Thursday, December 31, 2009

Adieu 2009

Hi Friends,

This is an official goodbye to the year just gone by, not only from the calendars but also from the hearts, minds and memories of many of us.

2009 (MMIX) had many important events and stories that took by all of us worldwide. In January, Barack Obama was inaugurated as the first African-American president of the United States. In March, Sri Lankan cricketers were attacked by few gunmen in Pakistan which led to the banning of Pakistan from hosting any ICC events. In June, Air France Flight en route from Rio de Janeiro to Paris crashed into Atlantic ocean killing all 228 on board. Also, the outbreak of the H1N1 influenza strain, commonly referred to as ‘swine flu’, was deemed as a global pandemic infecting more than 10 lakh people with a mortality rate of over 10%. Then, on 25th June, the king of pop Michael Jackson died due to cardiac arrest and his funeral had a record breaking audience close to 35 million people and so on.

This year was also seen as the year of economic recession. With giant firms like Lehmann Brothers and many others collapsing and still many who filed for bankruptcy. This was the year when Sachin Tendulkar completed 30, 000 runs in International cricket. This was the year when Tiger Woods announced an indefinite leave from professional golf to focus on his marriage after his past infidelities came to light. And many other things.

Personally, I did not like the way this year went by for me. But, some of the toughest and the biggest decisions of my life were made in this year. I quit my first job (Infosys Technologies Ltd.) to join Capgemini Consulting India Pvt. Ltd, Mumbai; a switch which I actually did not dream of, but never the less it happened. I booked a flat in Mumbai which I consider as a naïve decision of investing a huge amount at the age of 24. My blogs came to life again in 2009. And I hope, it goes on and on with many transformations.

There were many promises made, most of them taken care of, some of them forgotten. There were many commitments made, professional as well as personal. There were new things learnt from Microsoft technologies to blogging skills to some inadvertent matter.  There were many new hobbies grown and pursued, new friends made, old friends re-touched, old bonds revamped, mistakes forgotten and worked over. It was a year which took off life from me in terms of efforts and dreams. It was a year which taught me to the core about deepest aspects of life and relationships. This was the year which gained/lost self-confidence for me.

All in all, a year full of events, which at times demystified me and sometimes depressed me. I bow my deepest gratitude to this year for whatever good or bad it has given to me and my loved ones and pray for the new year to be more fruitful and pleasant for all of us.

Happy new year.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Indians in the matter !!!

GENEVA: The bronze Nataraja in its famous tandava pose gleams golden as it catches the first rays of the sun, bouncing off the glass façade of the international hostel nearby. Scientists, walking briskly to their labs through the chilly mist, cast quick glances at the ‘God of Destruction’, sitting above the tunnel where two proton beams are colliding at the rate of 40 million hits per second. This is where an explosion in a pipe on November 10 last year brought the world’s biggest scientific experiment ever to a halt. This is where rumours of doomsday began. The symbolism of the Dancing Shiva is hard to miss.
But, the Nataraja, gifted to CERN or the European Centre for Nuclear Research five years ago by India’s Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), is not the only Indian presence here. More than 100 Indian scientists have been working since the day the large hadron collider broke down last year. This happened just as 6,000 scientists were starting an experiment that hoped to find Higgs Boson -- the so-called god particle -- by creating conditions similar to that of the Big Bang some 13.7 billion years ago. The Higgs Boson, incidentally, is a massive elementary particle and its detection would help explain the origin of mass in the universe.
In the 27-km-long tunnel, 150 m below the ground on the Swiss-French border, scientists have been working to fix the problems quietly even as conspiracy theories run riot over “micro black holes” and “anti-matter bombs”.
Tapan Nayak, an Indian scientist, smiles when you ask him about the black holes. “There is no such threat. Here, we are trying to unlock the mystery of the Universe,” he says, fixing his helmet as he whisks down to the tunnel in an elevator. Nayak is joined by a dozen other Indian scientists, engineers and technicians. Indian scientists have been involved in two of the four experiments at CERN.
At the experiment called ALICE, located on the Swiss side of the border, Indians have been putting in place the photon multiplicity detector (PMD). Nayak says it “is truly an Indian detector from conception to commissioning”. Scientists are trying to record the temperature and density of the “Little Bang” – conditions within microseconds of the Big Bang -- with detectors and chips made in India. “Our contribution to this experiment is fundamental,” says Nayak, walking through a mind-boggling maze of wires, chips and huge magnets.
Indians remain key to yet another CERN experiment - the CMS, in Cessy, France. A shiny black road cuts through green fields and yellow forests as one heads to the laboratory. “Here, we are trying to find the god particle to know why the world is the way it is. If we make progress, we’ll be able to explain all physical phenomena,” says Archana Sharma, who has worked at CERN since 1987 and is the first non-European to be given a permanent position at this prestigious laboratory.
Born in Jhansi and educated in Varanasi and Delhi, Archana is the face of India here. She has started a new programme at CERN, inviting Indian students to the laboratory every summer.
The first CERN-India cooperation agreement was signed in 1991 but Indian scientists took five years to get involved with its experiments. Funded by the DAE and Department of Science and Technology, India has contributed close to $60 million to the Big Bang experiment and become an ‘observer’ at this European venture.
“India’s biggest contribution has been its scientists,” says Nick Chohan, a British scientist who worked with Indians to fix magnets that direct the proton beams in the tunnel. “Without their work, this experiment would not take off again. They came here in groups and worked round the clock in shifts and we fixed the problem.” But it wasn’t all work and no play. “We also had fun as we played cricket, organized picnics and had Diwali parties,” says Chohan.
He’s not the only one impressed with India’s scientists. John Ellis, one of the world’s leading theoretical physicists, says, “India has contributed, both in cash and kind. Your scientists have been working here for years and have made some important equipment too. Their work is fundamental for the success of this programme. This makes India a strong contender for associate membership of the institute.” He calls the CERN exercise an effort to prepare the “instructional manual of the universe”.
It is also about going where no man has before – into the heart of matter

Monday, December 21, 2009

Some interesting GK

Answers below

1.       *Ash nazg durbatulúk, ash nazg gimbatul,
ash nazg thrakatulûk agh burzum-ishi krimpatul
What? (don't bother to translate)

2.       "A public toilet, where you would not know who used it last“ - Encyclopedia Britannica. What were they referring to??

3.       X is the senior supervising producer. X was born on 6 June 1973 in Machilipatnam, Andhra Pradesh and was brought up in Delhi. He studied at Woodstock School, Mussoorie, but continued his graduation in Delhi University. X was a student of the Deshbandhu college in the first year. In the second year, he joined Sri Venkateswara College but he didn’t sit for the third year at all. Both he and his brother dropped out of the college. When they were studying at the Delhi University, their teachers predicted that they both have no future and would sell bananas on the streets. His first solo project was called Find the Road. Who?

4.       Another off the assembly line of “New Maradonas”, X may be the first to live up to that unfair comparison. Javier Saviola, Juan Roman Riquelme and Pablo Aimar have unsurprisingly failed to match HIS high standards despite initial promise. X started playing when he was just five years old at a club which was coached by his father. After three years he moved to Newell's Old Boys. At the age of 11, he was diagnosed with a growth hormone deficiency. Cost of treatment was $900 a month. A big European club offered to pay for his treatment and signed him. The rest is history. Id X.

5.       Fill in the blank:
Janus, Chicago, Memphis, Millennium, Odyssey, Whistler, ____ , Vienna, Red Dog.

6.       Saqib Abdullah a.k.a Skip was born in Dammam, Saudi Arabia in 1984. He is the 3rd and youngest amongst his siblings. Skip attended a Pakistani school in Saudi Arabia. He started a one man band. Name of the band is a Persian word meaning life & existence, while synonymously it can be used as Hope, faith, light etc. Skip's major breakthrough came in early April 2005, when he released his 4-5 year old composition through the Internet for free mp3 downloading. Within no time, his single became a popular hit amongst Desis living not only in Pakistan and India, but also throughout the world. The song became one of the most downloaded songs in India. Name the band.

7.       X and Y teamed up for a film, Devaa, somewhere in 80's. It was later unceremoniously scrapped due to some misunderstandings. X and Y being the giants of bollywood have never worked together since then. X finally relinquished the title and it was Sunny Deol (co star: Amisha Patel)  who was supposed to star in the movie which is due for release this December.
Identify X, Y.
.
.
.
.
.
.

Answers

1.       Inscription on the Sauron’s One Ring (LOTR)
2.       Wikipedia
3.       Raghuram or Raghu of Roadies
4.       Lionel Messi
5.       Longhorn (these were all Window 7 codenames)
6.       Zeest
7.       Subhash Ghai & Amitabh Bachhan

Monday, December 07, 2009

Addiction

Lately, I have been attending a lot of training sessions. No, not because I am interested in them, but we have to complete 40 hrs of training in a financial year to make things fall in the right places(this is what I guess). The trainings range from technical, behavioral, project specific to latest technologies and so on. And I always thought that technical trainings are boring to attend.

But I was proved wrong by my behavior last week when I was attending a non-technical training on how could be make this world green by being in IT. I had concepts like carbon footprints and all in my mind when I entered the training room. But soon, it rolled out to be something different, irrelevant and hence boring for me. Then I just thought, how did I survive for the rest of the training hours all the year. And I got my answer – Computer. Almost all the trainings had we using the computers and that is the sole reason, why I wasn’t bored.

I mean, we IT people are so habituated to seeing a computer all the time, the very moment when we don’t see it, makes us feel sick. The same way is with outlook. I don’t know why, but I have an unusual connection with my exchange server. The day I leave on Friday to the morning hours on Monday – I am complete dumbstruck. I don’t know what’s happening, I have no clue what I am supposed to do in the coming week, I don’t remember any birthdays or anniversaries, because for all these days, I am away from my outlook which is apparently me, a reflection of me. I am so obsessive about computers that even when I am home, I sit in front of this intelligent box doing nothing. Well, doing nothing means, doing no work. I just enjoy some movies or Seinfeld or some documentaries. But I make it sure that I am doing something which utilizes my mean machines memory. Such is the attraction.

Coming back to the session, sitting idle in a classroom like training room, with a boring (NOM, as he was just doing his job) trainer and NO COMPUTER in front of you, can make you a bit crazy and a lot more weird and restless. I tried to concentrate and add on to the session, but within minutes my enthusiasm saw a deep trench in the graph and I gave up. You see, I do give up things easily. Probably that’s my weakest point. I had to kill my time, so I started writing this blog. Yes, I actually scribbled this blog in my notepad and it had to wait till today to appear on my blog page. And not only this, I also composed yet another blog – Jashn 2009 (a blog about the annual event of Capgemini).

I owe a lot to this weird habit and addiction towards computers – my blogs, my fan following at social networking sites(which does not exist now), a lot of experiments on my home system, my website and my health :P. I am a happy man when I am in front of this chipset device.

Thanks to Charles Babbage (or whoever?) for inventing a computer. I don’t think I, or for that matter anyone, can do much without it :-)

Happy computing.

Wednesday, December 02, 2009

Jashn 2009

It all began at 3:00 pm on 30th November 2009 while we left office to head towards Andheri Sports Complex which was the glorious venue for Jashn 2009 (Official annual event of my company). Cutting the noon traffic of Mumbai city we reached the destination at 4:30 pm. The sun was mild and we were amazed as what it could be like.
After reaching there, we got our hands stamped and made an entry. After freshening ourselves, we started to hunt for some snacks. As soon as we started to hunt, there were innumerable platters in front of us. Though helpless, we then tried out almost every item which included chat, pani-puri, ragda-puri, dosa, uttappa and so on. Juices included mocktails, fruit juices, pina-coladas, soda juices and so on. My company has many offices in Mumbai itself. So, being at Jashn meant having to see all other people from other offices as well. After a bit of 'people' hunting and a mouthful of snacks, we decided to settle down. Initially we took the last row in the first section. But very soon, I shifted to the front with one of my friends. The hosts for the evening were Jaggu and Tarana (some TV star). They started with some light jokes, some small games and very soon the event was officially commenced by lighting the Jashn 2009 logo by fireworks.
The jury for the evening composed of wives of the TOP management as well as a couple of other biggies. The evening also had the grand presence of Paul Hermelin (CEO of Capgemini), Salil Parekh (CEO of North America and Asia–Pacific operations – also known as the 'King of the World') and Baru Rao (CEO India and a VP). The evening grew by some subtle jokes, speeches by the biggies and the dance performances. Not for a matter of doubt, Mumbai team won the national dance competition. Also, not to forget to mention about the speech by Paul Hermelin which, I am sure attracted the audience. He was narrating an incident about how, during the initial years of Capgemini, many big people in India had in a way or other worked for Capgemini. He also mentioned that NR Narayana Murthy once worked for a company in France (much before forming Infosys and much before when he worked for Patni) which later was acquired by Capgemini, so in a way, NRN also worked for Capgemini for which Paul Hermelin was a proud man. This narration, sort of bemused me as I am a big NRN fan right from my Infosys days.
As time passed, the hosts announced the guest of the evening and he was Shankar Mahadevan. It took him 30 minutes to make an appearance. During the meanwhile, all the stage was being set for his band and troops to perform. He made a grand entry by singing a religious song and then many of the famous Bollywood tracks. Within few minutes of his appearance on stage, the crowd took its toll towards him. The bouncers and the security guards had a tough time to keep the mob away from him. He took the entire audience at the ASC up high on his vocals. Many exhilarating tracks from Bollywood movies like Don, Dil Chahta Hai, Rock On, etc were presented before the audience. He introduced to his band in a never-seen-before way. He used to sing a raag on mike, and the same raag was then followed by the octopad player. The same followed for keyboard, drummer, lead guitarist, bassist and the tabla. It was breath taking and I was truly impressed by it. Andheri sports complex was the very place way back in November 1996 when the Mumbai crowd and all rock and pop fans witnessed the King of Pop – Michael Jackson perform in front of an audience of around 70,000 people.  When seeing Shankar Mahadevan performing live in front of you can be so amazing, I just could not sum it up what it could be like to even see Michael Jackson. Forget about him performing in front of you. A few girl fans were also reported to be fainted just by his sight. He is truly an immortal legend.
After few hours of his music, people started to scatter in search of dinner. There was a huge variety of dishes. I stuck to a few spoons of Chicken Biryani and then ice-cream and gulab jamuns. It was late in night when the crowd began to walk back towards their homes. So, we also decided to walk back to our buses by bidding Jashn 2009 a sweet adieu.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

An ode to the nice guys

This is a tribute to the nice guys. The nice guys that finish last, that never become more than friends, that endure hours of whining and bitching about what assholes guys are, while disproving the very point. This is dedicated to those guys who always provide a shoulder to lean on but restrain themselves to tentative hugs, those guys who hold open doors and give reassuring pats on the back and sit patiently outside the changing room at department stores. This is in honor of the guys that obligingly reiterate how cute/beautiful/smart/funny/sexy their female friends are at the appropriate moment, because they know most girls need that litany of support. This is in honor of the guys with open minds, with laid-back attitudes, with honest concern. This is in honor of the guys who respect a girl's every facet, from her privacy to her theology to her clothing style.

 

This is for the guys who escort their drunk, bewildered female friends back from parties and never take advantage once they're at her door, for the guys who accompany girls to bars as buffers against the rest of the creepy male population, for the guys who know a girl is fishing for compliments but give them out anyway, for the guys who always play by the rules in a game where the rules favor cheaters, for the guys who are accredited as boyfriend material but somehow don't end up being boyfriends, for all the nice guys who are overlooked, underestimated, and unappreciated, for all the nice guys who are manipulated, misled, and unjustly abandoned, this is for you.

 

This is for that time she left 40 urgent messages on your cell phone, and when you called her back, she spent three hours painstakingly dissecting two sentences her boyfriend said to her over dinner. And even though you thought her boyfriend was a chump and a jerk, you assured her that it was all ok and she shouldn't worry about it. This is for that time she interrupted the best killing spree you'd ever orchestrated in GTA3 to rant about a rumor that romantically linked her and the guy she thinks is the most repulsive person in the world. And even though you thought it was immature and you had nothing against the guy, you paused the game for two hours and helped her concoct a counter-rumor to spread around the floor. This is also for that time she didn't have a date, so after numerous vows that there was nothing "serious" between the two of you, she dragged you to a party where you knew nobody, the beer was awful, and she flirted shamelessly with you, justifying each fit of reckless teasing by announcing to everyone: "oh, but we're just friends!" And even though you were invited purely as a symbolic warm body for her ego, you went anyways. Because you're nice like that.

 

The nice guys don't often get credit where credit is due. And perhaps more disturbing, the nice guys don't seem to get laid as often as they should. And I wish I could logically explain this trend, but I can't. From what I have observed on campus and what I have learned from talking to friends at other schools and in the workplace, the only conclusion I can form is that many girls are just illogical, manipulative bitches. Many of them claim they just want to date a nice guy, but when presented with such a specimen, they say irrational, confusing things such as "oh, he's too nice to date" or "he would be a good boyfriend but he's not for me" or "he already puts up with so much from me, I couldn't possibly ask him out!" or the most frustrating of all: "no, it would ruin our friendship." Yet, they continue to lament the lack of datable men in the world, and they expect their too-nice-to-date male friends to sympathize and apologize for the men that are jerks. Sorry, guys, girls like that are beyond my ability to fathom. I can't figure out why the connection breaks down between what they say (I want a nice guy!) and what they do. But one thing I can do, is say that the nice-guy-finishes-last phenomenon doesn't last forever. There are definitely many girls who grow out of that train of thought and realize they should be dating the nice guys, not taking them for granted. The tricky part is finding those girls, and even trickier, finding the ones that are single.

 

So, until those girls are found, I propose a toast to all the nice guys. You know who you are, and I know you're sick of hearing yourself described as ubiquitously nice. But the truth of the matter is, the world needs your patience in the department store, your holding open of doors, your party escorting services, your propensity to be a sucker for a pretty smile. For all the crazy, insane, absurd things you tolerate, for all the situations where you are the faceless, nameless hero, my accolades, my acknowledgement, and my gratitude go out to you. You do have credibility in this society, and your well deserved vindication is coming.

 

This rant was written for the Wharton Undergraduate Journal by Fu-Zu Jen.

Monday, November 16, 2009

Ouch - It Hurts ...

There are times when we take so much effort and precaution in doing something perfectly right. We prepare, plan and try to ensure that even in worst case scenarios our plan will work out. And finally during execution it fails – it’s not that the execution was sloppy but it’s just that something went wrong. It might be securing an admission to a college, maybe a proposal that went wrong or maybe even something as simple as planning a journey. When you look at all the effort that went into the task you wonder, “What did I do wrong to deserve this?”

And more often than not others will not know your effort. They would only see the result and the result was that you failed – when something turns out unfavorable who cares what method you tried, who cares whether you painstakingly planned or just tried to get the result through short cuts. They say that the means used to achieve a result is just as important as the result itself but you do wonder if that is true!

Take the case of Sachin Tendulkar – I have been reading about him quite a lot and there have been many instances where he does the bulk of the scoring but unfortunately for him, he ends up on the losing side. And people immediately start pointing fingers at him saying, “He isn’t capable of finishing the match. He should have won it for the team”. Oh come on, the guy has scored more than 50% of the totals runs; do you expect him to score all the runs?

So for those of you who have gone through the pain of having painstakingly planned, failed and then criticized…take heart – you aren’t alone.

Picture this - Sachin Tendulkar

When Sachin Tendulkar travelled to Pakistan to face one of the finest bowling attacks ever assembled in the history of cricket, Michael Schumacher was yet to race a F1 car, Lance Armstrong had never been to the Tour de France, Diego Maradona was still the captain of a world champion Argentina team, Pete Sampras had never won a Grand Slam. When Tendulkar embarked on a glorious career taming Imran and company, Roger Federer was a name unheard of, Lionel Messi was in his nappies, Usain Bolt was an unknown kid in the Jamaican backwaters, Cristiano Ronaldo was still to try his skills on football. The Berlin Wall was still intact, USSR was one big, big country, Dr Manmohan Singh was yet to "open" the Nehruvian economy, Barack Obama was a name no one heard of.

It seems while Father Time was having his toll on every individual on the face of this planet, he excused one man. Time stands frozen in front of Sachin Tendulkar.

We have had champions, we have had legends, but we have never had a Sachin Tendulkar and we never will.

PS: This article has been taken from a newspaper.



I owe my deepest respect to the God for having a glorious and unbeatable innings of 20 years in the history of cricket.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

The MNS fiasco ...

Before writing this blog, let me first tell you guys that I did not vote MNS in this assembly elections. And I quite a lot regret my decision now. :-P

As most of you know what happened this Monday in the Maharashtra Assembly. Samajwadi Party’s leader Abu Asim Azmi was slapped by the MNS MLA’s due to which 4 MNS MLA’s (Shishir Shinde from Bhandup West; Ram Kadam from Ghatkopar West; Vasant Gite from Nashik Central; and Ramesh Vanzale from Kahdakvasla) have been suspended for four years. The MNS remains unrepentant over this, satisfied that the violent politics of chauvinism has planted the party in the news again. Though the deed was wrong, it was interesting for the onlookers. TRP increased for sure during the screenplay of this incident.

For ages we (common man) were unaware what actually happened inside the walls of the legistative assembly. I know we have read about passing bills and all that ‘civic’ stuff, but I think we hardly understood it. Bill passing was all rubbish and the MNS gave us a clearer picture of what actually happens in the LA. One person says something(? anything) and that gets opposed by the members of the opposition. This is what actually goes on over there :P

It was surely a breach of the assembly conduct, disrespect towards the constitution (as said by someone) and blah blah blah. But aren’t there tonnes of incidents going on around the entire country which does all this? But who cares! The junta doesn’t care unless and until it happens to them. So this is taken as a matter of sheer entertainment by people like us for whom it doesn’t really matter if Abu Azmi gets slapped or not. Though Thackeray intimated all the MLAs to take the oath in Marathi and if the oncoming danger was sensed, it would have been better that he took an oath in Marathi. At least that could have saved him of one tight slap :P

All in all it was an awesome incident which took the entire nation to a stroll and made a breaking headline. It also formulated the matter of discussion for youngsters and who-the-f**k-care people like us in the trains, offices and over the phones. Cyber traffic saw an upward trend when news and videos were streamlined by people online. All in all it was a win-win situation for all. Abu Azmi lost only some respect when he was slapped, which was regained in position by his own party members praising him for taking an oath in Hindi. MNS got the whole attention for standing true to its image and the junta got the much needed daily feed of something spicy which they could talk about in their leisure time.

Right or wrong, I think it deserved to be a topic of a blog in this space for sure :-)

Jack Daniels Fishing Story

I finally got around to going fishing this morning but after a while I ran out of worms.

Then I saw a cottonmouth snake with a frog in his mouth, and frogs are good bass bait.

Knowing the snake couldn't bite me with the frog in his mouth, I grabbed him right behind the head, took the frog and put it in my bait bucket.

Now the dilemma was how to release the snake without getting bit.

I grabbed my bottle of Jack Daniels (whisky) and poured a little whiskey in its mouth.

His eyes rolled back, he went limp, I released him into the lake without incident, and carried on my fishing with the frog.

A little later I felt a nudge on my foot.

There was that same snake with two frogs in his mouth.

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Sometimes ....

Sometimes hurt is needed to make you grow,
Failure is needed to make you know,
Loss is needed to make you gain,
Because some lessons are best when learned through pain.

When did ‘crime prevention’ became a crime?

In October 2007, Al Gore accepted the Nobel Prize for Peace with the words "I can't understand why there aren't rings of young people blocking bulldozers and preventing them from constructing coal-fired power plants."

At precisely the same moment, six Greenpeace activists broke into a highly-secure coal-power plant in Kolaghat. They made their way straight to one of the station's six chimneys and started climbing. At 260 feet, they stopped, secured themselves, and swung over the edge of the tower. The only thing keeping them secure was a 9mm rope, years of training, and a heartbreaking love for the planet.
Suspended high above a vast toxic wasteland of coal – the dirtiest fuel known to humankind – they opened their backpacks. Out came 5 liters of black paint. And two industrial-grade paintbrushes. Then, in ten-foot-high letters on the side of the tower, they started painting a damning message against climate change.
Even in the early-morning breeze, the air was thick with coal soot. Every breath made one want to vomit. A dead hawk lay on the parapet. It was impossible to talk too. They couldn't hear themselves over the wind blowing in from the Bay of Bengal. And the coal-power plant was noisier than a rock concert just before the end of the world. Deaf and out of breath, their biggest fear wasn't falling to their deaths. Their biggest fear was making a spelling mistake. But the message they left there (without any spelling mistakes) should be a Statutory Warning on every single chimney of every single coal-power plant in this country and on this planet: SMOKING KILLS!
Their work done, they climbed down. And for alerting our nation to the causes and perils of climate change, the six activists – one of them six weeks pregnant at the time – were arrested and thrown into jail. Nearly two years later, the unbelievable charges against them (ranging from trespass to terrorism) are yet to be dropped. Their case, unreported by the media, drags on in court.

Meanwhile, climate change continues unchecked. The monsoon has failed. Nearly half of the country's 626 districts are paralyzed by drought. As a result, India is facing inflation and is forced to import food. In spite of all this, our government doesn't seem to be waking up to climate change. Instead of building less coal-power plants, we're building more of them. This is shameful. This is stupid. And this has to stop.
What will it take? It will take more than six Greenpeace activsts willing to go to jail. It will take more than you and me. It will take a HUGE number of people like us, every one of them joining the long war against climate change.
-- A post from GreenPeace to save the earth.

Tuesday, November 03, 2009

Michael Jackson's This Is It!

Last weekend I had my glorious chance to watch 'Michael Jackson's This Is It'. And believe me it was more than a thrilling experience. With people all around me clad in Michael Jackson t-shirts and some even in complete MJ attire, it was a treat to my experience.

It all began with the high volume strumming of the dancers and the guitarists. 12 world class dancers were selected from thousands of them personally by MJ. It was only one time saying and they could pick up what MJ intended to say. Orianthi Panagaris was the lead guitarist and Thomas Organ as the rhythm guitarist. I was dumbstruck when I saw Orianthi strum her guitar more ferociously than I have ever seen. I always liked Slash for beating it harder and now I saw this girl, who studded with her blonde hair all over her face surely took off the audience off their seats. It was spellbound to see Jonathan Moffet – the drummer to tune into some of the world famous MJ tracks. With one song performed on stage with the American singer Judith Hill and the rest with either single or with the dancers on stage - it was worth an experience. Kenny Ortega has made his lifetime best piece of work by directing 'This Is It'. His masterpiece was truly visible in every scene.

MJ was the hero. He IS the hero. The mere presence of MJ in a scene or on the stage could swirl in millions of fans and freeze all the audience. Such is his audacity. Only seeing him perform on screen was such an awesome experience, I just imagined what would have happened if we saw him perform live on stage. I would certainly have needed breath shots coz by every means. He would have swooped all of his audience. It was a memento of all his videos, news, his movie stills and his entire pop personality.

MJ was always irenic when he conceptualized his videos. May be it 'The Earth Song' or 'Heal the World'. No other man has been ever titled as the king of any kind of music. So the title 'King of Pop' itself exemplifies his greatness. 'This is It' was to be played in the O2 arena in London for 50 days, most of which tickets were already sold. It was going to be a huge event for any rock-star. It would have earned Michael few billions of pounds (the first 10 dates alone would have earned him approximately £50 million). The concept of "This Is It' was that MJ was enthralled by his audience and their love towards him for all these years. And this was his final curtain call for all his fans. Maybe he knew that something unsure and uncertain was beholding him at that time. He wanted to warn his zillions of fans that this was the last and the least he could have done for them. He was noted to be very genuine and humble on the production sets. Not even the slightest of red muscle was seen during the shooting and rehearsals.

Inspite of number of controversies that got him involved he retained his popularities among his fans. His India was tour was something to cherish for lifetimes. His energy was seen to be a little bit drooling but certainly it was something that caught my eye that at an age of 50 years he kept himself in sync with his other dancers who were very young compared to him. He always conflated the other stars. He believed in unity. He also popularized a number of physically complicated dance techniques, such as the robot and the moonwalk.

Time described Jackson's influence as "Star of records, radio, and rock video. A one-man rescue team for the music business. A songwriter who sets the beat for a decade. A dancer with the fanciest feet on the street. A singer who cuts across all boundaries of taste and style and color too". The NYT wrote that, "In the world of pop music, there is Michael Jackson and there is everybody else".

With This Is It', he was punctilious with the dance moves, the sounds and even the lights. It was like the perfectionist is at work. He was cognoscente when it came to music. He knew all his notes, rhythms perfectly. He danced casually as it was born for him, within him. He need not be with dance, the dance needed to be with Michael.

The world has truly lost its greatest hero of all times. A great musician, a great humanitarian, a philanthropist and above all the 'King of Pop'. We love you Michael. You are an immortal legend.



Monday, November 02, 2009

Tu ani Me

Tu sui me dora,
Tu kaali me gora

Tu poli me bhaat,
Tu football me laath

Tu ball me bat,
Tu undir me cat

Tu mungla me mungli,
Tu saree me lungi

Tu love me prem,
Tu photo me frame

Tu doka me kes,
Tu saban me phes

Tu nisarga me fiza,
Tu kavita "Me Maazha"

Tu ghubad me pankh,
Tu vinchu me dankh

Tu sambaar me dosa,
Tu boxer me thosa

Tu kanik me poli,
Tu aaushad me goli

Tu petrol me car,
Tu daru me bar

Tu dudh me saai,
Tu kes me dye

Tu chaha me lassi,
Tu kumkum me jassi

Tu toop me loni,
Tu dravid me dhoni

Tu barfi me pedha,
Tu bavlat me veda

Tu computer me CD,
Tu cigaratte me bidi

Tu dahi me loni,
Tu kes me pony

Tu computer me mail,
Tu niranjan me tel

Tu tiger me lion,
Tu dadar me sion

Tu takkal me kes,
Tu canteen me mess

Tu kes me konda,
Tu dagad me dhonda

Tu cut me paste,
Tu haste me waste

Tu summer me winter,
Tu Sachin me punter

Tu computer me mouse,
Tu husband me spouse

Tu veet me vasavadatta cement,
Tu code me coding comment

Tu printer me paper,
Tu chips me wafer

Tu dharti me aakash,
Tu jyoti me prakash

Tu nadi me sagar,
Tu paani me ghagar

Tu daru me pinara,
Tu sagar me kinara

Tu vaat me diva,
Tu .NET me JAVA 

Tu chimani me kaavla,
Tu limbu me aavla

Tu Abhishek me Ash,
Tu credit Card me Cash

Tu paper me headLine,
Tu project me deadLine

Tu boundry me sixer,
Tu genuine me fixer

Tu ghevda me bhendi,
Tu bobcut me shendi

Tu Andheri me Dadar,
Tu blanket me chaadar.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

The Cut Off - Short Story by Chetan Bhagat

Everyone will give you an opinion on how to live your life. No one, no one will give you good advice on how to end it. Worse, they will tell you to continue living, without any respect for individual choice. Yes, hi, I’m Gautam Arora, and after eighteen wonderful years in Delhi, I’ve decided to end my life.

I sat with my best friend Neeraj and his girlfriend Anjali at Costa Coffee, DLF Metropolitan Mall in Saket. The coffee is way overpriced, but considering I had a day to live, I didn’t mind getting ripped off.

“The joke isn’t that funny,” Neeraj said, tearing open the second sachet of brown sugar and mixing it for his girlfriend. If this girl can’t mix sugar in her coffee, I wonder what she will be like after marriage.

“Do I look like I am joking? You are in medical college, and as a friend and someone two years elder to me, I am asking your advice on what is the most painless, graceful way to go. And ideally, it should be available at the friendly neighborhood chemist,” I said. I ordered a chocolate fudge cake. What are a few extra calories on your last day?

Anjali kept quiet, her iPod plugged in her ears. She had come to the mall to shop with her boyfriend rather than meet me. Neeraj said he only dated Anjali as her father had given her a car and driver, which made it easy to go around. Besides, she looked ok. She was pretty enough to invite a second stare from men, though that’s hardly an achievement in Delhi where men’s standards can be quite modest.

“Dude, you topped your school. How much did you score in your class XII boards again?” Neeraj said.
“Ninety two per cent,” I said.
“Ninety what?” Neeraj said as he ripped out Anjali‘s earphones, “Anjali, the dude scored ninety two per cent in commerce! Do you know of anyone who has scored that much?”
Anjali shook her head.
“Wow, you must have studied a lot,” she said.
I nodded. I had done nothing but study in the last two years.
“No time for hobbies?” she said.
I shook my head. My only hobbies were eating three meals and sleeping five hours a day. The rest of the time was with my books.
“With ninety two, you should be fine,” Neeraj said.
“Not according to SRCC, not according to Stephen’s and not according to Hindu, oh what the heck,” I said as I opened my rucksack.
I gave him the special admissions supplement from the newspaper. I had snucked it out early morning so mom and dad wouldn’t see it.
“Wow, check out Lady Sri Ram. B.Com Honors is at 95.5 per cent!” Neeraj said.
“That’s a girl’s college,” Anjali said.
“I know,” I said.
“Don’t worry; he wouldn’t have made it anyway. Anjali, why don’t you go spend some of your father’s money,” Neeraj said and winked at me.
Anjali and I both gave Neeraj a dirty look. Neeraj air-kissed Anjali and gestured to her to leave.

Seriously, don’t kill yourself. To us, you are still the school topper,” Neeraj said after Anjali left.
“So what do I do?” I said, my voice loud, “stay back in school? This topper tag makes things worse. My parents already threw a party for our friends and relatives like I have made it big time in life. I cut a cake with the icing ‘family superstar’.”
“Nice,” Neeraj said.
“Not nice at all. All relatives congratulated my mother. They see me as the next hotshot investment banker on Wall Street. The least they expect me to do is get into a good college in DU.”
“There are still some colleges that you will get,” Neeraj said as I cut him off.
“But none with the same brand value. Thus, you can’t get a decent job after them. You can’t get into the top MBA School.”
Neeraj pushed my coffee cup towards me. I hadn’t touched it. I picked it up and brought it close to my mouth but couldn’t drink it.
“I made one tiny calculation error in my math paper,” I said, “read one stupid unit conversion wrong. That’s it. If only...”
“If only you could chill out. You are going to college, dude! Branded or not, it is always fun.”
“Screw fun,” I said. “What kind of kids are they taking in anyway?” Neeraj said, “You have to be a bean-counter stickler to get ninety seven per cent. Like someone who never takes chances and revises the paper twenty times.”

“I don’t know, I revised it five times. That stupid calculation...”
“Gautam, relax. That paper is done. And sticklers don’t do well in life. Innovative and imaginative people do.”
“That’s not what DU thinks. You don’t understand, my father has proclaimed in his office I will join SRCC. I can’t go to him with a second rung college admission. It’s like his whole life image will alter. Hell, I won’t be able to deal with it myself.”

 

An SMS from Anjali on Neeraj‘s phone interrupted our conversation. At Kimaya, tried fab dress. Come urgently, want your opinion. Neeraj typed the reply back. Honey, it looks great. Buy it.

Neeraj grinned as he showed me his response. “I think you should go,” I said. Rich dads’ daughters can throw pretty nasty tantrums. Neeraj took out the money for coffee. I stopped him. “My treat,” I said. Leave people happy on your last day, I thought. “Of course, I take this as your treat for cracking your boards,” Neeraj said and smiled. He ruffled my hair and left. I came out of the mall and took an auto home.

I met my parents at the dinner table. “So when will the university announce the cut-offs?” my father said.
“In a few days,” I said. I looked up at the dining table fan. No, I couldn’t hang myself. I can’t bear suffocation.
My mother cut mangoes after dinner. The knife made me think of slitting my wrists. Too painful, I thought and dropped the idea.

“So now, my office people are asking me, ‘when is our party?’” my father said as he took a slice.
“I told you to call them to the party we did for neighbors and relatives,” my mother said.

“How will they fit with your brothers and sisters? My office people are very sophisticated,” my father said.
“My brothers are no less sophisticated. They went to Singapore last year on vacation. At least they are better than your family,” she said.

My father laughed at my mother’s sullen expression. His happiness levels had not receded since the day I received my result.

“My office people want drinks, not food. Don’t worry; I’ll do another one for them when he gets into SRCC or Stephen’s.”
My father worked in the sales division of Tata Tea. We had supplied our entire set of neighbors with free tea for the last five years. As a result, we had more well-wishers than I’d have liked.
“Even my country head called to congratulate me for Gautam. He said – nothing like Stephen’s for your brilliant son,” my father said.
“Gupta aunty came from next door. She wanted to see if you can help her daughter who is in class XI,” my mother said.
Is she pretty, I wanted to ask, but didn’t. It didn’t matter. I came to my room post dinner. I hadn’t quite zeroed down on the exact method, but thought I should start working on the suicide letter anyway. I didn’t want it to be one of the clichéd ones – I love you all and it is no one’s fault, and I’m sorry mom and dad. Yuck, just like first impressions, last impressions are important too. In fact, I didn’t want to do any silly suicide letter. When it is your last, you’d better make it important. I decided to write it to the education minister. I switched on my computer and went to the Education Department website. Half the site links were broken. There was a link called “What after class XII?” I clicked on it, it took me to a blank page with an under construction sign. I sighed as I closed the site. I opened Microsoft Word to type.

 

Dear Education Minister, I hope you are doing fine and the large staff of your massive bungalow is treating you well. I won’t take much of your time.

I’ve passed out of class XII and I’ve decided to end my life. I scored ninety-two per cent in my boards, and I have a one foot high trophy from my school for scoring the highest. However, there are so many trophy holding students in this country and so few college seats, that I didn’t get into a college that will train me to the next level or open up good opportunities.

I know I have screwed up. I should have worked harder to get another three per cent. However, I do want to point out a few things to you. When my parents were young, certain colleges were considered prestigious. Now, forty years later, the same colleges are considered prestigious. What’s interesting is that no new colleges have come up with the same brand or reputation level. Neither have the seats expanded in existing colleges fast enough to accommodate the rising number of students.

 

I’ll give you an example. Just doing some meaningless surfing, I saw that 3.8 lakh candidates took the CBSE class XII exam in 1999, a number that has grown to 8.9 lakh in 2009. This is just one board, and if you take ICSE and all other state boards, the all India total number is over ten times that of CBSE. We probably had one crore students taking the class XII exam this year.

While not everyone can get a good college seat, I just want to talk about the so-called good students. The top 10 per cent alone of these one crore students is ten lakh children. Yes, these ten lakh students are their class toppers. In a class of fifty, they will have the top-5 ranks. 

One could argue that these bright kids deserve a good college to realize their full potential. Come to think of it, it would be good for our country too if we train our bright children well to be part of the new, shining, gleaming, glistening or whatever you like to call the globalised India.

But then, it looks like you have stopped making universities. Are there ten lakh top college seats in the country? Are there even one lakh? Ever wondered what happens to the rest of us, year after year? Do we join a second rung college? A deemed university? A distance learning programme? A degree in an expensive, racist country?

Your government runs a lot of things. You run an airline that never makes money. You run hotels. You want to be involved in making basic stuff like steel and aluminum, which can easily be made by more efficient players. However, in something as important as shaping the young generation, you have stepped back. You have stopped making new universities. Why?

You have all the land you want, teachers love to get a government job, education funds are never questioned. Still, why? Why don’t we have new, A-grade universities in every state capital for instance?
Oh well, sorry. I am over reacting. If only I had not done that calculation error in my math paper, I’d be fine. In fact, I am one of the lucky ones. In four years, the number of candidates will double. So then we will have a college that only has 99 per cent scorers.

My parents were a bit deluded about my abilities, and I do feel bad for them. I didn’t have a girlfriend or too many friends, as people who want to get into a good college are not supposed to have a life. If only I knew that slogging for twelve years would not amount to much, I’d have had more fun.
Apart from that, do well, and say hello to the PM, who as I understand, used to teach in college.
Yours truly,
Gautam
(Poor student)

 

I took a printout of the letter and kept it in my pocket. I decided to do the act the next morning. I woke up as the maid switched off the fan to sweep the room. She came inside and brought a box of sweets. A fifty-year-old woman, she had served us for over ten years. “What?” I said as she gave me the box. It had kaju-barfi, from one of the more expensive shops in the city. The maid had spent a week’s salary distributing sweets to anyone known to her. “My son passed class XII,” she said as she started her work. “How much did he score?” I said, still rubbing my eyes. “Forty two per cent. He passed English too,” she said as her face beamed with pride. “What will he do now?” I said. “I don’t know. Maybe his own business, he can repair mobile phones,” she said. I went to the bathroom for a shower. I realized the newspaper would have come outside. I ran out of the bathroom. I picked up the newspaper from the entrance floor. I took out the admissions supplement, crumpled it and threw it in the dustbin kept outside the house. I came back inside the house and went back into the shower.

I left the house mid-day. I took the metro to Chandni Chowk and asked my way to the industrial chemicals market. Even though I had left science after class X, I knew that certain chemicals like Copper Sulphate or Ammonium Nitrate could kill you. I bought a pack of both compounds. As I passed through the lanes of Chandni Chowk, I passed a tiny hundred square feet jalebi shop. It did brisk business. I thought my last meal had to be delicious. I went to the counter and took a quarter kilo of jalebis.

I took my plate and sat on one of the two rickety benches placed outside the shop.

A Muslim couple with a four-year-old boy came and sat on the next bench. The mother fed the boy jalebi and kissed him after each bite. It reminded me of my childhood and my parents, when they used to love me unconditionally and marks didn’t exist. I saw the box of Ammonium Nitrate and tears welled up in my eyes. I couldn’t eat the jalebis. I came back home. I wondered if I should use my chemicals before or after dinner. Maybe it is better after everyone has slept, I thought.

We sat at the dinner table. Dad had told mom not to cook as he’d brought Chinese takeaway for us. Mom brought the soya sauce, chilly oil and the vinegar with cut green chillies in little katoris. We ate American chopsuey on stainless steel plates. I looked at my watch, it was 8 pm. Three more hours, I thought as I let out a sigh.

“One thing Kalpana,” my father said to my mother, “job candidates aren’t what they used to be these days. I interviewed for new trainees today, disappointing.”
“Why, what happened?” my mother said.
“Like this boy from Stephen’s, very bright kid. But only when it came to his subjects.”
“Really?” my mother said.
“Yeah, but I asked him a different question. I said how would you go about having a tea-shop chain like the coffee shop chains, and he went blank,” my father said, an inch of noodle hanging outside his mouth. My mother removed it from his face.
“And then some kid from SRCC. He topped his college. But you should have seen his arrogance. Even before the interview starts, he says ‘I hope at the end of our meeting, you will be able to tell me why I should join Tata Tea and not another company’. Can you imagine? I am twice his age.”

I could tell my father was upset from his serious tone.
“If you ask me,” my father continued, “the best candidate was a boy from Bhopal. Sure, he didn’t get into a top college. But he was an eighty per cent student. And he said ‘I want to learn. And I want to show that you don’t need a branded college to do well in life. Good people do well anywhere.’ What a kid. Thank God we shortlisted him in the first place.”
“Did he get the job?” I said.

“Yes, companies need good workers, not posh certificates. And we are having a meeting to discuss our short listing criteria again. The top colleges are so hard to get in; only tunnel vision people are being selected.” “Then why are you asking him to join Stephen’s or SRCC?” my mother said.

My father kept quiet. He spoke after a pause. “Actually, after today, I’d say don’t just go by the name. Study the college, figure out their dedication, and make sure they don’t create arrogant nerds. Then whatever the brand, you will be fine. The world needs good people.”

I looked at my parents as they continued to talk. Excuse me, but I have a plan to execute here. And now you are confusing me, I thought. “So should I study some more colleges and make a decision after that?” I said. “Yes, of course. No need for herd-mentality. Kalpana you should have seen this boy from Bhopal.”

Post-dinner, my parents watched TV in the living room while eating fruits. I retracted to my room. I sat on my desk wondering what to do next. The landline phone rang in my parent’s room. I went inside and picked it up.
“Hello Gautam?” the voice on the other side said.

It was my father’s colleague from work.  “Hello, Yash uncle,” I said.  “Hi,” he said, “congratulations on your boards.”  “Thanks uncle,” I said, “dad is in the living room finishing dinner, should I call him?” “Dinner? Oh, don’t disturb him. Just tell him his mobile is with me. It is safe. We were on a field trip today. He left it in my car.” “Field trip? For interviews?” I said. “What interviews? No, we just went to the Chandigarh office,” he said.

I wished him good night and hung up the phone. I switched on the bedside lamp in my parents’ room. Confused, I sat down on my father’s bed, wondering what to do next. To make space, I moved his pillow. Under the pillow lay a crumpled newspaper. I picked it up. It was the same admissions supplement I had tossed in the bin this morning. My father had circled the cut-offs table.

I left the newspaper there and came to the living room. My father was arguing with my mother over the choice of channels. I looked at my father. He smiled at me and offered me watermelon. I declined.

I came back to my room. I picked up the chemical boxes and took them to the toilet. I opened both boxes and poured the contents in the toilet commode. One press, and everything, everything flushed out.

“Gautam,” my mother knocked on the door, “I forgot to tell you. Gupta aunty came again. Can you teach her daughter?”
“Maybe,” I said as I came out of the toilet, “by the way, is she pretty?”