Friday, October 15, 2010
Happy Durga Puja!
Thursday, October 14, 2010
Inspirations
This was not the only time I was confronted with the harsh realities of life. My wife went many steps ahead of me. Once she returned back from a movie theatre saying she didn’t have the heart to spend 200 bucks for 2 hours of show after she saw so many poor manual laborers toiling to build a road.
Who needs lectures in motivation, when we have so many real occasions to take inspirations from?
- Rahul
Monday, October 11, 2010
Grandfather’s Death and No Cry
Big Flattering
I think to treat a woman nicely, just because she is a woman, is also an injustice to her. It is high time people like the participant described above learn that ‘flattering women’ is not a necessary or sufficient criteria to be called a ‘gentleman’.
- Rahul
Something about Everything
Now that I have got proper training and have understood the functionalities, I see the same situation and the same guys in a very different way. I remember that when I asked those guys about anything beyond those selected navigations, they won’t know. They didn’t even know the proper full forms of terms like ‘T-code’ or ‘GRN’. Now I realize that the expertise they had gained is because of working on the same few screens day in and day out. They don’t understand things beyond what they have been taught. And they don’t fully understand the implications of what they are doing in down/upstream the supply chain. Their work is kind of transactional, repetitive and even robotic.
If we don’t properly understand things, we can easily get into the trap of accepting things on their face values and getting carried away. I think “knowing something about everything and everything about something” is still the key.
- Rahul
Peace and Memory
It is so easy to forget some troubling incidents or some important reminders, if we only remain in peace for quite some time. I think it works both ways: it’s good as well as bad. If we take the example of Kashmir, the revolting people are like that because they haven’t really seen peace. And that has been the strategy of the neighboring enemy state Pakistan: if there is a period of peace in Kashmir, Kashmiris would forget to “revolt” against Indian state. On the other hand, peace is also what has made Indians numb towards many of the national goals for which our freedom fighters worked. We go on with our lives no matter one of our own people lives or dies on the footpath: our individual contribution towards poverty eradication is very low. We keep being proud of our children who go to elite schools and then settle abroad; while many like us can’t afford to feed their children properly. At one time before independence, our nation was one, behind Mahatma, in spreading the light of education.
Peace has indeed eliminated our collective memory of our national priorities. Today, we live life in a modern India, completely oblivious of many like us who have seen no light of modernity.
- Rahul
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Segregated
I found that there were many like me who had taken a refuse in that lab. And that lab was pretty quiet. That made me think. The loud-guys will force the behaved-guys to quit their designated labs. After some time, all the behaved-guys would accumulate in the other quieter labs, while the loud-labs would become dominated by the loud-guys. In that situation, if one behaved-guy is trapped, he would have no option but to leave. Was my experience a simulation of the real world?
Birds of same feather flock together. Guys with similar nature would hang around amongst themselves. If this goes on without social interruption, the anecdotes like, “Know a man by his company” would stand true. But in my opinion, world is at a loss in this arrangement. When people of different natures mix, they also influence each other. With such segregation, there would be little chance for them to know and learn from each other. Is there a way out? I think in organized environments, there is still a way out. In my experience, if there was an invigilator he would discourage the loud-guys and would ask them to behave. But in real life, we seldom get to have instructors and invigilators. Our conscience would help, but only if we care.
- Rahul
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Social Roles
The company has a very big campus in Hyderabad. It has more than a dozen buildings amidst trees and gardens. The whole campus is an aesthetic delight. The company is also among India’s biggest, with more than a lakh employees. Naturally, a lot of parents aspire to have their kids working here. And the manner, in which the company goes about its social responsibility, is a case study in itself.
Every Saturday, employees are free to bring in their family or friends inside the campus. A couple walking over the green grass, both holding a hand of their daughter or son is a usual scene. Then there are old parents, reviewing the place where their child spends major part of his or her waking hours. Not to mention, the campus takes a very different color every weekend. And it is such a delight! Many times students from local colleges also visit the campus as part of industrial visit. I believe they go back with a dream which would not only help them but also our nation. Then there are skills development programs conducted for teachers and professors. It is like a win-win strategy, much like the legendary Henry Ford’s strategy of empowering his employees so that they could buy a Ford car. The company also holds a very high position in terms of business ethics and values, and with these social interactions, it plays a very important role in our nation’s progress.
I remember the time when a college was discussing whether to close an access road which ran through its campus, for the ‘outsiders’. Locals took it to save their precious minutes. One professor suggested that we should never close it for them. A university has a very constructive role to play for the place where it is situated. To allow the locals to have whiffs of that fresh academic air should definitely not be disrupted, in spirits of the larger good.
If only all our institutions play a more constructive role in the development of our society our nation would take a faster pace towards reclaiming its past glory.
- Rahul
Business Risk in Marital Convenience
I wonder if the two companies where they are working know about their case. In consultancy, there is lot of confidential client information involved, which should be protected at all cost. In the lady’s case, such secrecy is defeated. Secondly, companies also guard their confidential procedures, systems, checks and loop-holes from their competitors. What if the husband and wife kept feeding each other with confidential client information; which actually helped them win accounts ‘individually’? Both these guys would become outstanding performers due to their nexus, but their companies might start losing lots of prospects and money in the process! This is why I believe that companies should be watchful of such circumstances during the background check stage. If husband and wife are in the same profession, both of them could be given offer of employment by the company. That would be a good proposition. But if a critical employee’s spouse is working with a competitor, there is lot at the stake in the long run.
On the other hand, a couple in the same profession may lack ‘variety’ in life. I don’t know anyone who loves absolute monotony percolating from office to home. And for help, we can always trust good colleagues and close friends! Being in different professions would also avoid any ‘ego-clash’ which is inevitable in same profession couples. Bottom-line: I see more advantages than disadvantages in couples having different professions. What say you?
- Rahul
Friday, October 1, 2010
Let there be Light
The photographs have come a few minutes ago. The guys in the front rows appeared bright and lit-up in the snaps while the faces in the shaded last rows are dark and not so apparent. What an eye-opener!
If you want to make a difference, you have to be in the ‘sun’. Never mind the sunlight. And bear the ‘heat’.
Monday, September 27, 2010
Book Review: Hinduism, doctrine and way of life
by C Rajagopalachari (1878-1972)
Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan
Sunday, September 26, 2010
The Hype of Outsourcing Ban in the US
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Microsoft $62.484 billion (2010)
Oracle Corp $26.82 billion (2010)
TCS $6.52 billion (2010)
Wipro $6.03 billion (March 2010)
Infosys $4.59 billion (2010)
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Microsoft 89,000 (2010)
Oracle Corp 105,000
TCS 160,429
Wipro 112,925 (June 2010)
Infosys 114,822 (2010)
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India 1,185,863,000 (2010 estimate)
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CWG and Nation’s priority towards Sports
Deep-seated cultural attitudes may be to blame for the Commonwealth Games fiasco
By Mihir Bose
Thursday, 23 September 2010
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/why-india-is-a-bit-player-in-the-world-of-sport-2087034.html
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