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  • Big Bang – Simon Singh

    Big Bang – this is the first book I have read by Simon Singh… makes me feel I have to read more books by him… just loved the style of narration.

    Simon Singh is not just a physicist but also a lucid writer, the style of his writing is just too good.

    Big Bang this book deals with the creation of the universe and, is a historical account of the way the modern theory has evolved. It’s a brief description of how this, now famous, theory has evolved, so it essential has an element of History in it. That makes the description even more beautiful… now u don’t just know what the theory has but also have the way it has evolved. A really neat description of cosmological journey-right from ancient Greek to the modern world.
    The account of this journey is really well presented, not at one moment did I loose interest and felt I wanted to take a break, its just so enticing, I just wanted to read further each time I took up this book after a break, but had to stop thanks to other works being a priority.
    This book is not just about this particular theory but gives a neat account of other competing theories as well. The Steady State theory, the earth centric theory are the main ones – these are not dealt in detail but to a certain extent that might be needed for Big Bang and its story.
    The effort of the experimental physicist is not undermined anywhere, they are given dew credit; the marvel of serendipity is also taken care.
    Really a nice read, am sure it will generate an interest in any one for astronomical reading.

  • Challenge familiarity

    Almost every one of us want to live in a familiar domain… we want to stay in the city that we are familiar with… we want to keep company only with those whom we already know… we want to visit only those places which we know and are accustomed to, we want things to be easy and laid out. In general its the cozy feeling that we want to stay with… we don’t want to try something that might involve a risk, some challenge in it… we want the path of least resistance…
    Well form another angle do we really benefit from this sort of an attitude, I hardly feel at any point we might have gained from such an attitude. If we look back in life its always been rewarding one way or another to challenge this love for familiarity that we have…. each of our experiences show that when we tried something new and difficult we have come out with a new understanding and perspective to the particular work or a whole new experience that has mad us richer and more open which is essential to our life on a much larger scale…


    Essentially I don’t find any reason why we should not try something new… of course that we have to have the time and the resources that might be needed for the particular purpose… So just go ahead and try the next time you are contemplating as to – “TO DO OR NOT TO DO!!!”

  • Me and efi

    EFI – Electronics for Imaging.

    Its been almost 23 month since I joined EFI… I stand now on the verge of entering into IIMB for my PGDM. I think its the time for me to look back at the stay at efi and concentrate on my experiences here.

    Right after my grad exams in 2005 I took a break, and it was almost a month. I was feeling frustrated sitting at home. My on-campus recruit -Huawie had given me a joining date in September. I could not just wait that long. I got a call from efi for an interview on June 25 th… It was a Saturday and the venue was the old office of efi (above globus, Kormangala).
    My interview was taken by Dyllon and then a round with Krishna… It was rather a simple interview… and was confident of getting in.. so was it to be…. I landed inEFI, to accept the offer letter and join the troupe of new recruit freshers. I joined on the 27 th of June 2005 in EFI as Associate Software Enggr (I am still that…. he he [:D]).
    It was Poonam Bajaj who handed over a bag… with efi stitched on it and some other stationery material… We were guided into the conference hall that was then turned into a training hall for us. This was group of 13 freshers… We went through two sessions of training… the first week was on domain related stuff… a lot ofTLs coming in and giving us fundas… clearing our fundas…[I truly don’t know how much of it has remained in my head… but used to note down all those points… [;)]] I only recallRajneesh and Venkat giving us fundas.. cant recall anything greater than that now. It was in these training sessions that I got my 2 best pals…. Vikas Shayana (Progressively sleeping!!!) and Vinay Setty. After this session of Domain knowledge, we went through a session of training in C++. Thanks to N S Kumar, I got to learn C++ with its “philosophy”.
    After the technical coaching we had a week’s time to wander about, we made a trip to Nandi Hills, and got back, a freshers party at Three-Quarter Chinese. We then were called for a “one-one” session with Poonam to take note of our interests and try allotting us into the domain that we liked the most. It was also a feedback session on the training program. After about a couple of days during which we watched a movie inPVR, we got assigned to our teams.
    I was inducted to Rajneesh’s team that was working on CWS wx then… due to some reason this project got scrapped. It was my first interaction with a team at efi. Arthi K, was set as my mentor by Rajneesh. The initial task that Rajneesh assigned to me was learning wxWidgets. I used to browse through the help pages, look at the sample and then start coding the samples in my own way. this continued on for about 10 days after which I was given my fist assignment byRajneesh , It was to design a message box that would take in strings of any length and then wrap the string to some set number of alphabets and then display it. It was my first assignment and thanks to the initial “Josh” I finished this very quickly.Rajneesh then was on testing this application and suggesting modifications…It was all exciting one to learn this new library… very often I would stumble across something think.. “It must be hard to do” and then look at the code… debug get the thought process right and attempt it…this helped me learn a lot quicker… just to add to it.. I would try it out… and when it works, there was nothing more exciting than it.
    After a couple of weeks of this assignment, Rajneesh took me to a meeting, it was here that I learnt my first major lesson, We had discussion on some stuff that was being planned and I was to do something (cant recall what) in it. After the meeting I went toRajneesh personally and suggested something, he immediately gave me an important lesson – “Man, if u want to tell out something, do it when you are asked for and people are listening. Don’t expect people to speak for you, you will have to speak for yourself.” These words had a great impact on me.
    It was around this time that Arthi left the company and I was the only person working directly under Rajneesh for the CWS wx version. The work load was not all that great and it was just some samples that I was working on. Then Rajneesh got involved into HotFolders. I was still on bench nothing serious that I was doing. Around a week into the project, Rajneesh gave my first assignment, to develop a testing application for Filter that would be used in the Hot Folders Application. I was supposed to develop only theUI part and not worry about the implementation. This was the first application that I has to make decisions on how and what controls I would be using…. This was a very nice and thought provoking experience.
    While professionally this phase was a learning one for me… there was not much of productivity that was put up for efi. I began understanding and appreciating what Rajeesh was doing… I began to appreciate the way he handled things.. not much of tension, very frank in his speech, helping if he can else just saying it our frankly… accepting he doesn’t know when he doesn’t now, and most importantly not letting himself down under any situation – in short I got to see a lot of idealizing things in him.. In short he is the coolest TL I have ever had. We got to know each other better and slowly transformed from a TL and a ASE to good friends. The common thing that got us very close was our interest towards book. We both were bibliophiles… and even to this day we keep discussing on various books..
    After around a month of such kidding and being paid for all the party that I had, Atul called me in, and put me into a different team. Being without work, I was eagerly waiting for work…. No better time to come ah!!! Ya I got to join theColorWise team, headed by Venkat Reddy.
    It was under quite a bad state at that time…. with Venkat trying to get it past the ‘ALPHA’ milestone and it flopping all the time. Is was around September end that I joined this group. Shiva andRajiv were already in this group from the gang of freshers-05. It is here that I got to meet another peculiar person – Kanhayia. Slowly down the line there was one more person to be added to this list…. Pankaj Bhalla. This trio – Kanhayia, Pankaj and myself, you would find them invariably doing night outs soon… [;)]
    I was asked to solve a few defects in one of the common library – Select Profile by Venkat… These were mostly some UI changes. It was fun doing these things… not major work at all… later on this helped me become what Raghu to day calls me – ‘A Sizer Expert’ [;)] (I am not sure about that though.). Occasionally I used to get some logic related defect, but then it was not a major one, and could be easily handled. I can still recall vividly the first review of code thatVenkat did, the first check-in. Venkat wanted to teach me in a very affectionate way, but may be I was not mature enough to know all that. I was looking stars when he made changes, to the code, then build something, compile something somewhere, and finally get theexe. Venkat was waiting to get me into the release management of Color Profiler. After about 3 weeks into Profiler I began making builds…. and this was followed by an upload to the prerel.
    Our release was scheduled on Friday and Tuesday. Friday was then the day most of the releases were done, we did not have a RMS like we have today so every one had to use the same available bandwidth to upload the binaries to prerel. Invariable it would take 2 to 3 hours or sometimes even more than that.

    Our product is an integrated product, that consists of a few applications that come from US. We used to get these binaries, then integrate it with our local applications that we develop and then copy these binaries after our testing (noQA then, it was just the developer verifying). We would fix the defect so locally that we would just test the fix for its working, not actually going through the complete flow to analyse the side effect… invariably we would find a defect at the last minute… andKanhayia would run back to his desk to fix it.. finally he would make some alterations and fix it (am not sure what exactly would be his fix in such a short time….[;)]) He was used to working under such pressure that he used to say – “it is only under such pressure that my Brain works properly man!!!”
    It was a real pressure cooker sort of situation.. Venkat Reddy was under immense pressure… he had the art of getting extra time under any circumstance. I have not seen the similar art in Raghu… well you can’t expect everyone to have everything, right? Kanhayia, myself and later on Pankaj all got into the similar situation… all a pressure cooker.. no one was better… occasionally we used to get some half an hour break in our work.. and then the work would get on. My friends used to say – “earlier u would return home at 6:00pm sharp… now even if the world break u stay atefi!!!” Well that was the state our work was in…
    Around Feb the project that I was working moved from Venkat to Raghu…. and around a fortnight later i got my first feature development… Thanks to the expert guidance from Kanhayia and Raghu, I could finish this implementation quickly and it was a big confidence boost for me.
    May be it was only Raghu who could get the process straight, not many identified there was a flaw in the sytem… slowly the process had to improve… what was more necessary was develping confidence between the two teams… the spec and related documents had to be worked out in a right way… we needed a local QA who could be quick enough in identifying the defects if any first hand… A lot of processes needed to be changed…
    What the most striking realization was… there was not a proper structure for the module… This became our starting point. Raghu sat back and got the design diagrams for the project. At this juncture, Pankaj decided to leave our group and move on to another company… that was followed by Janaki Madam, and Sudheer’s arrival into the team…. Once the design was ready it was a matter of setting the design right… but the problem was you cant correct it over night… it has to be done in a smooth manner…
    In the mean time, Kanhayia decided to quit… we shifted to the new office. The process improved but the father of PrinterProfiler – KK was not there to watch it past all the marks to go to the market. I was the only fortunate one to have seen all the three phases. All through the initial phase of theQA we had Bhaskar, giving us company in all the late night shows…. he he [:D]
    After the QA process got added we had to finish off the release of the project a bit early, and then both the QA and engineering got a bit more time to test the binaries…. Slowly the things started falling in place… That is what happens – when a right decision is taken, you make more better decisions and slowly bail yourself out of problem.
    From Raghu, I learnt the art of withstanding the storm and taking the boat to the shore… it takes a lot of time and effort to rescue a sinking ship… I learnt a lot of things from him.

    Now the Fun part:

    There are a couple fun memories associated with my stay at efi….
    1. The EFI cricket tournament –
    I remember this was the first match of the tournament for our team… I was on a Saturday that we chose to play this match… And we had to make the Friday release…. [:)]…KK had left home early, Bhaskar and I were the only two members in the group who where present…. Bhaskar began his testing at 10:00pm… I decided to have a nap while he tested the product on 3 platforms…. he would inevitably take 4 hours to complete the whole process.. I began my nap on the floor at 11 and he was busy measuring.. at 1 he woke me up asking me to upload the binaries… the process got completed at 2 am and we reached home in the company cab.
    Next day we had a match at 7:30am…. I landed in at the right time.. and we were to bat first… I don’t know what was in my head but I made a quickfire 36 that helped us win the match…. [:)]

    2. The Diwali celebrations at the new office.
    I vividly remember this, we were all engrossed in our own work, Raghu got back from his native after a vacation. He called up a meeting of all his team members… and told we have this event here…. we want to get the first price in this. We began doing the planning that day and decided to give an attempt for the first price… The whole team went about doing things with missionary zeal, all of us contributing our bit to the preparations. We made a nigh out till 4 am in the morning, then got home… had a small nap changed our attire and got back.
    This event gave me a lot of realization and self reflection thought… thank to the pot painting that I did. i began to question myself!!! The refection of this helped me realise a lot of thing about myself. It was then that I began preparing for CAT….

    Now I stand here on the verge of quitting efi, its been one huge learning experience for me.. one who joined as a fresher.. I have been able to manage my day the way I want, that has been the best part of the life here.
    I have only made a mention of those people whom I interacted a lot… this is not a detailed story so don’t blame me, I have not added many experiences..

  • Prime numbers the pillars of Mathematics!!!

    Well just a profound realization that I had recently, its about how important prime numbers are for Mathematics….

    For a moment, it occurred to me that all the natural numbers except one and primes can be represented as prime numbers…. Am sure every one knows this…. its called prime factorization….

    Just imagine if there were no prime numbers… there will be no numbers other than unity (1)!!!
    Surprising isn’t it? Yes but that is true…. It’s really hard to have anything if not for prime numbers and the operation of scaling them. Yes, call it scaling… multiplying one with another to get a composite number.

    The analogy that I can draw from this understanding is… We can consider prime numbers to be “Bricks” that occur naturally in nature, we just pile up these naturally occurring bricks to form what we want… These Primes are for sure the pillars on which the whole natural numbers stand and hence our understanding.

    These primes have not definite pattern of repetitions, they are scattered across the whole space… occasionally you stumble by them and start using them from then on… They are the pillars that hold the numbers… All the composite numbers are constituents built by just scaling them!!!

    Beauty isn’t it…

  • Azim Premji Chairman and CEO WIPRO Technologies

    Azim Premji stands today with numerous laurels and achievements. Premji has been honoured as being the – “Business Man of the year” – 2000, by Business India Magazine. From a beginning that was given to him by his ancestors to being a millionaire, it has been one huge journey for Premji. Born on July 24th, 1945, Premji has today become an icon for most Indian budding entrepreneurs. Premji was doing his undergraduate program at Stanford University, in 1966 when he was called back to India following the sudden demise of his father. At the age of 21, he was entrusted with the responsibility of handling the family vegetable oil business.
    Premji eventually sought—and received—permission to study arts courses by correspondence to complete the requirements for his bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering. The Indian Institute of Technology, Roorkee and the Manipal Academy of Higher Education (2000) have both conferred honorary doctorates on him. At the first general body meeting of the company a shareholder had doubted Premji’s ability in handling the company and had advised him to hand it over to mature management!! This spurred Premji and made him all the more dertermined to make WIPRO a success story! Success story indeed it has been, under his leadership WIPRO has grown a lot. Starting with the family business of vegetable oil, WIPRO later on diversified to get into various fields. From Vegetable oil it diversified into to bakery fats, ethnic ingredient based toiletries, hair care soaps, baby toiletries, lighting products and hydraulic cylinders. Thereafter Premji made a focused shift from soaps to software. Today WIPRO is a household name as a huge software company.

    Under Premji’s leadership, WIPRO has grown from a Rs 70 million company in hydrogenated cooking oil to a pioneer in providing integrated business, technology and process solutions on a global delivery platform. Today, WIPRO Technologies is the largest independent R&D service provider in the world. It also ranked among the top 100 companies globally with a turnover exceeding 2.3 billion US Dollars.

    Premji started off in WIPRO with the simple vision to build an organization on a foundation of values.

    Premji believes that ordinary people can do extraordinary things, the key to achieve the extraordinary is creating highly charged teams. He takes personal interest in building teams and leaders. He devotes significant amount of time as a faculty in WIPRO’s leadership development programs. Premji has a fanatical belief in delivering Value to the Customer through world-class quality processes. This belief has driven Wipro’s pioneering efforts on Quality. Wipro was the first Indian Company to embrace Six Sigma, the first Software Services Company in the world to achieve SEI CMM Level 5 and it also became the world’s first organization to achieve PCMM Level 5 (People Capability Maturity Model). Premji equates Quality with Integrity – both being non-negotiable. In 2001, he was voted among the 20 most powerful men in the world by Asiaweek. He was also among the 50 richest people in the world from 2001 to 2003 according to Forbes. In April 2004, he was rated among the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine. His assets include 84% holding in Wipro Technologies (the remaining belonging to the co-founder of Wipro). In January 2006, he was the 10th richest man in the world. He has been awarded the prestigious Padmabhushana award in 2005 from the Govt of India. He is also a member of the Prime Minister’s Committee for Trade and Industry in India. Premji in put up in Bangalore, and has a family comprising of Wife: Yasmeen Premji Sons: Rishad Premji married to Aditi Premji; Tariq Premji Azim Premji Foundation

    Azim Premji Foundation says it “Aims at making a tangible impact on identified social issues by working in active partnership with the Government and other related sections of the society”. The Foundation was set up with financial resources contributed by Azim Premji. It believes that “Education is the vital element in the development and progress of our nation”.

    Programmes of the Azim Premji Foundation focus on “creating effective and scalable models that significantly improve the quality of learning in the school and ensure satisfactory ownership by the community in the management of the school”. Azim Premji Foundation says it “dedicates itself to the cause of Universalization of Elementary Education in India.”

    Azim Premji’s Eight steps to excellence Here is what Premji has to say about the secret of success

    These are changing times. Yet in the middle of all the changes there is one thing that constantly determines success. Some call it leadership. But to my mind, it is the single-minded pursuit of excellence.

    Excellence endures and sustains. It goes beyond motivation into the realms of inspiration. Excellence can be as strong a uniting force as solid vision.

    Excellence does not happen in a vacuum. It needs a collective obsession as I have experienced the benefits of excellence in my own life. Excellence is a great starting point for any new organisation but also an unending journey. What is excellence? It is about going a little beyond what we expect from ourselves. Part of the need for excellence is imposed on us externally by our customers. Our competition keeps us on our toes, especially when it is global in nature.

    But the other driver of excellence is internal. I have found that excellence is not so much a battle you fight with others, but a battle you fight with yourself, by constantly raising the bar and stretching yourself and your team. This is the best and the most satisfying and challenging part about excellence.

    How does one create excellence in an organisation?

    First, we create an obsession with excel
    lence. We must dream of it not only because it delivers better results but because we truly believe in it and find it intrinsically satisfying to us.

    We must think of excellence not only with our mind but also with our heart and soul. Let us look outside, at the global standards of excellence in quality, cost and delivery and let us not rest till we surpass them.

    Second, we need to build a collective self-confidence. Organisations and people who pursue excellence are self-confident. This is because excellence requires tremendous faith in one’s ability to do more and in a better way. Unless, we believe we can do better, we cannot.

    Third, we must understand the difference between perfection for its own sake and excellence. Time is of essence. Globalisation has made the customer only more impatient. This may seem like a paradox: should we aim for excellence or should we aim for speed?

    Excellence is about doing the best we can and speed lies in doing it quickly. These two concepts are not opposed to each other; in fact, speed and timeliness are important elements of quality and excellence.

    Fourth, we must realise that we cannot be the best in everything we do. We must define what we are or would like to be best at and what someone else can do better.

    Excellence is no longer about being the best in India. It is about being the best in the world. We have to define what our own core competencies are and what we can outsource to other leaders. Headaches shared are headaches divided.

    Fifth, we must create processes that enable excellence. Today, there are a number of global methods and processes available whether it is Six Sigma, CMM or ISO. Use them because they are based on distilled wisdom collected from the best companies in the world.

    Also, we must build a strong foundation of information technology, because in this complex, dynamic world, it is imperative that we use the most modern tools to keep processes updated.

    Sixth, we must create a culture of teaming. I have found that while great individuals are important, one cannot have pockets of excellence. Quality gives ample opportunities to build a culture of teaming. Cross-functional teams that are customer facing can cut through an amazing amount of bureaucracy, personal empire building and silos and deliver savings that one would not have imagined possible.

    The other advantage of building teams focused on quality is that the teaming culture eventually spreads to the rest of the organisation and teaming becomes a way of life.

    Seventh, invest in excellence for the future. Future always seems to be at a distance. But it comes upon you so suddenly that it catches you by surprise, if not shock. What constitutes excellence in the future will be significantly different from what it is today.

    In these days of severe market pressures, there is big temptation to sacrifice the future to look good in the present. We must certainly trim our discretionary expenses, but we must ensure that our investments in strategic areas that lead to excellence in the future are protected.

    Finally, excellence requires humility. This is especially needed when we feel we have reached the peak of excellence and there is nothing further we can do. We need an open mind to look at things in a different way and allow new inputs to come in.

    Otherwise, there is a real danger of becoming complacent or even downright arrogant. I would like to end my talk with a story that illustrates this very well.

    A brilliant young professor went to meet a famous Zen master to have a discussion with him on Zen. He found himself in front of a modest house. He rang the doorbell and waited. A while later, he heard shuffling footsteps and the door was opened by the Zen master.

    He invited the professor to sit with him on the dining table. The professor was a little disappointed with the shabby appearance of the Zen master. He started quizzing him immediately on comparative philosophies and the Zen master gave some brief answers.

    When the professor began to debate with him on those answers, the Zen master stopped speaking and kept smiling at him. Finally, the professor got angry. He said, “I have come from a long distance just to understand the relevance of Zenism. But apparently you have nothing to say. I have not learnt anything from you at all.”

    At this point, the Zen master asked the professor to have some tea. When the professor held the cup, the Zen master started pouring tea into it. After some time, the tea started spilling and the professor shouted, “Stop! The cup can contain no more.”

    The Zen Master stopped and then, once again smiling, he said, “A mind, full of itself can receive nothing. How can I speak to you of Zenism until you empty your mind to learn.” The professor understood and apologized to the Zen master. He parted from him, the Zen master — a wiser man.

    The author is Chairman & Managing Director, Wipro Limited.


    src:http://www.rediff.com/money/2005/jan/17spec.htm

    src: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Azim_Premji http://www.answers.com/topic/azim-premji http://www.rediff.com/money/2005/jan/17spec.htm http://www.wipro.com/webpages/aboutus/azim.htm http://www.iloveindia.com/indian-heroes/azim-premji.html

  • Dif-equations and prediction

    Well these are my personal view on what role differential equations have got to play…. read on if u think its worth…

    As humans we are mostly interested in knowing what will happen to some thing in the future… What will happen to him? what will be the weather in 2 days, or some more thing else… the whole point is simple…
    “I want to know what is going to happen…”

    So what is it that a person gets to start off on prediction?
    He has seen what has happened in the past, he can think what are the dependant and the independent parameters based on this experience…. he continues from here and makes an assumption as to the directly varying or indirectly varying and then comes up with an equation….
    Well this was a crude that worked wonderfully with the initial understanding….
    but, what the person currently sees is only a small portion of the whole, the smallest part of the system almost negligibly small instance that he considers… so at this particular instant if he has to form an equation it is better he forms a differential eqn, that is a better way to write it down…. so then if he has a differential eqn, and wants to know what happens in the long run, he just has to integrate and find out…

    An example:
    well now this is how I start my prediction… if the change is always a constant… lets say…
    we want to measure some distance…. I see that I have been travelling some 3mt in 2 seconds… for a consistent amount of time…. so now I say this is a constant for every small interval of time say a second… I travel 1.5 mt So now I continue to write the differential eqn…
    dx/dt = 1.5

    now I integrate to form my equation…. X = 1.5t… I continue this way to form the eqn…

    well there is a catch – in writing these dif-eqn… most of these are unsolvable… that’s coz we cant predict to the minutest detail…. true rt!!!

  • Spider Man 3

    I just got to see the Spideman-3 this Friday, I come back and have got to say – “Its just not what I expected from the film with the highest budget”. I think it was not worth the amount I spent buying tickets at Innovative Multiplex…. Well on the other had I had something to pic from this film… I would rather concentrate on those than on the film and the story line…
    The animators have done a good job… The Sandman and the wind related animations are really good… he keeps turning from a sand man into a human and back thatz a nice part…
    The part I loved in the film was the fundas… Highly filled with fundas… though not like Matrix.. you can take a lot in case u look at it from different angle.
    Here are some of the fundas I could pick up.

    1. Every one gets through tough faces in life… and every one needs some help at some instance.. even if he is a super human…
    2. The worm of revenge… makes u feel happy when u show ur rival that you are better than him…. but then it kills the naturalness in humans…
    3. A man must lean to put his wife before him when it comes to making some decision in life…
    4. It gives immense joy when you forgive some one who has hurt u a lot…

    Well when it comes to the mistakes in the movie… chk out the link here…
    http://geeks.onlygizmos.com/public_html//article.php?story=20070512131915386

  • The art of learning!!!

    Learn from any one…and from everything.
    This is a realization I got… may be many have a similar realization when they reflect back upon themselves…. Read on…. may be something might interest you.

    Learning to me has been the most stimulating and exciting face in my life and will continue to be that way. There is a lot of knowledge out there, and we have to enlighten ourselves with it to live a more fulfilling and happening life.
    I have realised that a lot of my fears have gone away by my habit (that’s what it has become) of removing my ignorance… Learning and the knowledge it gives, puts me in a peace with myself. I have learnt to relax because I know now what my fears are exactly, I have learnt to counter them by my learning ability.
    It has given me the strength to face defeat, I am in the process of learning so there is nothing that ensures victory all the while. I would like to take note here – “when I loose I don’t loose the lesson.” Its when I ruminate over my failure that I realise my ignorance in some of the portions. In such a phase, the process of learning makes the victory or defeat devoid of personal intentions and more open. In such a competition, we surrender our-self to the process of learning and not to the person who handles it. We don’t take defeat or failure personal, we walk away with the satisfaction that we have realised we have to phase more… expose our-self more. The consequences become inconsequential!!!

    In the process of this learning, I have learnt that we are never complete and in a lot of places I have had to learn it with a lot of ego clash (sorry cant help it… I have to improve that’s it.). I only know now that we have a lot to learn from a lot of people…. its just our inhibition that prevents us from being more open. There is nothing that I can do without getting over my inhibitions… and all these are internal to me… I have to improve over time, with experience… I am no hurry.

    I learn now from nature, from the people who help me, those who guide me, to whom I speak. Its been an appreciation all over when I look back to every single encounter with every single person, and every incident.

    I am learning the art of learning is it!!!

  • Read it makes you humble

    I was not in the habit of reading books other than academic ones till I was in college and completed my graduation from NITK. I began my job once I passed out off college, I used to travel by the BMTC bus and as I boarded it in the first stop, so invariably I would have a seat for myself. I wanted to kill time and that’s how I began reading books.
    Now after almost 2 years of such a commutation to the office, I have just become deeply in love with books. I read a lot of books and in the past 24 months I have read over 20 books, on various topics.
    The process of reading books has opened up a new phase in my life. I have began judging more accurately. I have begun creating my own opinions and tastes based on what I read. I have get a regular dose of active material to get me growing in the intellectual dimension as well.
    Alex Stevenov in his speech to the fresh employees of Adobe, made a mention of how important it is to read regularly. What we read need not always be related to what we work, it can be more diverse. The more diverse the better, coz we get to know that much more. This study/learning that we do on our own is a great way to sharpen our skill. The diverse knowledge will stand by us in a huge way.. an will give a much bigger gamut for thought.

    The biggest realization I have got its this, (may sound philosophical still its the truth) the more I read, the more I know, the more I realise how little I know.

  • Hanadka Falls – Simple, elegant, beautiful

    Hanadka falls, some of my college juniors had explored this falls and informed me about it. At once I felt eager to see it, I called up a few friends to ask if they would like to join me on the trek. I was informed that this was a very simple trek, and even the falls was not all that dangerous. It was around March and so that would reduce the water in the falls, still it would be a good one -that’s what my juniors had told.
    Finally only two of us Mahesh and myself decided to go on the trek. Both of stay near Indiranagar and by chance we got into the same us… till the KSRTC bus-stand we were discussing about the job/work and related thoughts.
    We reached the bus-stand and then searched for a decent bus to board. We boarded a bus to Dharmasthala, which took got us there at 5:30am. We had our morning breakfast and then caught a bus to Ujire…. From Ujire we had a cab that would take us via Mundage to Kaddor. We reached kadoor before sunrise and, started our trek, we reached the junction where we have board that states… “Welcome to Kudremukh National park”. We asked a persona at this junction as to which was the direction of the falls, we followed instructions and reached the fork where a bridge had broken down. We asked the people who were hanging around the bridge the direction for the falls and they directed us to the left turn there. We followed the path and reached the last house on the route. We asked them for directions, and they told continue ahead and you will find a stream… walk through the stream and reach the falls.
    When we were contemplating on the suggestion, we were encountered by an old lady whom we asked the same suggestion and she was kind enough to take us along the route to the falls. We reached the falls following the direction after she had left and relaxed. We reclined in the shadow of the falls for around 2 hours, nibbled away thesnacks which we had got along and then decided to try out some photography.
    The falls was a simple elegant jump that the water collected upstream would do. Through years of erosion, some of the stones had chipped off and fallen on the ground. This was still an untouched paradise, we could see birds chirping around, carrying our their daily chores. People staying way from the falls and that is why wedon’t find much plastic accumulated around there. We could see the kudremukh range if we turned our back to the falls, some clouds that would try scaling them. All this combined making it a paradise. I just hope that peopledon’t spoil the natural balance here. Its just too good.
    After the break we got back… nothing much to say about the journey back.. except that the jeep was too crowded…