As usual I won’t trade in names and I’ll say this again, I write for myself. If you enjoy or seek literary or any form of artistic pleasure out of this, I’ll take that as a compliment on my sincerity of expression. Because we all share same instinctive feelings and can relate to them. Don’t we do that in books & movies?

I’m in love & gladly with someone who shares the same passion & intensity as I do. How did this all happen? It all looks like a mirage now. It just happened. We talk & talk & talk. And then sometimes I feel how we could understand each other so intuitively. It feels as if we are meeting after a long break, “Where have you been?” that’s what I asked her too. And she in her typical coquettish manner replies, “I was here waiting for you naa”. Is it her childlike innocence or is it her happy-go-lucky attitude or is it her simplicity or is it her thoughts which reinvigorate all my senses or is it just her smile. I don’t know what I fell for. But I feel blessed.

Sometimes I wonder, will things remain as charming as now between us forever. But then I feel like going with the flow. Its like river-tubing, you just flow with the river & then after some time you don’t seek to challenge the river’s course but start enjoying the scenes it brings to you. I wish this river keeps flowing like this forever & brings to us more & more beautiful vistas.
For the first time, I’ve also started to feel more responsible in life. It feels that your decisions ricochet her life too and hers yours. But the real beauty is in the fact that it doesn’t feel like yielding yourself to someone else. It feels like having someone for whom you were building all the time, building your aspirations, your dreams and your life. Didn’t I say you don't love a woman because she is beautiful; she is beautiful because you love her.

I’m glad I never love with my mind. And I hope I never do. So welcome back to the thought garden. And today I’ve again sown some more romantic seeds. After all what’s this world without love. Love makes a house a home, and it makes this planet our world. Keep me inspired…

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Memoirs of a SCITian…

The last days of our college life have approached. The campus looks deserted as if life has been sapped from it. We’ve seen this place flooded with activity and people & now it looks like an empty place waiting for new blood to enliven it again. That’s the trend of the world. Our two years in this campus are almost over & its “goodbye” time. Seeing off people is really tough. So today I’ll walk down the memory lane and shall pen down some events out of these memorable two years.

It was June 2005 when I came to SCIT. I certainly had my expectations; Expectations about everything. How would the people be? What’s gonna be the pressure like (Yes I did expect that when I came here)? How will I be able to survive with people sharing my room? And of course how will the gals be? Well looking back I guess I was too naïve. Living in hostel with people hailing from varied parts of the country is some experience. I feel you can’t feign at 2’o clock at night while boozing around and stripped to your minimum possible attire. That’s when you witness the real person inside. And perhaps that’s when you realize that we’re all too same. We share similar ambitions, similar pleasures and of course passion for women. That’s the greatest leveler. Booze & sutta come to a very close second place.

After striking initial chords, the party animals inside us came out. And I truly feel our drunken revelries shall be deeply inscribed in the very psyche of the college & the restaurants around. I never thought people could drink so much, esp. from the background I hail where I had seen some grand liquor parties… but ya I was in for a huge surprise. Somebody Beat us at it…. The network guys suck(only Booze pls literally) it all. Then came our indecent yet noble birthday bashes. You gotta pad up your asses buddy else you’ll regret sitting in proper posture for days to come. I can specially recollect the great Zulu dance we guys performed at Chacha’s & DK’s birthday last year. I hope it doesn't become another MMS scandal for others to savour.

Ya I wrote Chacha & DK. Believe that’s the name they’ll never wanna forget ever in their lives. We all had names. Some real cool ones. Trust you have to earn one. A proper sobriquet does bring out your grandest attribute. So Abhishek journeyed from being Bhatija to Kukhi, Ajay aka Gym for his typical accent, Tiku remained a Tiku.. I guess the name has it all.. u can’t just add to it, Gupte aka Chhava for his eagerness to solicit gal’s townships( R U frm Chinchpokli?), Anni became Cadet for his military like rectitude, of course our loveliest Ankur who ventured from being a Tourist to Dhinchak and what not, Ashish aka Chinta( I prefer PG — The chint with a hole), Charles who ultimately got baptized as a Sheikh, Dhawal too had his share ultimately settling for his heroic antics to DK BHOSE, Manish aka Baniya Babu for being true to his culture, Piyush became PPiyuuuuuuuush the Bomber Man…. Do u know what Piyush has eaten…and ya later on Pujari & the best of all Casa****, PK became R**** for the lovely face he makes… he’s the batch’s darling. Pradeep aka Parry…. suits his stride Maan, Pranab aka CHIKARI for a reason I can’t trace, Priyankur aka Takki… he truly achieved it man… he became the highest paid Techie from the batch, Rajat remained Rajat… trust me he didn’t want any.. Otherwise he would have been showered with our creativity, Rajiv aka Teddy… aka Teddy BEER.. mind the E’s, Ritesh became Body to Dead Body( SIC Strongman)… but man he played it all… generations at SIC will wait for someone with similar determination to play it all, Sabarinath aka Sabu for his literal towering height… hey is it cool in there? Samir became Maru to Kaua… man he has some musical talent… what a lovely voice.. it can raise dead bodied from their graveyard slumber, Sanjiv the Bengali and ya don’t tell anyone but he’s got the real *ornvita… he’s our *onnoisseur, Saurabh aka Gabbar… can u find anything else for him… they say all paths lead to one & so does his sobriquet, next comes The SIC strongman…. Shreyansh Saroha… well he became Choudhary **** Singh…. But Choudhary stuck, now comes Soumya, The Master… well our master has some severe itch & so he was honored with the nomination of ths Sarpanch of the T-Choupal, ahh we’ve saved the best for the last.. here comes Kalyat Kalyat Kalyat(with an echo of f***in ) ….. well he’s the grand old man with the youngest heart amongst us… I call him Anna too and we had some real cooool discussions over booze…. Man he’s got some knowledge, then we’ve our quality guy Vikas, the Chindi… well you know in hostels prudence gets baptized as stinginess… and so he got this name, and at last our beloved Chacha, ie Gaurav… well we started with Bhatija & we’re ending with Chacha jaan… So these are our priceless pen-names that we shall call each other with even when we’ll have become respectable members of our society, as if we’re not. If any of you is p***ed off with this names then try being a little honest & transparent to the two years of your existence in here. Man you earned it. By The way the .COM aka Kaadi is always here to get some heated comments & mails.

Well why I am not mentioning the 7-layers of our Networking Batch Stack. That’s our gals. I guess I’ll tread it safe here for it’s a damn tight rope walk. Haven’t we had our share in these two years? Anyway I guess after these 2 years don’t we know each other beyond our skins. If you gals still insist on your leg pulling you can mail me personally for a long discourse.

So guys, there is so much that I’m taking from these two years. Beautiful moments of present times become fondest memories in the future. The album of my life has been populated to the fondest memories of all time. And it’s all because of all your little little nuances. We shall remember those trifles more than anything else each other. I know all of you are going places in life. It’s been an honor to be a part of all your lives. I’ll miss our T-choupal, Shivaji’s vada-pav, POC nights, Sports week with its obscenities esp. from gals, strolls around the campus, Wipro’s thela, CS’s strategic maps, our immense movie collection, D-Hostel’s café at late nights, our birthday bashes, and of course our drunken revelries at Dhanshree. And ya I’ll take back a few memories of someone special. I guess the British coined this word exactly for me,” smitten”. But then as Kalyat said what’s a college life without some such bravado. I’m going back very rich with a huge surplus in the album of my life.

I hope you must be getting this creepy feeling that why I didn’t ever mention about the acads as a part of our college lives. Well now don’t act here buddy. Did we have acads? Let your conscience (con-science) give you an honest reply. All I’ll treasure forever will be Anajali Mam and of course Hariharan. Ravindra Sir too did his best to aloe for a smooth sail.

So all of you SCITians… I’m dying to see ya all once again in one campus one last time at the convo. Let’s make it a day to remember forever. Let’s party one last time like no one has ever imagined.

And lastly let’s rock the industry…… We’re the best.

Monday, April 02, 2007

The whole universe is in a glass of wine

A poet once said "The whole universe is in a glass of wine". We will probably never know in what sense he meant that, for poets do not write to be understood. But it is true that if we look at a glass closely enough we see the entire universe. There are the things of physics: the twisting liquid which evaporates depending on the wind and weather, the reflections in the glass, and our imaginations adds the atoms. The glass is a distillation of the Earth's rocks, and in its composition we see the secret of the universe's age, and the evolution of the stars. What strange array of chemicals is there in the wine? How did they come to be? There are the ferments, the enzymes, the substrates, and the products. There in wine is found the great generalization: all life is fermentation. Nobody can discover the chemistry of wine without discovering, as did Louis Pasteur, the cause of much disease. How vivid is the claret, pressing its existence into the consciousness that watches it! If our small minds, for some convenience, divide this glass of wine, this universe, into parts - physics, biology, geology, astronomy, psychology, and so on - remember that Nature does not know it! So let us put it all back together, not forgetting ultimately what it is for. Let it give us one more final pleasure: drink it and forget it all!
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I just came across this beautiful piece of work & felt like sharing. Enjoy the stimulus...

Monday, March 05, 2007

Money follows skills ....

It’s been some time that I've put up something valuable to the blog. So I'll pick something & just try to generate ideas. Well I’ve been gorging on information for last few days and so ideally I should synthesize a little of it for your consumption. Trust me, I hate being an indoctrinator, but thought garden is all about sowing some seeds & then waiting others to contribute to the thought process.

So I'll talk about this simple idea that I came up with in recent days. I know most of the ideas are often similar to something someone has said before. But then the good part is that you too have started to reach similar conclusions. specially when you find that these ideas are expressed in similar vein by some real prominent figures. I often say that its a great experience to relate with a great mind but greatness still has to be achieved.
So here is one such thought....

Money follows skills...
Money follows meaning...
Money follows value...

Now the first part is mine... the second is almost derived from Guy Kawasaki's (MD of Garage... a seed capital VC firm in Silicon Valley) speech, "The art of the start" ... quiet a man I must say... then the third line is derived from Richard Feynman (Nobel laureate in Physics and one of the most interesting scientists of all time).

I told u I've been gorging some information & the names suggest that I've been in some good company. Also perhaps it corroborates my ambition to be a scientrepreneur. So let me interlace these thoughts from different spectrum of work & find a common thread between them.

Now the matter... I feel loads of people are just bandwagon followers... they follow a particular trend & then expect to harvest a fortune out of it... most of the times when u get to know about a particular trend happening the curve is almost on a its maximum incline and is now going to become kinda static due to more supply pouring in(just like u getting in the flow now)... so its damn difficult to catch a trend during its formative years... we used to say that IT is hot... then BPO became hot ... and now retail is scorching... we should rather ask what keeps u hot... what ignites u & your passions... rest is a consequence....

Guy Kawasaki says the same regarding forming a company... the company u form shall be formed with the ambition of making a meaning & not to make money... Making money is corollary to the magnitude of your success on the first front of making meaning... adding value to your customer's lives or businesses...

Similarly Feynman says that Nobel doesn't bother him for it was a consequence of what he achieved... the real prize being the achievement itself... that is to have made the discovery of quantum electrodynamics... now don’t expect me to explain that. But ya u can’t design or create to please your contemporaries and everybody. Be your best critique & harshest judge. As I mentioned in my previous post that when u got to create future u can't seek its expectations & answers in the present.

So I'll leave with u these thoughts... munch on them... and do contribute with your suggestions to the forum ... don’t forget thoughts are the atomic units of pleasure.

Wednesday, December 13, 2006

Dreamcatcher....

It all starts with a dream. Every monumental accomplishment; every act of greatness; every significant achievement in life. I don’t believe in diminishing our dreams. Rather let’s elevate ourselves to them. We all have a cause that drives our lives. But then in our process of growing up we tend to accept life. In reality we succumb to our existing limitations. And we don’t want to leave our comfort zone for the unprecedented. Perhaps the unprecedented is the realization of our dreams.

Within all of us there is a latent desire to achieve greatness. But then why do we hesitate to practice the traits of being great. And I believe we all know deep inside the attributes we associate with our version of heroism. I feel the biggest and perhaps the single-most factor for our acceding to the norm is societal acceptance of our actions. All I can remind you is that the society lives in present tense and if you bring future right in front of them, they will balk at it. They’ll never be ready for leaving the cocoon of status quo.

I believe all the wisdom in this world lies within all of us. We all perhaps name it differently. And formal education helps in avoiding us reinventing the wheel by providing such knowledge a nomenclature. But then it stops there. The future is still always unexplored. The future is a territory of dreams. So keep chasing your dreams. And ya never forget – It all starts with a dream.