tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-100605952024-03-07T19:29:35.818+05:30Lies, Damned Lies and BlogsVarun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.comBlogger227125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-13143070679133586422007-08-15T18:47:00.000+05:302007-08-15T18:50:57.831+05:30Independence Day Special!<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/cChWYYa-FF8"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/cChWYYa-FF8" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object><br /><br />Happy Independence Day to all :-)Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-17752560228807013872007-08-10T01:42:00.000+05:302007-08-10T01:46:56.471+05:30The pace is too fast...<object width="425" height="350"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Y9Sz8u4GcX0"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Y9Sz8u4GcX0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object><br /><br />IIMB sports team is visiting Calcutta this weekend for Samhaar - the C-B sports meet. We made a build up video for the same!<br /><br />Check out!<br /><br />(Youtube link: <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9Sz8u4GcX0">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y9Sz8u4GcX0</a>)Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-12955193372038332652007-07-30T01:28:00.000+05:302007-08-07T02:25:51.023+05:30Dil Hai Hindustani<object height="350" width="425"> <param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/MiAn6mszyr4"> <embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/MiAn6mszyr4" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" height="350" width="425"></embed> </object><br /><br />Made a video for a course project. Check out!<br /><br /><b><i>Edit:</i></b> The youtube link, just in case you want to embed - <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiAn6mszyr4">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiAn6mszyr4</a>. Feel free to do so :-)Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-70410258336363214512007-07-05T12:31:00.000+05:302007-07-05T12:35:47.542+05:30Poster We designed<div style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/vasingh/EcellWork/photo?authkey=twdokdhAhLY#5083603633524811330"><img src="http://lh4.google.com/vasingh/RoyWkhMhpkI/AAAAAAAAAtM/5jiZWe8jh44/s400/poster.jpg" /></a><br /></div><br />I've joined the design team for the Entrepreneurship Cell at IIM Calcutta. This my first poster for them. The logo at top right is also designed by me. The caption, "What goes my daddy?", is the campus translation for "<span style="font-style: italic;">Mere baap ka kya jaata hai?</span>" :-).<br /><br />The idea was to catch attention of all the <span style="font-style: italic;">facchas </span>(<span style="font-style: italic;">using the caption</span>) and inspire them to attend the club crasher. The writeup is most likely taken from some Steve Jobs' speech. Fits well tho'.<br /><br />What say?Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-28648610326426677512007-06-25T13:17:00.000+05:302007-06-25T13:25:46.472+05:30Maggi ad gone bad..<a href="http://radio.oneworld.net/mediamanage/stream/7148/6591/Cutted_13-ez1182757966.mp3">Listen</a>Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-58060968566710582162007-06-25T12:49:00.000+05:302007-06-25T13:04:25.063+05:30Bhen of Brothers<a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/vasingh/BhenOfBrothers/photo?authkey=POO5RJAIIqs#5079900010384082210"><img src="http://lh3.google.com/image/vasingh/Rn9uJR1yRSI/AAAAAAAAAsg/CEwV-HU20_4/s144/bhen%20of%20brothers2.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/vasingh/BhenOfBrothers/photo?authkey=POO5RJAIIqs#5079900031858918706"><img src="http://lh4.google.com/image/vasingh/Rn9uKh1yRTI/AAAAAAAAAso/c7sp0gZVajE/s144/bhen%20of%20brothers4.jpg" /></a> <a href="http://picasaweb.google.com/vasingh/BhenOfBrothers/photo?authkey=POO5RJAIIqs#5079900049038787906"><img src="http://lh4.google.com/image/vasingh/Rn9uLh1yRUI/AAAAAAAAAsw/2a07toug9m8/s144/bhen%20of%20brothers1.jpg" /></a><br /><br />The idea came to us in a general bakar session. May be we'll shoot a spoof on this. Just made the posters. What say?Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-63376613188202583502007-05-13T18:11:00.000+05:302007-05-13T18:31:47.240+05:30London UpdateWent to Edinburgh, Scotland. The trip was a dampner, mainly due to bad weather and somewhat due to our bad luck. We wanted to hire a car and drive & enjoy the beautiful country side of Scotland. Couldn't do since we didn't have any credit cards on us. It might have worked with our debit cards also, we didn't have the pin numbers! The highlight of the visit was our trek up the Aurthur's Seat (which I abandoned mid-way :-). But it's a great town and nice place to visit. May be some other time I'll make a better visit to Scotland and spend more time.<br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div>The TV channels we get at our service apartments suck big time! Very rarely do we get to see some interesting program. Between time to watch a cricket match & telecast of that match, till now I've been able to get just one. I missed the world cup final too (<span style="font-style: italic;">oh well, but that was a let down anyway</span>).<br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div>Routine during weekdays has ceased to look so bad. I've got used to it, I guess. I get up around 7, reach office by 8:30, lunch at around 12:30 and dinner around 7:30 (<span style="font-style: italic;">in office</span>), be back home by 8:30-9 & sleep by 11:30. Started to get hang of the work also, actually liking it. Another three weeks before I fly back to India. Got somewhat encouraging feedback from office junta, but have to push a little more. I guess coming three weeks are going to be busier (<span style="font-style: italic;">wish me luck ! </span>:-).<br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div>Things I learnt the hard way -<br />1) You can visit Switzerland on UK work permit, but 3 months' work permit won't do.<br />2) £80 can get you round trip to Geneva with Easyjet.com.<br />3) Easyjet.com refund in case you want to/have to cancel.<br /><br />Sigh!Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-55461138736965832482007-05-13T17:30:00.000+05:302007-05-13T18:06:53.451+05:30Deja VuProud to present - <a href="http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Cities/Mumbai/Amid_spate_of_suicides_IITian_takes_a_reel_look/articleshow/1916926.cms">Deja Vu</a>. A film by IITB alum, Anshul Singhal, dealing with the issue of suicides at the campuses. The film has been received very warmly, it seems.<blockquote> So impressed was Bollywood screenplay writer and actor Ranjit Kapoor (of Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron and Kabhi Haan, Kabhi Na fame) with the film that he said after the premiere, "With a little bit of trimming, the film can actually be sent to Cannes. I thought I would view Deja Vu a bit patronisingly, but this film has taught me a thing or two."</blockquote>While I'm not totally convinced that the suicides were totally due to the academic pressures, any step towards addressing them is appreciable. And what better way than a film by friendly neighbourhood directors & actors.<br /><br />I tried searching for the movie on youtube and all, but obviously it isn't uploaded over there. They <i>are planning to send it to various national and international film fests with the active support of IIT</i>. Great!<br /><br />In a way, they are living my dream. Me and couple of friends are also very enthu about film-making and likes. Our music video - <a href="http://youtube.com/watch?v=5hOVCHCkj0c">Early Days @ Joka</a> - was our first foray in this field. It was frantic! We didn't start with a proper script or anything; most of our ideas evolved while shooting and we learnt a lot about it, while filming. But it was fun too. We had a great time as a team! We did shoot lots of redundent footage, which now won't see the light, most likely. <br /><br />Anyway, don't mind the ramblings. Looking forward, we are getting together again in June and planning to work on some short fillers, advertisments and kinds. One constraint we face is the camera. We shoot with Sreeni's panasonic and tho' we still have to try a lot with its controls, I doubt it has all that professional jazz to offer. Another constraint is the lack of actors; at the campus we can find people within certain age groups. If the story demands some child or old people, we don't have any way to get 'em. Anyway, these certainly won't dampen our spirits and we shall keep trying. You keep watching this space.<br /><br />P.S. : <a href="http://www.alumni.iitb.ac.in/dist_alumni/dist_alu_2002.htm#mundhra">Jagmohan Mundra</a> (of recent <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0458072/">Provoked</a> fame) is the bigger name in film-making from IIT Bombay. I hope Anshul will go on to be the bigger name eventually!Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-53729393491937442612007-04-19T01:57:00.000+05:302007-04-19T03:15:03.106+05:30दिलचस्प, बेहद दिलचस्प!"जे तो घनो ही अच्छो हो गयो रे ताऊ! इब तू हिंदी में भी ब्लॉगर को युज्ज कर सके है।"<br /><br />हाँ भाई, हाँ. पता है कि पुरानी न्यूज़ है, पूरी दुनिया को पता है। मैंने भी देखा था कभी तो, पर आज मेरे घनिष्ट मित्र स्वामी हग्नेश दास कि <a href="http://masterofuniverse.blogspot.com/2007/04/blog-post.html">ये पोस्ट</a> देख के दिल जिगर गुर्दे फेफड़े मचल उठे। तमन्ना जाग उठी कि मैं भी हिंदी में लिखूं। एक ज़माना था, मैंने भी हिंदी ब्लोग शुरू किया था। अब अलग ब्लोग तो चलने से रहा, यहीं पर हिंदी शुरू कर रहा हूँ। वैसे हिंदी ब्लोग्गिंग इस गूगल टूल की मोहताज नहीं, इसके आने से काफी समय पहले से ही हिंदी ब्लोग्गिंग का परचम पुरजोर लहरा रहा है। अक्षरग्राम पर सक्रीय नारद आपको बहुतेरे हिंदी ब्लोग्स की लिंक्स देगा जो की content में अंग्रेजी ब्लोग्स से कम नहीं हैं।<br /><br />पर एक बात तो है, हिंदी ब्लोग्गेर्स अक्सर क्लिष्ट हिंदी का प्रयोग करते हैं, जो कि आम बोल-चाल वाली हिंदुस्तानी भाषा से थोडा हट के है। मानो या ना मानो, उर्दू, अरबी की ही तरह अंग्रेजी और कई पश्चिमी भाषाओं के भी काफी अलफ़ाज़ हिंदी में इस क़दर मिल चुके हैं की उन्हें अलग करना सही नहीं होगा। जैसे, बस, ट्रेन, सिगरेट आदि। अब बचपन में सबने इनके हिंदी शब्द सुनें होंगे और हँसे होंगे, पर कोई ये नही कहता होगा कि "<em>सवेरे लौह पथ गामिनी, छुक-छुक वाहिनी से चले जायेंगे!</em>" खैर।<br /><br /><img style="FLOAT: right" src="http://www.phy.cam.ac.uk/cavendish/hands/Emerarr/emergencies_files/image017.jpg" />अब एक unrelated बात, सबने देखा होगा, हर बिल्डिंग में FIRE लिखे लाल अलार्म बटन. सबमें शीशा लगा होता है। आग लगे तो शीशा तोड़ो, घंटी बजाओ। अब शीशा क्यों? यहाँ तक की शीशा तोड़ने को हथोडा भी साथ में लगा देते हैं। तो फिर, शीशा क्यों? जैसे की कईयों ने सोचा लिया होगा, मैं भी सोचता हूँ कि ऐसा इसलिये कि कोई बिना किसी urgency के घंटी ना बजा दे। थोडी गूग्लगिरी करके देखा मैंने, पर इस रहस्य पर से पर्दा ना उठ सका। (Q. लिफ्ट्स में "Stop" और "Alarm" buttons पर शीशा क्यों नही है?) Main कारण यही है कि - Prevention is better that cure. अमेरिकी इस राय से कतई इत्तेफाक नही रखते। हाल ही Virginia Tech में हुआ shootout ऐसा सबसे बड़ा हादसा था, पर ऐसा पहला हादसा नहीं था। हर दफा ऎसी किसी घटना के बाद US में एक lobby जाग उठती है। ये वो लोग हैं जो चाहते हैं कि आम जनता से घातक हथियार रखने का हक वापस ले लिया जाये। ऎसी ही सोच वाला एक शख्श है <a href="http://www.michaelmoore.com/">Michael Moore</a>। फिल्म <a href="http://www.bowlingforcolumbine.com/">Bowling for Coulmbine</a> में उन्होने Coulmbine High School में हुये बेहद similar हादसे से जुडे तथ्य दिखाए हैं और कई सवाल उठाये हैं। पर नतीजा कुछ ना निकला, और फिर जो हुआ वो शायद रोका जा सकता था।<br /><div align="center">***</div>मेरा time यहाँ अच्छे से ही कट रहा है. हफ्ते भर तो घर से ऑफिस और ऑफिस से bed ही चलता है, weekends का इंतज़ार है.<br /><blockquote>यही कहानी है, इतना ही फ़साना है,<br />8 बजे जाना है, 9:30 पे आना है :-(</blockquote>Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-73831872207086382672007-04-15T19:19:00.000+05:302007-04-16T00:45:29.833+05:30Namaste LondonFirst weekend in the city. Glorious day; bright, warm, sunny. Will go and check out the various summer sales going on in the city. Only hitch - short on cash before the first stipend payment. But hey, window shopping doesn't cost a penny! And since I've got the monthly travel card made, travel is also free. So, wait there London city, me cometh.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div><br />First day in office, day filled with form-filling and other stuff. The highlight of the day was the walking tour we had around the office with an official walking tour guide. As the gentleman said - "<span style="font-style: italic;">Every stone has some history in London.</span>" Starting with the Roman era, to the great fire of 1666, to the Victorian times - the city is filled with relics and monuments. Of course, we Indians do have lot deeper historical roots, but one has to appreciate the way the Western World preserves its past. Makes me sad to think about all the history spread all over India, ruining & dying slow death.<br /><br />By the way, death does have some part to play in the history of London. All big monuments are either churches, with big grave yards (<span style="font-style: italic;">tombstones are still there, though all the bodies were exhumed and taken out of the city sometime in 1800's</span>) or have someone important murdered there, after elaborate torture, of course. We saw a square where <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wallace">William Wallace</a>, aka <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braveheart">Braveheart</a>, was <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Wallace#Wallace.27s_capture_and_execution">executed</a>.<br /><blockquote>[..]On 22 August 1305, following the trial, Wallace was taken from the hall, stripped naked and dragged through the city at the heels of a horse to Smithfield Market. He was hanged, drawn and quartered — strangled by hanging but released while still alive, emasculated, eviscerated and his bowels burnt before him, beheaded, then cut into four parts — at the Elms in Smithfield. His preserved head was placed on a pike atop London Bridge. It was later joined by the heads of his brother, John, and Simon Fraser. His limbs were displayed, separately, in Newcastle, Berwick, Stirling, and Aberdeen.</blockquote>Who the hell used to come up with all that. Yikes! And yeah, the guide told us the executions there were still carried out even after London got the tube in 1860s. So you could actually come using the tube to see an execution. Beat that!<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div><br />First day at the desk - mostly easy. Some stuff to be read and understood. Met almost the entire team. Had lunch at Subway with the two analysts from IIT Delhi. Left early. My manager was not in. London accounts for almost 50% of credit derivatives volume in the world and the volume runs in billion $; sitting on the floor where millions are made and lost was some thrill. Still don't understand many things, but surely this stuff ain't no rocket science!<br /><br />Eventually got to meet my manager on the next day. Pretty busy and pretty aggressive guy. Heard he joined here after working in Chicago for quite some time. No wonder he is all full of the typical american aggression. Check out the meeting we had recently (<span style="font-style: italic;">all in good humor, mind you. Not really menacing</span>)<br /><blockquote><span style="font-weight: bold;">Manager:</span> We seriously are f**king around here. What happened to the slide I asked you to do?<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Subordinate:</span> Oh yeah. I know I was supposed to do it, but I guess it got lost in the process.<br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Manager:</span> Yeah. In your world its "lost in process", in my world its called "f**king around!" See basically you f**k around because I am basically a nice guy.</blockquote>Only if I could get a penny everytime he says f**k, my cash crunch will be solved for a very long time. Almost the entire desk works pretty hard and leaving before 7-8 is kind of stuff hallucinations are made of. Around me, I keep hearing lots of different languages, seeing lots of different colored people. The office is quite cosmopolitan and location wise its in the downtown London, sitting pretty just opposite the London Stock Exchange.<br /><br /><div style="text-align: center;">***<br /></div><br />The place we (<span style="font-style: italic;">six of us: 3 from IIMC, 2 from A and 1 from B</span>) are staying in is pretty cool too! Full of interesting restaurants (<span style="font-style: italic;">Indian, Chinese, Lebanese, Malaysian, blah blah</span>) and shops, its considered among the better residential areas in London. We of course are staying in the company provided service apartments. The room, although a bit on the smaller side, is sufficient and quite comfortable. Usually I take a 15 minute ride in the tube to reach the office. The morning rush is nothing compared to the rush in Mumbai locals or even Kolkata metro.<br /><br />So there, the routine is almost set and life is good.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-64529159044175706062007-04-11T00:31:00.000+05:302007-04-14T18:01:42.284+05:30Lasting impressions<div id="figure" style="width: 240px;"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/215/458643424_63f63ff675_m.jpg"/><p>My wing at IITB - <b>The Outlaws</b>. The name painted on the wall and the Name-room no.s on left are no longer there.<br/>L-to-R: Me, Dasa, Jha saab, Mamu, Rizvi & Saras</p></div>This year it'll be four years since I graduated from IIT Bombay. Time flies. I realized this when I visited the campus back, couple of days back when I was visiting Mumbai to board the flight to London. It was great to have old friends, Nandu & DRS, with me. Torrents of memories rushed back, overwhelming me. Things have changed there, but not much, thankfully.<br /><br />Bikes are obviously banned inside the campus now and I'm sure people aren't missing them much. I spent my entire 4 years without a bike (<i>I once bought an old bicycle from an auction, but I used that very sparsly during her brief stay of about 2 months in my company</i>) and if anything, it makes you enjoy the long walks. My department's (<i>Comp. Sc & Engg.</i>) old building is now abandoned, due to bad design. It was definitely <i>"different"</i>, it boasted of design such that no two walls in the entire building were parallel. I'm sure not what exactly was the problem, but even during our times it had developed couple of cracks. Anyway, the department has now moved to the soulless KReSIT building. They have improved the tennis court; new ones look very sleek and posh, quite an improvement over the old ones. I saw some new shops in the Gulmohar building too.<br /><br />What made me most happy was the visit to my old room. Hostel 9, room 224. I spent about two and a half years in that room. And it hadn't changed much. <div id="figure" style="width: 500px;"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/202/458643420_777590fc09.jpg" /><p>H9-224. Home.<br/>The murals are still preserved by the current resident</p></div>The hostel was almost the same too, barring the mess which was <i>Hafeez-Contractor-ized</i> after renovation; but I'm sure even Hafeez can't do much about the <i>"mess"</i> they serve in there! There was a swanky billboard outside the hostel, welcoming people to "Hostel Nine - Pluto." Neat.<br /><br />Coming back to room, I gathered my guts and knocked the door. The room now belongs to a PhD candidate; I was shocked when he commented - "Oh! So you came to check out the old room. <b>May be the old graffiti.</b>" And there it was! My wall. THE wall. Amazing sight! During my days in the room, I had made couple of figures on the wall. I was totally touched watching them still there. The same Popeye & Flintstone smiling back. The present resident told me that he loved them there and made sure that when they paint the walls they don't paint over them. <i>Thank you my friend!</i> Though they painted over the wing's name (<span style="font-style:italic;">Outlaws</span>), but atleast the room still has my impressions.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-78379980453066362462007-04-03T23:27:00.000+05:302007-04-04T00:01:25.513+05:30Biz-cketSubhash Chandra, of Zee fame, <a href="http://www.zeenews.com/articles.asp?rep=2&aid=363747&sid=SPO&ssid=88">has announced the formation of new cricket series, the Indian Cricket League.</a> Apparently Chandra was miffed by the poor performance at the World Cup and wants to develop "a reserve pool of cricketers who could play for the country." No one minds making millions in the process, of course. "<span style="font-style: italic;">We are not shying away to tell that this is also a business proposition but at the macro level, this is a passion of the group to promote cricket,</span>" Chandra said.<br /><br />Whatever be the intention behind it, this can make difference. Check out Chandra's plans -<blockquote><b><u>Format:</u></b> Six teams will participate in this year`s league, which would start any time between July and August. The number of teams would be extended to 16 in the coming three years. Each team would comprise of two national, four international and eight budding players, who would be selected by the talent scouts. The matches will be played both in the ODI and Twenty20 formats with teams playing on a home and away basis.<br /><div id="figure" style="width: 351px;"><img src="http://www.thehindubusinessline.com/2005/09/27/images/2005092704180101.jpg" /><p>Ball's in BCCI's court now.</p></div><br /><b><u>Infrastructure Support:</u></b> The league will be supported by cricketing academies across the country having state-of-the-art facilities headed by international and domestic coaches. Talent scouts would pick talents from across the country and groom them in academies to provide a pipeline of reserve players.</blockquote>Chandra did mention <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kerry_Packer">Kerry Packer</a> - "<span style="font-style: italic;">No, that was a coup. All the players of Australia were signed and he also chose not to get the telecast rights of the Australian board,</span>" he reasoned. Chandra has seeked support from BCCI & state cricket associations and said, "<span style="font-style: italic;">If BCCI wants to draw from the talent pool, they are welcome to do so.</span>" BCCI is yet to respond, but I guess they won't be happy to lose the monopoly control they have over Indian cricket.<br /><br />This thing looks good. The point about searching talent at the grass-root and grooming them at state-of-the-art academies and giving them chance to rub shoulders with international players, all this sounds too good to be true! This should definitely bring forth some quality competition in the domestic circuit. Chandra is basically offering to do the work BCCI should be doing, and taking the bounty in the process, sounds fair to me! However, we presently have a mechanism in place to find players from the member states of BCCI. All players representing the teams in domestic tournies are basically held by contracts. If BCCI puts its foot down and outlaws it to play in the ICL, the league might get reduced to all fizz and no fun. Some players might get lured by the money, but I doubt if it'll be a big number. Then we'll have probably retired or forgotten players; <a href="http://www.hindu.com/mp/2006/08/03/images/2006080300200401.jpg">Vinod Kambli</a> might just get another chance there :-).<br /><br />"<span style="font-style: italic;">At present there are only 20 players contracted with the board and there is a restriction that they cannot play for anybody else. From each state only 25 players can come up as registered players. What about the millions of boys playing cricket in schools and colleges? Do they get a chance?</span>" Chandra said. Not another reality show, I hope! But if Chandra's league doesn't get the top 20-25 players from the states, I doubt if their talent scouts can hunt plenty of good ones. Hence, the ball essentially lies in BCCI's court. As per the good of Indian cricket, Chandra's plans definitely have my thumbs up. It's essentially an open market vs monopoly situation and I would always go for open market.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-59484831294493568392007-04-01T01:34:00.000+05:302007-04-01T02:34:03.387+05:30Domestic cricket in IndiaThe recent World Cup performance by the talented Indian team has stirred the hornet's nest. Heads are rolling in Pakistan and the blame game is just about to start in India. However, I doubt if anything meaningful would come out of it. <a href="http://www.iimcal.ac.in/calumni/archives/vol.3/spotlight.html">Ramachandra Guha</a> describes cricket as a "special game" in India in his outstanding book on Indian Cricket - <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Corner-Foreign-Field-History-British/dp/0330491172">A corner of a foreign field</a>, and one has to agree. More than just another sport, it's now another icon of national pride. When tension mounted between India & Pakistan, Indian government was quick to snap all cricketing ties, however, the Pakistani hockey & TT teams were touring India, that too without a whimper from Thakre and likes. Every year the broadcasting rights for cricket in India are fought over intensely with the amounts going up astronomically. Every cricket match in any corner of India, featuring the Indian team, sometimes even without them, meets full-house with thousands turned down!<br /><br />If such is the love for the game, how come no one cares a damn about the domestic cricket in India? Before delving deeper, let's see if it is really the "love" of the game or just fanatic following of the home team. The Indian crowd has given diametrically opposing impressions over time. Compare the standing ovation received by the Paki team in the Chennai test and the unruly crowd of Calcutta in the '96 WC Semifinal. So, do people want to see good cricket or they just care for their team's win? The truth lies somewhere between these two extremes. I think, people have some idea (almost fair) about the team's calibre and when they perform below there capability, they face the fan's ire. Indian team's ouster in the first round was definitely below their capabilities. It's not that the fans expected them to win the cup; they were hailed as heroes in the last WC when they played out of their skins to reach the finals, only to get hammered!<br /><br />Coming back to domestic cricket, one most common argument is that the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranji_Trophy">Ranji Trophy</a> has too many teams, thus diluting the quality of cricket. I quote from the wikipedia page -<blockquote>Up until the 2002-03 season, the teams were grouped into five zones - North, West, East, Central and South - and initial matches were played within the zones on a league basis. The top teams (two until 1991-92, three after that) from each zone played in a national knock-out competition, leading to a final which decided the winner of the tournament.<div id="figure" style="width:500px"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/54/143337506_458d8aa6e3.jpg"/><p>Kids playing cricket near Payakara Falls, Ooty</p></div><br /><br />Starting with the 2002-03 season, the zonal system was abandoned and a two-division structure was adopted: the Elite Group and the Plate Group. For the 2006-07 season, the divisions were re-labelled the Super League and Plate League respectively.<br /><br />The Super League is divided into two groups of eight and seven teams, while the Plate League is divided into two groups of six teams each. In both divisions, the top two teams from each group advance to the knock-out phase. The finalists from the Plate League are promoted to the Super League the next year while the two teams at the bottom of the Super League are relegated.</blockquote>If this seems too many, we've got <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duleep_Trophy">Duleep Trophy</a>, with just 5 zonal teams. I quote -<blockquote>Five Indian zonal teams regularly take part in the Duleep Trophy - North Zone, South Zone, East Zone, West Zone and Central Zone.<br /><br />The original format was that the five teams played each other on a knock-out basis. From the 1993-94 season, the competition converted to a league format.<br /><br />From the 2003-04 season onwards, the five original zonal teams competed along with a sixth guest team which was a touring foreign team. The first guest team was England A in 2003-04.</blockquote>If you say the slow test cricket is the deterring factor, we've got Deodhar Trophy, 50-over one-day competition played on a league basis among the 5 zonal teams since 1973!<br /><br />So there, we've got all flavors of cricket in the domestic competitions, yet it's not able to pull the apparently cricket crazy crowd of India. It <i>has</i> to do something with the quality of cricket played. The difference of quality between international fixtures & these domestic ones has to be huge, thus not attracting the attention of people. This again is a mind-boggler! Cricket is played almost <i>everywhere</i> in India and yet we can't produce ample number of quality competitors for the domestic cricket? This points towards the callous attitude of cricket governing body in India. We should do more to train & prepare cricketers from their younger days. There is another anamoly here, our under-19 team was among the strongest & in the final of last two U-19 World Cups! How do you explain this decline of form of the same players when they graduate to the big league? It's as if they stop adding value to their cricket while their peers from other countries move on.<br /><br />There is another deterrent, parents skepticism towards career in professional sports. I don't know if we can tackle this problem in the short run in a third-world developing country like India. May be BCCI can announce some comprehensive scholarships, may be they have these even now. But the fact remains that the parents are scared to let their kids chase their cricketing dreams at the cost of sound academic background, thus increased probability of a decent career.<br /><br />Another face of the problem is the media coverage of these games. I do get to read about them in the newspaper, however no channel is ready to air these games. We do get to see the NKP Salve Challenger Trophy, but not other games. This again depends on the fact that there aren't many buyers for these games, because these are low quality matches. Some vicious cycle we've got here! We can't relate with these matches, because we can't see them. They can't broadcast the matches, because no one sees them!<br /><br />These definitely aren't the only problems with the Indian cricket. Still, I feel if we can address these one fast, the Indian cricket will be benefitted a lot and fast. Depleted bench strength & mediocre domestic cricket are holding back Indian cricket big time.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-9385595541424320042007-03-31T22:23:00.000+05:302007-03-31T23:00:42.351+05:30April Fool's PranksDilbert creator Scott Adams has mentioned some of his favorite April Fool's Pranks in his <a href="http://dilbertblog.typepad.com/the_dilbert_blog/2007/03/april_fools_jok.html">recent blog</a>. Pretty neat, I say. Reminded me of some of my own pranks. Now, I'm someone who'd go to quite some lengths to play pranks on friends and may I add I have quite some reputation as a prankster. So, here I present my favorite one. It's the biggest prank I pulled off and an act of total brilliance, I say with all the modesty.<img src="http://www.elon.edu/images/e-web/pendulum/April-Fool-ILLUS.jpg" style="width: 300px; border-width: 0px;float: right;"/><br /><br />I was working as a software engineer with a name big enough to provide me with an SMS gateway, although an US one, but using it I could send SMS to Indian numbers. So one fine day, I sent an SMS to couple of my friends saying - "<span style="font-style: italic;">Congratulations! You are our customer of the month. You winning number is XXXXXXX. Please wait as we'll contact you again to tell you more about your prize. In case of any clarification, please feel free to contact us at ZZZZZZ.</span>" The contact number given was my office desk's number. Within minutes, Thakur called in. In fact his call caught me off guard as I hadn't planned it all by then. However, to make it look genuine, I asked his confirmation number & phone number and in my most call-centerish voice I exclaimed - "Oh! You must be Mr. Thakur, our customer of the month!" Thinking on my feet, I gave him two options to choose from, 1) A Laxmi Juicer-mixer-grinder & 2) Rs. 2000/- worth of talktime. He told he'll confirm later. After this call, I dropped emails to his roomies, explaining the situation to them. They chipped in, asking Thakur to go for the mixer.<br /><br />Next day, I sent him another SMS saying - "As per your instructions, we're giving you the Laxmi Juicer-mixer-grinder. Please collect the same from our office on coming Sunday. Please do not forget to get you previous month's bill." As expected, I received another call from him on the "call-center" number. This time I made one female friend of mine to attend the call, to make it look more genuine. Clearly, Thakur was distressed about the choice forced on him. We asked him to come to the office to sort it out.<br /><br />The fateful Sunday, I was present at their house. Since the Airtel office was towards my side of the town, I offered to accompany Thakur to the office. Pankaj also came with us. By now Thakur had got the printout of the last month's bill and the congratulatory SMS ready to flash. We reached the office. Pankaj and me stayed out, Thakur went in. The attendant present couldn't comprehend what Thakur was saying and took his mobile to show the SMS to her superiors. Now, I went inside to burst Thakur's bubble.<br /><br />Priceless! The look on his face said it all!Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-50727172523186058702007-03-30T01:39:00.000+05:302007-03-30T12:21:34.391+05:30Withdrawal SymptomsEver tried getting down a running bus? Yup, the inertia funda. Physics, class XI, CBSE.<br /><br />My prolonged stay at home, after the months spent at IIMC, has put me in that kind of situation. When I was always chasing deadlines at IIMC, I would have laughed at someone had he suggested that nothingness can bore you. And yet here I am, toppled into the abyss of deep boredom. Despite the long sleeping hours, longer hours spent in front of the TV, the days just don't get over.<br /><br />And the mercury is rising too! Its tough to imagine that the day I arrived here I slept in a <i>rajayi</i>. Now its almost imbearable to be out in the sun. The ceiling fan is no longer adequate to beat the heat. Glad that I won't be here to face the worst.<br /><br />All's not lost tho', all the cricket happening about half the globe away keeps me company. The idleness compels me to listen to the pre-match chat show too, not that it makes me any wiser or happier. Tut-tut, India's out; but still the arena is wide open! My predictions: Semifinalists - Aus, SA, SL and NZ & Dream Final - Aus vs SA with SA claiming the cup. Long way to that though.<br /><br />And I'm reading again. A lot, by my own standards. Some recommendations -<br /><ul><li><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Corner-Foreign-Field-History-British/dp/0330491172">A Corner of a Foreign Field</a> - Amazing work about mostly pre-independence history of cricket in India. Even if the WC debacle left a bitter taste in mouth, don't miss this masterpiece, for the love of the game. Hat's off to Guha for doing all the hard work in researching the anecdotes and stories to present in such lucid form! (<span style="font-style: italic;">and if cricket still fancies you, pick </span><a style="font-style: italic;" href="http://vasingh.blogspot.com/2006/02/india-pakistan-wagah-border-ceremony.html">Pundits from Pakistan</a><span style="font-style: italic;"> also!</span>)<br /></li><li><a href="http://www.aboveaveragebook.com/">Above Average</a> - Doesn't dwell too much on the IIT connection. Very interesting, very piquant. Very nostalgic for any IITian, more so for IITD junta (<span style="font-style: italic;">I guess</span>). Its characters reminded me of many lost faces from my IIT days.</li><li><a href="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Spy-Princess-Life-Noor-Inayat/dp/0750939656">Spy Princess: The Life of Noor Inayat Khan</a> - The story is definitely very thrilling & impressive, though the narration lacks punch. It's told just like a chronological record of facts. Bit drab in parts, still quite enjoyable as a whole.</li><li><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Being-John-McEnroe-Tim-Adams/dp/1400081475">Being John Mcenroe</a> - Rather than being just descriptive, this book tries to analyze the reasons behind & effects of John Mcenroe on Tennis. Great insights about the genius and his times.<br /></li><li><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/images/076790818X/sr=1-2/qid=1175201039/ref=dp_image_0/002-5692274-9180855?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books&qid=1175201039&sr=1-2">A Short History of Nearly Everything</a> - Masterpiece! Absolute masterpiece! Would appeal to anyone with slightest bend of mind towards Science & tiniest tinge of curiosity towards Nature. Simply unputdownable.<br /></li><li><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_IITians">The IITians</a> - Just started this one. Starts on perhaps a bit too laudatory note, but is building up nicely. Should be a good read.<br /></li></ul>Apart from all this, I've also started reading blogs again. But my BSNL dial-up doesn't allow me to surf much. By the way, till very recent I wasn't aware that you can just put the BSNL phone cable in your laptop, do simple registration once and can start surfing @ ~40 kbps on totally on-use-basis rates! Check out <a href="http://bsnl.co.in/service/internet_typeofaccess.htm">Account free Internet dial up access based on CLI</a>.<br /><br />All my bags are not yet packed and I'm not yet ready to go, still another week left. But most of my shopping is done, barring some last minute items. Not yet thinking much about the upcoming internship, but I hope it would be interesting time. Reminds me of an ancient Chinese <span style="font-style: italic;">curse</span> - "<span style="font-style: italic; color: rgb(102, 0, 0);">May you live in interesting times.</span>" Hmm, we'll see that.<br /><br />Couple of things I <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> to do in London -<br /><ol><li>Watch a cricket match, county-shounty, anything!</li><li>Watch a soccer match. Some decent clubs whose names I know, hopefully.</li><li>Visit some typical Irish pubs (<span style="font-style: italic;">just to check out the atmo, Mom!</span>)</li><li>Buy long-pending lenses for my camera and click loads of pictures.</li><li>Travel a bit. Bath, Oxford, some coastal towns, perhaps.</li></ol>Time to hit the bed.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-13024433801660618892007-03-23T00:55:00.002+05:302007-03-23T01:41:02.081+05:30Film Review: Just MarriedIt seems a whole lot of Bollywood directors discovered <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0314331/">Love Actually</a> recently. The funda of having multiple parallel love-stories, capturing various shades and emotions, is literally beaten to death in last couple of months.<div id="figure" style="width: 175px;"><img src="http://img71.imageshack.us/img71/9778/16jm2dp9.jpg"><p>No "action" for Fardeen<br/>No action for audience</p></div> In the race of duplicating ideas, its the laggards who lose worst. Thats why after <a href="http://www.salaam-e-ishq.com/">Salaam-e-Ishq</a> & <a href="http://honeymoontravels.indiatimes.com/">Honeymoon Travels</a>, its just impossible to digest Just Married.<br /><br />And that's just first of the many MANY problems with the movie! The pace of the movie is another. The movie just drags and drones, without any point in sight. The story has loopholes of the size of India Gate where from Siddhu can pass with his tractor! I don't think there are still homes in uber-urban Delhi where US-return Marketing Heads would agree to marry some girl without even talking to her. And someone please tell me what <i>actually</i> was the issue in the film? Why was Isha Deol screaming - "<i>Kya sex hi sab kuch hai aapke liye?</i>" Because Fardeen touched his shoulder or because the cockroach touch her legs (<span style="font-style:italic;">eh.. talking to Fardeen or Cockroach</span>)? Oh, and there were other couples too. Mostly artificial and boring. Faces from the TV serials, bringing the typical rude onslaught of emotions from the small screen. <span style="font-style:italic;">Waaaay</span> over the top! See, the issue with the movie is - there is no story!!<br /><br />Which is saddening, given the fact that it the debut movie of Meghna Gulzar, daughter of famous poet & lyricist Sampooran Singh aka Gulzar. Coming to that, the music of the film was another flop show. Only one song - "<i>Gudgudee</i>" - is worth noting. <br /><br />Now the acting, Fardeen Khan gave yet another Man-Behind-The-Iron-Mask performance. He definitely beat Isha Deol in Look-I'm-So-Expressionless contest, but by a very narrow margin. I can imagine both set of celebarents (<span style="font-style:italic;">new term coined by me - celeb+parents!</span>) scratching their heads (<i>Firoz very delicately</i>) about where to fit in their wards. Action didn't work, neither did emotion. No chance in romance and too young for bhabhi-bhaiya roles. Well, tough luck. But please move over and spare the poor audience.<br /><br />And if you've read till here, you must be rewarded with my own PJ. The mention of cockroach brought it forth in my memory. So,<br /><blockquote>Q. What did the nephew roach call his uncle?<br />A. <i>Kaka</i>-roach! :-P</blockquote>Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-22419229194876314742007-03-17T16:35:00.000+05:302007-03-17T16:59:27.287+05:30One year at JokalandThe terms are done, exams taken & projects submitted. No matter how far it looked when I started, the end of the first year at IIM Calcutta came a little too soon. The year was more or less kind to me. Along with the usual stuff, I did many unusual things too. The campus band, JBS Baro-C, composed a song about the early days of students in IIMC ( <a href="http://music.cooltoad.com/music/song.php?id=296339">http://music.cooltoad.com/music/song.php?id=296339</a> ). <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Song contains swearing/explicit lyrics!</span> I made a video on the song along with some friends. Here it is -<br /><object width="425" height="350" align="center"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/5hOVCHCkj0c"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/5hOVCHCkj0c" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="350"></embed></object><br />The response to the video has been very encouraging. In the first 4 days at youtube, it gathered around 1200 hits! This encouragement has motivated us to make more videos under the banner of "Between the Lines" production.<br /><br />However, the movie-making would have to wait, for the summers are here and all of us are to leave and join our respective organizations for the summer internships. I'm leaving for London on 9th April and would be back on 2nd June, good one week before the next term start.<br /><br />One regret after the first year - I virtually abandoned this blog and my photography. Since this was something I really enjoyed, I'll try my best to revive my interests and devote more time to them.<br /><br />That we'll see, for the time being, please check out the video and some feedback, may be?Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1158763604976115552006-09-20T19:55:00.000+05:302007-03-30T12:42:02.653+05:30A Rage For PerfectionMcEnroe<div id="figure" style="width: 301px;"><img src="http://img238.imageshack.us/img238/2754/john20mcenroeag0.jpg"> <p>John McEnroe<br />"Needed to lose head to play good"</p></div> named his autobiography "<a href="www.amazon.com/McEnroe-Rage-Perfection-Richard-Evans/dp/0450055868">A Rage For Perfection</a>." As Harsha Bhogle recently quipped in an informal talk here, perhaps he was the only player who needed to lose his head to play better. I'm on hunt for the book, if you find one, don't think twice before dispatching it to me :-)<br /><br />Anyway, the title got me thinking. Quite recently I've realised something about myself - I don't have the "rage for perfection." This is not to say mediocrity doesn't bother me, but competition surely doesn't. I'm not someone motivated by the vision of the accolades reserved for the highest achiever. Even from the very start, in school, I was never pushed for the first place, by me or by my folks. I was among the toppers, but rarely "the" topper. During my preparation days for JEE, I didn't use to think in "top 10, top 50" terms. Till the results came out, I thought anything in top 500 would be cool. Then in IIT, I let it go loose. Even afterwards, in my job, I never aspired to be the best or whatever. I wasn't bad, mind you :-), just not the best!<br /><br />Does that mean achievements don't matter to me? My proudest achievement in recent times has been my success (however miniscule) in photography. I started with absolutely no credentials and did reasonably well. Many, many people have looked at <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vasingh/">my flickr account</a> and praised my work. Nothing makes me more proud! Same for my blog; I started as another anonymous blogger. Now after some 1.5 years, I've got more than 50,000 hits. No mean feat :-) And mostly I have written whatever fancied me. Not for the readers, just for me.<br /><br />So the way I've explained it to myself is that may be competition doesn't push me, but once I set my eye on some job and if I really enjoy doing it, then I do it well. And so well that, often I would emerge decently placed in the competition!<br /><br />Just wanted to tell someone.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1156340800931280882006-08-23T18:52:00.000+05:302007-03-23T01:52:38.349+05:30An AppealCouple of days back, one student at IIMC met with an road accident and after about 1 week in the ICU, succumbed to the injuries. It was shocking, disturbing, but more than anything else, it was unfortunate. I personally didn't know the guy, but it disturbed me. "Could've-been-me" feeling! The guy was riding a motorcycle, without a helmet and possibly under the influence of alcohol. He crashed with a bus and hit his head on the road. Pity. Foolishness? Waste!<br /><div id="figure" style="width: 476px;"><img src="http://img101.imageshack.us/img101/989/accidentsza8.jpg"> <p>Kolkata road accidents data.</p></div><br />Couple of years back, I would've put the entire blame on the foolhardiness of that guy, but somehow it doesn't seem right anymore. Most of us aren't aware how easy it is to lose our lives. Just a little misfortune and there's no tomorrow! Most of the time, most of us don't give any thoughts to such possibilities and the consequences. I had my own little face-off with it once, about <a href="http://vasingh.blogspot.com/2005/06/brush-with-eternal-hush.html">an year back</a>. And it sets you thinking. One of our professor, whose tongue can sting at times, said,"This is perhaps the most mindless way of dying." And I couldn't agree more.<br /><br />More fortunately than unfortunately, early in my biking days, when I was still a noob, I had a little accident. I was learning biking and it skidded. I landed safely and absolutely no harm was done. But that incident never left me, it's always there at the back of my mind. Result: I developed as an extra cautious biker. Of course, I've had my moments of madness. Fortunately, I survived all of them.<br /><br />There isn't much to say. The sad incident can end up being just a statistical data point, unless we take a lesson from it. Sincere appeal to all bikers - please get a helmet!Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1156020785791419512006-08-20T01:38:00.000+05:302007-03-23T01:52:38.350+05:30Skeptic Youth vs Confident VeteransThe panel discussion I mentioned in my last post turned out to be quite an interesting one. The topic of discussion was - "100 Indian MNCs by 2020." The panelists were -<br /><ul><li> Mr Sandipan Deb : Chief Editor, <a href="http://www.financialexpress.com/">Financial Express</a></li><li> Mr Hemant Kanoria, Managing Director, <a href="http://www.srei.com/">Srei Finance</a></li><li> Mr D K Chaudhuri CEO , <a href="http://www.skytechsolutions.com/">Skytech </a></li><li> Mr Barun Das, <a href="http://www.exideworld.com/">Exide</a>, Company Secretary</li></ul>Sandipan started with his views, which unfortunately didn't look very well prepared. However, he was lucid; talked much without saying much. Rest three had solid experience in industry, extending the operations at the world stage. They talked with more authority and shared their experiences. All of them were very sure that the dream of 100 Indian MNCs by 2020 is well within the reach and sort of underrated. It was quite inspiring hearing their first hand experiences.<br /><br />Like all good panel discussions, this one too ended with a Q&A round by audience. Like all good audience, lots of questions came out after a little prodding. What was most interesting to note was that the crowd - comprising the leaders of tomorrow, <span style="font-style: italic;">yada yada yada</span> - was quite skeptic about achieving the goal! There were questions about the government and its ineffectiveness, about sustaining the current wave of growth, about population & literacy, about infrastructure & investment - all of them showing how improbable this goal seems to be. On the contrary, the panel maintained its stand that India will have to do too bad to miss this one!<br /><br />Their settling argument was that India has reached this stage even with the kind of government & stifling regulations we've had, so there is every chance that now that the condition have improved a lot, India will bloom even more. The post-lib generation hasn't seen those days, when Infosys almost died as an infant after frustrating experiences trying to work for global client, mainly due to the policies in 1989!<br /><br />What will happen remains to be seen, but this skeptism in the youth of the nation, <i>crème de la crème</i>, worries me. Not like <span style="font-style: italic;">OMG-India-is-screwed-now</span> worry, just a little concern.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">PS:</span> Just a small note, reply to Jeet's comment on my last post where he said, "<span style="font-style: italic;">I don't agree with Sandipan's only one answer theory.. I don't know about comp. sci and engg. but Civil Engineering was all about evaluating multiple correct answers and 'choosing' one of them.</span>" Still, you'll find the management education a whole lot different than engineering. CS is mainly about optimizing; space, speed, transfer, safety.. So in a way, you are confined in your pursuit of the answer. You can say that A is <span style="font-style: italic;">better</span> than B and like that. Civil, as I understand, does have an element of subjectivity to it. In the managerial world, I'm told, there are many situation where nothing's universally better or worse. It all depends on what you decide.<br /></span>Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1155407789809513962006-08-12T23:46:00.000+05:302007-03-23T01:52:38.350+05:30MBA vs EngineeringOne among various good things about IIMC is that it provides you opportunities to interact with various leaders from different walks of life. I attended couple of presentations from top consulting firms, basically pitching consulting as a career to us students. They had sent IIMC alumni, who were placed at top positions. It's definitely inspiring; sets you dreaming.<br /><br />Tomorrow, that is Sunday, we've Sandipan Deb (Managing Editor, Outlook magazine and editor of Outlook Money) coming over to the campus for one panel discussion. He happens to be an IIMC alumni. Sometime back he was <a href="http://www.iimcal.ac.in/calumni/archives/vol.4/Iview_Sandipan.htm">interviewed</a> by the alumni magazine. Couple of interesting points he made:<blockquote>We came from a very closed quantitative engineering system, in the sense that engineering education inculcates the philosophy of one right answer to any problem. That if you follow the flow chart, if you follow the algorithm, if you do the steps properly, there is only one answer possible. I think I gained hugely from the exposure that IIM gave me to - economics, sociology, political science, psychology, behavioral sciences etc. It really broadened my horizon.</blockquote>That is exactly what I'm going through. But it isn't all rosy; atleast for me it's little tough to adjust. It's easy to think that it's much easier to give <span style="font-style: italic;">gyaan</span> on such subjects, it's not! I guess, I'll take some time to get used to it. Sandipan further added:<blockquote>Our batch was quite an exceptional batch. There were about fifteen of us in the same wing H2-top and I was very fortunate to have these people to interact with. We had toppers and we had bottomers. We had brilliant bottomers, we had people who slogged, and we had people who never went to class. They were also extremely talented. In those two years, most IIM Calcutta teams-quiz, debate, drama, music etc-had representation from our wing and we won almost every festival that we went to. So that made my two years totally worth it.</blockquote> That is so true! You learn a lot even outside the class, among such a great gang of selected few. I've had the same experience at IIT Bombay and I guess I'm in for good two years in Calcutta too.<br /><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">PS:</span> Not getting much time to read/write. Hence this inactivity at the blog.</span>Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1152959229857245212006-07-15T15:37:00.000+05:302007-03-23T01:52:38.351+05:30The CampusThe IIM Calcutta campus or <span style="font-style: italic;">Jokaland</span>, as we call it, is almost like an island amid lakes.<div id="figure" style="width: 500px;"><img src="http://img89.imageshack.us/img89/7271/183743511cf5195f738ha9.jpg" /> <p>The IIM Calcutta campus, courtesy Google Earth.</p></div> As it's evident from the Google Earth image, there are three major man-made lakes surrounding the academic block, the campus KV and library. Our hostels are along the lakes on the outside. The setting gets more clear in the <a href="http://www.wikimapia.org/#y=22445541&x=88299699&amp;amp;z=18&l=0&m=a">Wikimapia image</a>, as it has proper labelling too.<br /><br />Compare it to the <a href="http://www.wikimapia.org/#y=19129843&x=72910337&amp;amp;z=16&l=0&m=a">IIT Bombay campus</a> and you'll find many similarities. Both the campus have the serene presence of beautiful water bodies and dense greenery. Right now the similarities get thicker, since the Calcutta weather nowadays is quite like Mumbai monsoons; it stays cloudy with frequent short showers. Due to the lakes, it stays humid at the campus and if it's not windy, it can get really stifling. The IIMC campus is much smaller than IITB campus, and obviously since IITB is meant for much bigger number of junta. It used to house 4 BTech batches, each of roughly 500 plus huge number of MTechs and few PhDs too. Here at IIMC there are just two batches at a given point of time. My batch's strength is around 310 and that's the largest number they've ever had.<br /><br />One thing paining me is the distance from the downtown Kolkata. Last night I enquired about ordering pizza and I got to know that the minimum order they take is something as obscene as 6k!! That's because the nearest outlet is at Camac Street or like that :-). But, the food in the mess & (almost) 24 hrs canteen in the hostel is much better than IITB. But eating out is still an issue. Nearest Metro station is some 100 bucks away from IIMC and there aren't many options to reach there. I guess things would get brighter once my bike reaches Kolkata.<br /><br />Today I took some pictures at the campus. I've uploaded them at the <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/vasingh/sets/72157594199635436/">Flickr page</a>. Most of them need little bit of postprocessing, which I plan to do soon.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1152881382040964552006-07-14T17:49:00.000+05:302007-03-30T12:42:02.654+05:30Kolkata Chapter Begins :-)This would be the longest stretch when I didn't blog, since I started blogging, but <a href="http://www.altavista.com/audio/results?q=it%27s+like+that+DMC&maf=mp3&maf=wav&maf=msmedia&maf=realmedia&maf=aiff&maf=other&mad=all"><span style="font-style: italic;">it's like that, and that's the way it is</span></a>. First I was stranded, disconnected at Jaipur for a while, which now seems like pretty comfortable setting.. sigh. Then, once I touched base at Kolkata, things got hectic, and I didn't have a computer for a while. Now that things have more or less settled and I've bought my self a rather sleek <a href="http://www.google.co.in/url?sa=t&ct=res&cd=1&url=http%3A%2F%2Freviews.cnet.com%2FHP_Compaq_Presario_V3000%2F4505-3121_7-31864365.html&ei=dou3RMqcJ6O8sALv15mABg&sig2=QPMZWNq81g4f1lxGKwLDIg">Compaq Presario v3000</a>, it's about time I resume blogging.<br /><br />First things first, Kolkata and the neighbourhood, looks totally amazing from air, after first few days of showers. From my SpiceJet flight, I was gawking, spellbound, at the marvellous view below.. lush greenery, numerous big & small canals and all! Then we hit the ground (<span style="font-style: italic;">pun intended</span>). Let's just say, for someone new to the city, it's not very tough to not like the city, going by the first impressions. The IIM Calcutta campus is good 90 minutes from the airport! The area neighbouring IIMC, it's called Joka, is rather unimpressive to say the least. However, the campus is breathtaking with its 7 lakes and lush greenery. My hostel room, I found is more comfortable than the room I had in IIT Bombay. It's bigger, better planned and it has a balcony which opens to the patch of jungle behind my hostel. I haven't clicked snaps of the campus, but I intend to do that pretty soon. The downtown Kolkata, essentially Park Street area, is light-years away from the campus and it takes huge effort to make it to there. Till now I've been there only once, and even then it was disappointing as we couldn't catch any movie! The movie buff in me is still very pleased to be here; the LAN is virtually full of movies! My new 250 GB external HDD might getting full to the brim, is looking like a possibility.<br /><br />The academic load looks manageable. I have five courses, all of them interesting. Especially the Organisational Behaviour course, which has interesting mix of Psychological studies in it, pretty impressive! Then there is Indian Economic and Political History, which is also pretty interesting to study. Midterms are still (<span style="font-style: italic;">just?</span>) 2 weeks away and things are chill (<span style="font-style: italic;">as we say here</span>).<br /><br />I guess, I'll start with such banal posts; it should take time to get back the flow for blogging :-)Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1149747319043275942006-06-08T11:33:00.000+05:302007-03-30T12:42:02.654+05:30Back to HomeReached Jaipur on 5th morning. Since then, life has been laid back. Sleeping late, waking up early (!!), going for morning walks and sleeping again after that. Eating a lot and having long siestas during hot afternoons. Lots of TV - cricket & tennis. Soccer should start in some time. Meeting with lost acquaintances, uncles & aunts; explaining everytime what I was doing and what I am going to do. Taking all the insinuations about my marriage & elbow-in-ribs jokes from middle-aged uncles with a straight poker face.<br /><br />Not all rosy, but closer to it. I'm loving it and praying it to end soon :-) Bundle of contradictions, eh?<br /><br />Leaving for Calcutta on 23rd. Taking SpiceJet this time, after vowing to never take an Air Deccan flight again. That's a long story, some other time.<br /><br />Be Good people,<br />- VarunVarun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-10060595.post-1148913704203601282006-05-29T19:54:00.000+05:302007-03-30T12:42:02.655+05:30Closing the Bangalore Chapter<blockquote><span style="font-weight: bold;">16</span><sup style="font-weight: bold;">th</sup><span style="font-weight: bold;"> July, 2003:</span> I reached the company guest house in Jayanagar, wet, tired & hungry. Things could've gone only better from there.</blockquote>And how well things turned out to be! As the time for me to bid adieu to Bangalore is sneaking close, a mix of melancholy & nostalgia is setting in. When I first came to Bangalore, I was a fresh out of college, wide-eyed kid of 21; tired of scraping my time for the degree & bumbling with anticipation towards the corporate world. Coffee machine & the biscuits in the office pantry excited me, so did the free stationary (<span style="font-style: italic;">I did build up a mini ball pen collection of my own</span>) & the wall-to-wall carpet in the office. I already had some of my closest buddies working in Bangalore then and later on I made many more good ones, at work. Sadly, many of them are no longer in touch. Not everything was as rosy though; coming from the soggy & warm Mumbai to wet & windy Bangalore, messed me up bad and I was in-n-out of viral fever for about one month. Then I guess, I just got used to it. The rains in Bangalore, though no lesser in the vigor, don't last for as long as those in Mumbai and they have assuring surety of schedule, unlike the ill-tempered rains in Mumbai which visit at the most inappropriate hours.<br /><br />In last three years, Bangalore has given & taught me a lot. I have changed jobs twice since my first company and finally acknowledged that this is perhaps not what I would want to do all my life. The software industry, with all its lures & charms, failed to excite me for long; but it wasn't just the job. I was feeling a bit jaded for a while, by the city, by its people, by the mundane routine. Almost all the people I know in general, have one tiresome similarity - all of them are software guys! And the city, it has perhaps the greatest weather in India, but I think I've had enough of Bangalore. Nothing against the city, but I guess I would relish the change right now. Incidently, Bangalore is the city where I've spent the second longest continuous spell of my life (<span style="font-style: italic;">After Mumbai, where I spent four years of college. So much for being a Jaipuri :-) </span>). I guess, the wanderer in me is still not ready to settle. At the same time, if Calcutta wouldn't have happened, I guess I would've stayed back in Bangalore for another year or so, and happily. Who knows?<br /><br />Change comes with a price tag; you need to get out of the comfort zone and go through the ordeal of settling up yet again, in a new rhythm. To accomodate new people, you need to get away from the existing friends; to venture new places you first need to leave the comforts of your home. Ironically, often we seek change to get rid of the monotonous rhythm only. It seems contradictory, but such is life.<br /><br />There is just less than a week before I fly out of here, and yet the feeling isn't sinking that I'm <span style="font-style: italic;">leaving</span> Bangalore. I guess it would start settling once I leave the city & its heavenly weather, to get roasted in the ruthless Jaipur summers :-) So here's me, off to yet another new city.Varun Singhhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17168493702369142983noreply@blogger.com11