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Daily recipe

My morning starts with shutting down the alarm on my lappy. It’s a very irritating song of Raghu Dixshit in which he starts of yelling every 8a.m in the morning disturbing my late night sleep. Unlike the first month, where I used to get up as a diligent student and get ready for some office work, but due course into my internship I found out that there is no strictness about the timing schedule and hence my  early morning slowly drifted towards 10a.m.

After waking up, with a bit of shameless guilt I always promise myself to be on time the next day, and the day kicks off with breakfast (milk, bread, sometimes upma and maggi…the usual stuff) and I reach the office by 11. All the intern students in my department have been given a separate room, so the radio is the first thing i open up, followed by the usuals….gtalk, orkut, facebook, TOI…etc.

After one hour of trying what the prof has told me to do….frustrated me…shifts me attention to planning out my weekends and hence I have been a regular customer of skyeurope, ryanair, bahn.de , wiki travel, google maps. As the time passes by me, chatting and googling around, the clock ticks 2 when I decide to head back to the apartment for lunch and if possible a short siesta. Before leaving I sign out from unwanted sites…but I just keep my matlab window on..with some code(in running condition….) that  my prof gave me on the day i met him and with a note….”SIMULATION GOING ON…DND” and i make sure to spread out some print outs and registers on the table so as to give an impression that something important is cooking up.

Back to office till 3:30 I spend the rest of the planning what to do after office time. plans usually hop around from visiting fan zones, discovering cheap places  to eat….which is then confirmed with my fellow interns on gtalk…….but we usually end up in our own apartments. Bird watching from my room’s window…..checking out orkut albums, naughty videos on you tube is also a good option, but in order to maintain some decency in the department..it is exercised only when nothing else crops up…

With no stringent timing requirments….5:30 seems to be a decent time to walk out of the office so…..with a few bbyes, head phones over my ears….and with a sigh of relief….i head straight back to my apartment….where the unlimited, free supply of net… keeps me going through the rest of the day…….

Intern : Part 2

The Hip Hop Bus

My first weekend was full of ups and down. The thought of seeing whole of Vienna in a weekend….so that I can cover other cities in the coming ones…..prompted me to go for the “Hip hop” bus ride at city center for some 15 odd euro. It was an open top bus….so as soon as the bus started…..I switched my camera on…..and to my surprise…..the batteries had died out….!!!!….and this was just not it….the bus didn’t stop at any place for more then 2 minutes….had to see all the places again…and that to on foot!!! :(

@Indians

The good thing about Vienna is that…there are a lot and lot of Indians…and the even better part is……you don’t have to find them…they are just always there…..at every station….selling newspapers and magazines. Don’t even bother to speak Hindi with them..coz they will respond either in Austrian or in Punjabi….no Hindi.

Great Driving sense

This has happened to me not once but…thrice…me and some of my newly found Indian-intern friends where standing on the foot path, with no intentions of crossing the road…A car stopped next to us…and the drive indicated that it was waiting for us to cross the road, out of humility we had to cross the road…..Austrian mentality!!!….3 Cheers for them…. :)

Roomy again…

I just found out from my roomy..that interest rates in bank are negative in Austria…..now who is going to believe that….!!!..I just hope they are not..coz I did deposit my whole stipend in the banks. :o

Intern : Part1

First Day@Vienna

One month into my intern, and still no work to do, being fed up of all the useless reading of those long PDF files, and seeing other people writing their internship experience here i am writing my experience.

Arrived here on 8th morning, and being unaware of the cheapest and smallest way to reach my office………I had to drag my suitcase half way across the city, breaking my back and sweating my ass out :( . It was not absolutely a bad day…………got to know that my prof would be arriving till the end of the month and was overjoyed to know that i would be paid an whole 3 months stipend. My work was only to read my PDF files till my host arrives….still cant understand why did he called me so early….This could be done in India!!!! Though I didn’t get a warm welcome from his secretary (a Pakistani fellow)….it was only later when I found out that he was fooled by some IITD students last year into buying a domain on the net…so that they could make some college site…which apparently they didn’t!!!

I met my SMALL and arrogant room mate (kgp) later in the evening. “SMALL” because he is exactly about half my size and more thinner then me. I was going to describe him giving more examples from our batch….but I guess I don’t have the authority to do that…lets say….for those who have seen munnabhai mbbs…remember his roomy….my roomy is just half of his size :D . Just after my arrival ground rules were set. No cooking together………no sharing food…………every alternate day I was allowed to make my dinner before and after 8:30 p.m.

Before sleeping I had a thought…”Is that midget, even human?” :o

Rest in my next blog…..

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Survival of the Flirtiest

This blog is for to those “fit” people who survived mid sems, the eye flu break out and the drastically changing climate in the campus. The author, as fit as before would try to accentuate some important points of the flirting world.

Looking at the history point of view….the term “Survival of the fittest” was first framed by a economist Herbert Spencer trying to stress the fact that only those industries survive which adapt better, perform better…blah blah blah…..drawing an analogy with Darwin’s theory of evolution.

Darwin after studying millions of years of human evolution concluded that our behavior have evolutionary purposes. We tend to act in a way which helps in survival. Flirting with the opposite sex, spending time with them, hooking up, producing babies (basically leading to the survival of the flirtiest) is in our genetic code. We are programmed to do it in order to evolve in a superior race. Evolution has made us an expert in this field. At this age we are filled with hormones. The ability to make the opposite sex attract is is already sowed into us. It is just the fear inside which is suppressing it.

What are we afraid of? Why are we so shy? Is it only because of the fear of rejection, embarrassment, making a fool of oneself in front of others or just ego problem of being a superior sex. I do agree that these are big, hefty terms but it is something which we have to get over. Look at it in a different way…..You are “just” asking someone out on a date. A “yes” could mean a lot of things and its worth risking a slap on the face.

Fittest and flirtiest is quite similar to the “gene and meme” duo. While for the latter combination the meme is considered to be superior the same thing goes for the formal one. Fittest can finally extinct out but the flirty one will at least have a (…or several….. ) blood line. So go out start dating(atleast start talking—>>for ECE-05)…or remain in your room and start writing crap like i am doing right now.

Have we turned into Robots?

Disclaimer: With this blog I don’t mean to hurt anyone’s feelings. Any similarity to any existing person or event is unintentional and coincidental.

Lets go back 2 year—>>>>when we first stepped into IIT Guwahati (for ECE students exclusively) we were always pestered by the fact that the so called “5th sem” having “5 labs” is going to kick our ass hard. I remember my neighbor once commenting before the advent of this sem

“my ass is going to go into coma” (convert it into Hindi…you might find it humorous)

And 2 years from then here we are…one month into the 5th sem …just breezing thru it. (can’t comment about the next three month..)

Remember the third sem guys…with sedra smith, crime master gogo, the dracula, and 4 hrs of analog lab kicking the shit out of us. Which was tougher? 3rd or 5th?Go ahead give your friend this sem’s schedule. See his response. Well…One of my friend asked me whether it was a yearly scheme!!!

Is it me or everyone is finding this sem just like the previous ones. Is it because of the fact that we are more matured than last year? Or Is it the fact that we are so used to working a lot that we have simply become numb to the load placed upon us? Or has our intelligence increased…and we have started finding things simpler….Or is that that we have started co-operating with each other, living in a brotherhood making things simpler.

Does the quote :

“Getting into IIT is difficult but surviving is a much more daunting task”..loose its importance.

Or is it just that we have turned into ROBOTS. Robots who solve assignment, attend classes and labs, do projects go on internships. Robots who don’t celebrate festivals (..Forget celebrating..Many of us even don’t remember them…) until unless told.What was the last thing we did, which was completely for ourselves not for some one else, not on someone’s order and may be not for money.

Are we just neglecting the small joys of life instead of being smitten by them? Simply living a materialistic life, isn’t it just giving us virtual happiness? If yes….is there any cure for that? Think!!!!

After IIT—->>What next??

The good response of my first blog motivated me to write the second one. So here goes…..

The time again has come to think and decide what to do ahead. Most of us are in state of Discombobulation, The question

“Where do you see yourself 5 years from now?”

Seems really daunting….

Many have already have the thought about it and reply instantly while the rest reply …”dekhein ge bhai itni kya jaldi hai…”…” jo milega wahi kar leinge”Though they answer in a non serious fashion I am quiet sure most of them dissemble their feelings and somewhere in them a serious thinking process starts…

“What to do…an MBA or an MS…..ya a job would be enough….”

There is a general perception in IIT that those who don’t have an healthy CPI, those who are fed up with technical studies and cant stand BJT’s, Fourier, PDEs, equations, etc even in their college years and pass their lab time gossiping, letting others do their, and even if they do something they do it n the “pharzi” way. For what I write above it may seem that the left over consider an MBA. But the situation is not as bad as it seems, seeing the trend of the last few years (including ours) people with the top DR’s are craving to get into one of the IIM’s. What is their in this that drives the brightest mind in India who spend most of their time in their +2 levels locked up in their room working their level best to get into one of the best technical institute of the country?

The Basic curriculum of an MBA involves subjects like accounting, marketing, finance, management, manufacturing, etc. What attracts engineers most is that more and more companies are opting for people with technical background who also have idea of management and business. It would not only help the company in terms R&D but also help them in making technological decisions which can profit them more. You can control both the manufacturing and marketing of your product and Being its manufacturer you would be knowing its pros and cons and can present it accordingly. An graduate degree accompanies only a limited growth rate, however with an degree in management you can rise up to the CEO(you would be needing something else if you want to reach up their with a simply graduate degree). Still I would like to ask, preparing for the IIM’s, is it worth it? According to last years survey their rank is 68 in the world.Why not do a job and earn enough to go abroad for a better college. After all the need for an MBA is only realized after few years of Job.

Now MS…. well only people with good CPIs, good project, good GRE, Toeffl scores can think of applying for an MS. The rest, untill unless you have enough money(around 50 lakhs) can fund their own(but if you have so much money why do anything after graduation…).An MS is tough to get. Even if you reach the states you would have to do part time jobs, work as TA’s in the lab or in the library. The Road down there is tough but the end result is really fruitful. Being specialized in your field you not only earn a direct entry to the R&D department but also have a hefty pay package, with a decent growth rate. A simply graduate degree would require atleast 3-4 years of work experience to get into R&D. But its no good coming back to India after that. You would be earning about 1/4th of what you earn in the states and the job profile would also not be satisfactory. So what go ahead explore your talent, utilize 4 years of your engineering, try doing a PhD in your field. After all studying it is the second most coveted job in USA.

Finally I would like to say ……Why limit yourself to a this-or-that choice? We can go for both. We are dynamic, energetic and most of all young. Good luck!

Feeling enamored by the free net facility and watching my friends dawdling their time orkuting, blogging, chatting, googling around, here I am after many contrived attempts presenting my first blog, though it is a desultory attempt and topic seems quite boring (though highly debated) I do hope you will appreciate it.

India though not a unified state as it is now was a rich one both in terms of money and culture. It was only with the advent of the Britishers that concomitants poverty in India. Poorness of any place of South East Asia commensurate with the amount of time spend by the Europeans (Dutch, French, English) in that place. According to stats in India in 1830, 17.6% of the industrial production was contributed by India while 9.5% belonged to the Englishmen. After a few decades the draconian plan of the Britishers and purposeful deindustrialization resulted in the situation worse then if you reverse the stats above: 1.7% to India and 18.5% belonged to the gooras. I would not be a heckler and blame only the Europeans but exacerbated weather conditions and famines, over population, lack of knowledge, property right played its part also.

Since then,200 years ahead looking at the sensex boom which is as a result of boom in sectors such as outsourcing, engineering, infrastructure, property which would not only accompany a deluge of job opportunities but will also attract international investors. But what effect will it have on the poor???? By poor I don’t include those people who just make it in the range of the middle class and their kids land up in government schools, but those who whose kids don’t even make it to school, who below the poverty line and are burdened with child labor, child marriage and all other kind of social atrocities. A Boom in sensex might affect a house owner in a good way both for his driver it is only a trifle in the upliftment in the way of his living. Why would he care about employment opportunities, as his only concern is to earn 2 meals a day.

Were does the problem lies?? Delving deeper into details we find that the growth is only in the tertiary sector (the skilled sector) and is around 20%. However the primary sector (the agricultural sector) remains untouched .The growth of the agricultural sector has decreased from 3.2% in 1980-81 to 1.9% in 1995-96.The situation is so bad that the agricultural sector does not even achieve even the expected growth rate of 4%, and because of the excessive dependence on the monsoon, which are quiet unpredictable, a famine can worsen the situation. This has the direct effect on the farmer, many commit suicide, many run to the city abandoning the agrarian profession and hence degrading the situation.

Look at the health sector The infant mortality rate of India is 57, while it is less then half in China around 25 and that of developed nations like America, France, etc it is around 5%.
I read a report stating that
“A recent World Bank report supported the previously documented inverse relationship between per capita income and infant mortality rate in India. However, even though increases in income have reduced the infant mortality rate, the income effect is stronger on total fertility rates; and non-income factors play an even more significant role than income in lowering the infant mortality rate. For example, the effect of technological progress on the decline in infant mortality rate was estimated at 20% over the period 1975-90, the greatest effect occurring in 1985-90. However, public health expenditures did not significantly lower the rate. The World Bank report noted that although the poorest states in India performed worst in terms of both infant mortality and total fertility rates, the richest states did not perform best. The best state performers in India had relatively low per capita income levels, but achieved relatively good results for those levels.”
So even though economy is flourishing in India the rate of decrease of infant mortality has declined.

Peeking into the Gini coefficient which is the measure of economic inequality of any country for India it is around 0.30-0.34 while for china it is 0.40-0.44 (the lesser the better). But looking at the economic policies of China which is mainly to curtail the economic gap between the urban dwellers and the people living in the country side it is not long that the figure will come down. Rather then giving more emphasis on creating job opportunities (…like the “rural Development guarantee bill”…which is launched by the congress which guarantees100 days of employment to many districts of India) India’s economic policies should be more like china in bridging the gap between the poor and the rich.

It is the general consensus of the public that growth will bring India out of poverty, though true only growth should not be the ultimate aim. What India must desire for is improvement in the quality of life of people-which means providing better health, education, infrastructure to both rich and poor and this is not only the job of the government but also the right of its people who elect them.

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