Showing posts with label life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label life. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Jakarta Diary: Part I

As I sit on the 17th floor of our high-rise apartment, one of the innumerable towers that form the incredible Jakarta skyline, I am amazed by several things about this beautiful country.

The first thing that strikes you when you land in the simplistic Jakarta airport (once you clear the long slow-moving immigration queue), is the traffic, if you are lucky you could get from the airport to the city in half hour and if you are a bit unlucky it could easily take two hours. I had the experience of doing both. The irony is, there is a huge patch in the middle of every major road in the city which could easily be converted into 1.5 lanes if not two. But No-Jakartans would not do that. Instead the roads are lined with trees almost infinitely. My father says that if a tree falls in a road due to some reason, they replace it with a new tree almost every time within the same week. These are not sort of “we-too-are-green” kind of trees that I have seen in some other cities. They are all very well maintained, lush green. It is humbling to see a country so resolutely adopting to be green in spite of all the troubles that it brings with it!

If you have any liking at all for observing people from a different culture, Indonesians offer a remarkable case study in contrasting microcosms living in harmony. An Indonesian friend remarked to my father-“Our religion is Islam, but our culture is Hindu”. This is visible in the innumerable statues of Hindu Gods and Goddesses on the streets of the city. This contrast extends beyond religious beliefs into their economic conditions as well. On one side of our apartment is the striking skyline that stretches across Jakarta, standing as a shining example of a nation that has boldly ridden the free market tide (and has had serious scars to show for it-check the conversion rates of Jakarta’s currency-Rupiah), one that has successfully attracted foreign investment and managed to raise standards of living for a major section of the society. If I just walk across the room, the window opens up to a different sight-a huge slum with people living in dilapidation. Of course an enormous wall separates the apartment from the slum serving as a grim reminder to the barriers these unfortunate people have to scale to improve their quality of life.

That being said, Indonesians, even the ones I saw in the slums are among the very few people who I am truly jealous of, the reason in the next post.

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Life is Beautiful...

...when you discover a gem of a mail from a dear old friend in your mailbox while idly browsing through it. 

Here is the piece, a beautiful read...

His comments on it at that time..."Wishing that i become open enough to experience everything that life has got to offer . :-)". 

It seems so easy that it would be almost dumb not to be that way, and yet, I never seem to get it. To conclude again with his words this time three years later...

"Oh dear ones unless you taste it you don't know what it is   :-)
...
...
Being so near yet so far .... waiting ... waiting ...as if they have got a eternity ahead of them ...." 

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Vista and Vostro-the love-hate story...

I have been forced out of the blogosphere for quite a while due to some issues in my laptop that ate away a major portion of my spring break :(. I love my laptop-I really really do and Vista Ultimate has definitely been one of the reasons for that. But of-late I am tired of searching for solutions to all the problems that have been cropping up over and over. I am going to record the best and worst of this Vista-Vostro combination and if any of you have something to add (esp. some solutions) please do so in the comments.

Awesome:

  • Windows Media Center-watching movies has become a great new experience with Media Center (there are a few bugs though, like every resizing of the window freezes the player and confuses the hell out of it-maybe it was not designed for laptops and fast application switching).
  • Windows Dreamscene: One sure-shot way to grab attention to your laptop is to have one of these moving wallpapers on the desktop-its unbeleivably beautiful-some videos are really soothing. (again some issues with Dreamscene crashing and stopping+making the overall system slow-still worth it for the experience).
  • Games: I love the Chess and Hold'em Poker games on the Ultimate.
  • Aero: Doing a Windows+Tab to switch Windows is a new paradigm and am addicted to it now-its super cool to watch the windows in 3D and choose.
  • Organized: Its hard to explain this one, but somehow all the pieces of the UI and the file system are a lot better organized on Vista than any other-very intuitive and simple.

Bummers:

  • My advice to all new users would be-DON'T do a clean install of Vista Ultimate on your own. I did that and the first screen that greeted me after the install was a blue-screen (crash), and to top it all, the blue screen would vanish in a split second and the machine will reboot and the system will dutifully ask-"Looks like last time Windows did not boot successfully. Do you want safe mode?" (well there was no last time that Windows booted successfully in the first place!!). And the same blue screen appears in safe mode too.
    • After a lot of debugging I narrowed it down to one driver that seems to screw it up for Vista-RICOH. And since you never get to login to the system, you cannot upgrade it either.
    • So I tried the next best option-reisntall the OS, and I did this 4 times each time trying a different combination-nothing worked.
    • The only “solution” was to install Vista home and upgrade to Ultimate. Now its “better”
  • And why only “better”-well the first reason I reinstalled the system was because ever since I upgraded Vista Home to Ultimate, Sleep function is totally screwed up. If you put the machine to sleep and wake it up a balloon that says “One of your USB devices malfunctioned” greets you (I don’t have any USB devices connected) and from then on none of the USB ports work.
  • Another problem when this happens is the system cannot be shut down after the USB problem; it stands in the “Shutting Down” screen for at least 30 minutes AFAIK.
  • Finally, the problem that really drove me mad was this-every now and then when the system goes to sleep, it will never wake up. All the blue lights for the CPU/Bluetooth/WIFI will be glowing bright and fine, but the screen just stays blank-never comes up no matter what key/button you press.
  • Then there are minor irritants like, once your hard disk capacity goes below a certain level, hibernate function vanishes and there is no way you can turn it back on even if you free up a lot of space.
  • IE crashes every now and then. I started using Firefox and the world’s been brighter since then. If you are really adventurous, try Firefox 3 Beta 4-its lightning fast, does not eat memory and has some very helpful new features.
  • And today I installed Vista SP1 and the microphone drivers seem to have disappeared from the system-need to debug this tomorrow-still not sure if it’s a Vista problem.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Yahooooo...its snow time!!

There was a snowstorm in Columbus this morning and we were hit by about a feet of snow! Seems that this is a record for the month of March (broke the 1906 record for Columbus!)...
http://blog.dispatch.com/Weather/2008/03/10_inches_and_counting_in_colu.shtml

Here is a video I took from the window in our living room....




Of course we were out playing in the snow after the carnage and photos are here:
http://picasaweb.google.com/toarvind/Snow

Monday, February 11, 2008

It's always beautiful...

...when it snows and you never realize that...and suddenly you peek through the window to find the whole world white :).
Indeed, Life is beautiful!

Monday, January 28, 2008

Two achievements

Somehow our Professors seem to have a knack of recognizing Indian festivals much beforehand, we had a midterm on Diwali last quarter and again one quiz on the day of Pongal this quarter. However the lucky bugger that I am, I gotta eat some wonderful Gulabjamun on Diwali (courtesy: Nalabagam Sid aka my roommate:)).

For Pongal however I was determined to make Pongal and eat it too! Turned out that we didn't have stock of jaggery to make my favorite Sakkaraipongal. Ithukkellam asaruvomaa! I decided to make vennpongal for the first time in my life. As luck would have it, paasi paruppu (not sure of the name in English) is supposed to be one of the ingredients and ofcourse we didn't have any of that as well. When has lack of an ingredient stopped arvi the great! So I settled on an approximate substitute-toor daal and started off the process after a few phone calls and some browsing on how to actually make vennpongal. After the cooker was on for fifteen minutes I realized that I missed out one small ingredient-salt! So again off went the cooker to the sink for emergency-cooling and opening, (don’t ask me what the mixture looked like at that point). After adding the salt cropped up another hitch-I knew how many whistles meant the pongal was ready under normal circumstances, but under these extraordinary situation I had created, I really wasn’t sure. Resolving to myself that I will feed this Pongal to others before I ate it, I made an approximate calculation with the original cooking time and the new cooking time. Finally ofcourse the-savior-of-every-dish-Arvind-has-ever-made (to quote Rachael “that’s an expression”J), lots and lots of ghee and the Pongal was ready! I don’t like self-praise, but cant help it this time-whattay Pongal it turned out to be!!! My cooking has a new fan now (of course me).

And today I reached another milestone I made Dosa from scratch i.e. from mixing the flour upto the final (semi-) crispy Dosas. Ofcourse the Dosas turned out white as milk is another matter altogether (well that’s way I always intended it to be!!). Feeling on top of the world right now. I am the best!!!

And for some sumaar recipes of a disciple of mine check out http://meerablogs.blogspot.com/search/label/Reciepes

[Note: Comments on my past cooking triumphs are not welcome unless they are filled with fulsome praise]

Friday, December 21, 2007

On the icy rink...

Just a few months back, a friend asked me-"So what was the last new thing you did?". I thought a bit about it, then I thought a bit more, and after an excruciating silence, I came up with-"Oh let me think about it...what was it that you did?" and off we went on a tangential dicussion.

And last week I did finally find a new thing to do:)-Ice Skating! I was in Cincinnati and saw this beautiful skating rink right in the middle of downtown and decided to go for it. It seems parents in US (or atleast Ohio) want their kids to learn skating even before they learn to walk!! There were so many beautiful kids on the rink and I wanted to ask their parents whether they were born with the skating boots on! They were playing run and catch (for the lack of a better word for ஓடி புடிச்சு) while I was trying hard to stand on my two feet (or rather on the two blades under my boots).

After falling some twelve times and scraping most of the ice with bare hands (look at fotos for explanation), I finally got the hang of it...or so I thought until I made the near-fatal mistake of trying it a second time at our own Ohio State University Ice Hockey rink. All was well until the last ten minutes of our time, when instead of falling on my hands and knees as I usually do, I fell on my right leg twisting it out of shape in the process, thankfully no bones were broken in the process and am left with a right foot swollen to the size of a small apple...(some people seem to think it has been that way always-but the pain says a different story).

Ofcourse, just for the record I shall not stop, and am planning to get back on the rink as soon as the foot is ready! Trust me, except for that one last fall, it really WAS a lot of fun.

Pictures are here... http://picasaweb.google.com/toarvind/IceSkating

Wednesday, January 3, 2007

A brand new year!

Happy new year to all of you...while everyday could be a new start, a new year does give us the feel of a fresh start doesn't it?:).....just for the record I was sound asleep on the train from Kolkata to Hyderabad as the new year dawned in India. While the journey from Hyd-Kolkata by train is a bit tiring it is worth every bit of it for the awesome views as the train passes through Orissa and West Bengal lush green fields, the amazingly huge (but dry) Mahanadi river, and on the return journey some different views of Orissa, a lake just about a km away from the train extending into the infinite blue sky...reminded me of a song from a Maniratnam movie...great views.

As for other news, just before new year we had to witness the hanging of a dictator. Though the mind tells us that this fellow has committed so many crimes that make us shudder just to think of them...still seeing the frail old man getting the noose around his neck and the look on his face..the shiver on imagining what must be going through the man's mind those very moments, it is indeed difficult to come to terms with one human's right to end the life of another. Still my mother's final statement on the issue settled things right for me-"Vaikunda egadasi annikku thookula pottirukka da...nera sorgathukku thaan poga poraan paru:)." ("He has been hanged on Vaikunda Egadasi-day of opening of heaven's doors in Indian mythology-definitely he is on his way to heaven."

Monday, June 26, 2006

A simple prayer...

This is actually the prayer of Alchoholics Anonymous and it makes a lot of sense for us sober ones too...

God, Grant me the Serenity to accept the things I cannot change.

The Courage to change the things I can.

And the Wisdom to know the difference!

Amen:).

Monday, April 10, 2006

Birthday!!!


I completed one more year on this lovely planet and as usual had to pay a price for it...bumps were very severe this time-lot of pent-up emotions I guess:)..

However one conv I had with a friend immediately after the "celebrations" at office was interesting:

P: Arvind, after seeing that, I am thankful that "I am not a guy".
Me: This was just nothing, my worst nightmare would have been having a person like me in the crowd:).
P: Ungalukku poi pavappattene, enna sollanum!!


Sharing my birthday with Bhoopesh is such an honor and having him with me on the day made it more special than ever before!! More on Boo in another post...


Then there were the gifts-an ornamental Krishna painting, a Godfather collector's edition VCD pack(btw, if you didn't guess already, am a mad mad fan of the Big G:)), a box of chocolates(yummy!!!full box'um enakke enakku!!).

Then four days after my birthday was the real fun...I had sent out an invite for dinner at our house, to all my batchmates at Hyd (23 of them) and all of them accepted the invite!!! Wow, we had to cook for 20 people and I tell you there no other experience in the past two years has been more satisfying and enjoyable than this-everything was on large-scale, we finally had a plaintain-leaf dinner under the moonlight (with some candle-light to bolster it;))...it was fun till the end. Janani sang a beautiful song, other enthu narrated his life-story..and after all this we (a core group of die-hard Gf fans watched the Godfather till 4.30 in the morning:)..



Sunday, April 2, 2006

Barber's shop

I remember a story from school in which a man visits a photographer and ends up in a lot of misery. In my case it has always been the barber who is on the wrong side of all my fashion statements. Exactly how often (or seldom) does a person need a haircut? This is a question that has probably been hanging around ever since the chicken-egg paradox was discovered. I would say the answer has more to do with fate than anything else. The day invariably comes when I look at the mirror and the feverishness arises-"Arvind, you just have way too much hair...it doesn't fit your persona!!" and this feeling never subsides until you have the cut(Patta pin unarum manamae)!!

Waiting at the shop is an experience in itself-more so in Hyderabad for there are no Tamil newspapers to browse through (not even English!) and I have to settle for picture-browsing in Telugu papers-and quite uncharacteristically these Telugu reporters seem to have little spice in their lives-for all I get is a gleaming YSR or an agitating Chandrababu Naidu or worse still, an old dilapidated photograph of an actress who just decided that life was too much and took a plunge from the top of the staircase!! Where are all the Shreyas and Genelias!! Dont these guys find them photogenic??!

Then comes the big moment, when you get your turn to sit on that Aasana. How much ever you adjust your head the guy never seems satisfied-"aur thoda aage jaana saab!" (go a little forward Sir) and when you are forward enough to see two images of yourself in the mirror and are not sure which one is getting the haircut, he starts. Now he throws the mythological question the answer to which has caused more misery to me than all the geography exams in school put together! "Short or Medium Saar?"-I find that a lot of people are very well equipped and prepared to answer this question-but yours truly almost never is! Medium means another visit to this wretched place real soon and short means...well we will see that later. This time I said-"Short" and definitely it was Lord Shani Himself seated there on tip of my toungue at that mythical moment when I said that...so short it was going to be...

Normal people usually have the option of stopping the destruction mid-way..on "seeing" what is being done to them they generally say-"Ok that should do." But for a sweet gullible boy like me with an eye-power of -6, well I have very few options other than to wait till the razor decides to stop and I scramble for my glasses to see what a work of art my head of hair has become at the moment. Now this is the point of no return, a sort of a emotional peak-when you want to scream at the top of your voice, but when the guy asks-"Ok hai Saar??" (Is it ok sir?) 'Oh sure it is ok to have a bulldozer run over my head when I am blind..thanks buddy' and I say-"Han ok hai, kitna?" With a proud smirk that might have put Bachanji to shame, he says-"Twenty Five rupees Saar." I pay and walk out, and he is not done yet..."Yehin phir aanaa saar..."(please come again)...Sure my friend-that will happen...but atleast, let me rest in peace until we meet again...

Monday, February 13, 2006

Baghu Sucks...

Here is the mail from this kaiyalagatha fellow:

From: prasanna s
Date: Feb 13, 2006 1:09 PM
Subject: Feb 13th Treat status.
To: softthinkers , praveen.DS@trilogy.com, karthee_sivalingam@infosys.com

Hi all,
I have been told by Murr that there are a few changes in the scheme of things for the treat that we had planned.

1.The sponsor is now changed from Baghu and miss.x
to
2. The reason of treat now changed from Introduction of miss.x
to
Welcoming back Baghu to the elite group of singles.
3. Date now changed from 13th February
to
'Yet to be decided'

4. Venue no change i.e. 'Yet to be decided'..
Murugu will send a detailed mail regarding the same shortly.

@Murr : is this all fine?

and my reply is "Baghu, You suck!!!"

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Baghuvin Sabatham...

Last year this day, one of our dear friends, Baghu, made a solemn pledge that he reaffirmed countless times with status messages on Yahoo Chat and that was: he will find his dream girl, before the next Valentine's day (that is tomorrow). I initially was (and still am) skeptical of his cupidial abilities. But if anything, Baghu is definitely unpredictable...so we were waiting. This fellow doesnt stop there, he goes on to declare to every soul he has known in the last four years, that he is giving a treat on Feb 13th to everyone and there he will unveil the object of his sabatham to everyone...he is supposed to introduce his girl to all of us on this day. Notwithstanding the ominous threats of GKB-"Mavanae nee mattum emathinaennu vaiyi...eppadi irunthaalum, treat vangama vidamattaen..", Baghu was (and still is) confident. Grand plans are on to give him the bumps of his lifetime should he fail to deliver, but somewhere in the corner of my mind there is still a ray of hope left for this maverick, adament, self-conceited (but loveable) rascal...lets wait and see. As Ram's status reads...today is definitely the judgement day.

Thursday, February 9, 2006

Salam Hyderabad...

These are some reasons why I love this city:

1. Friends- it has truly been a college away from a college here, we are a gang of about 15 guys, we completely enjoy each other's company-I feel like I have rediscovered each one of them after college...more on each one of them in a seperate post:).
2. Roads- the first thing that strikes you on landing in Hyderabad are the amazing roads that connect the whole city (the unruly traffic running on it is a sad story, but we will ignore that for the moment). They are really wide and well-laid, making driving a great experience.
3. Eat Street-my favorite hang-out, a bunch of eateries just on the banks of Hussain Sagar Lake-a lake and food at one place-what more could your truly ask for?? A stroll along the lake is enough to cure the worst headache and releive the stress-the breeze here competes with that in the beaches in Chennai.
4. Cooking (ofcourse by JP and Bhoopesh)-the initial 6 months were horrible-I had to go scouting for decent food every night and breakfast was a word absent in our dictionary. Then we slowly started-initially just with curd rice, then moved on to many more delicacies (courtesy: Bhoobi ofcourse). Now, on normal days we have a full three-course south indian meal ending at around 1am in the next morning:).
5. Shopping at Hyderabad Central (esp. when there is a sale:) and watching a movie at Prasadz. I have watched movies in gutter-like theaters in Chennai (Devi theater is one example where the low-lifes sell tickets officially in black!!). Here at Prasadz, you can do the booking online and just walk in about an hour earlier, pay for it and collect the tickets. The ambience and facility inside the theaters has to be seen to be beleived!
6. Temples-occasionally we visit a beautiful but crowded temple called Chilkur Balaji temple. I kinda like a small silent Hanuman temple near our house where you dont have to stand in queues and you dont bump into acquaintances who want to talk about everything under the sun inside the temple premises.
7. KBR Park-This park deserves a special mention among the various parks available in the city-they are all amazingly well-maintained. In this park we have a walk-way of about 6km along the circumfrence of the park open to public-the cleanliness of this walkway (inspite of being a free entry) and the greenery surrounding it makes it an ideal destination for a morning/evening walk.
8. Our Friday night activities-these have varied over time starting with watching movies on the VCD player huddled together in the hall, to playing board games like Business, Scotland Yard etc. Now we have a subset of us preparing for a Yoga course which takes away most of their time and so the rest of us are waiting...:)
9. Microsoft parties- being singles (every one of us AFAIK), we are not allowed to stalk any clubs/parties. So we relish the occasional parties that Microsoft hosts to the fullest extent...dancing our hearts out singing until everyone's voice is a mere croack.
10. Restaurants-once you are ok with spending, Hyderabadi hospitality and cuisine opens its doors to you-there are some superb restaurants like Angeeti,Mainland China,Chutneys,Utsav, Ohris-which are sure to burn a deep hole into your pockets, but are worth every bit of it when you do it occasionally. Then there is this small mess called Kakatiya (quite far from our house) where you would get the most satisfying meal for a paltry Rs. 28-their customer service would put every other restaurant I mentioned previously, to dust! It is truly six-sigma!!
11. Cars-Two of our guys Naresh and Arun have bought cars and all of us like to jump-into one of them whenever the occasion arises (or we might create one:) and these two wonderful souls have never ever refused us a ride and even take the pains of choosing the right CD to play during the ride at the right volume to make it a real pleasure ride.
These are the ones that come to my mind now..will add-on to them as I remember..

Tuesday, May 10, 2005

One Memorable incident-Redmond Continued..

This was a mail I wrote to my cousin when I was in Redmond about one unforgettable incident...
We went to Mt.Reinier (about 3 hours drive from here) on Sunday and it turned out to be an unforgettable day in many respects. We reached a point 5400 feet high in car and climbed for 2 hours to reach a point 7200 feet high!!! There was almost noone there and we had snow all around. We were so close to the peak. We played there for almost an hour. It was the best adventure I ever had.

Finally at 8.30 we decided we need to go back and started the descent. It took almost an hour and finally when we reached the car all exhausted and drained, I found that I had left the headlights on and the battery had completely drained!!! Then we found that the visitor's
office and all such places were closed as it was sunday night!! Finally there was a hotel there and we went into that and made a call to the Emergency services of the rental agency (Avis) and they arrived in about 2 hours and we waited patiently.

I should say Mt.Reinier is quite a sight in the night with the clear sky and countless stars in the background (though the temperature must have been around 10 degrees or lesser). Infact we took a few pictures of our incredible car with the night sky in the background!! The mechanic finally managed to jump-started the car. Finally we started at 11pm and bingo!! we didnt know the proper route back as the maps we had taken had some road named incorrectly.Also since I didnt want to risk a half-filled tank, we stopped at a petrol bunk and my friend went and filled the fuel. Then just before we left I noticed the name on the fuel station and it was written-DIESEL FUEL. I was totally dismayed.

We kept driving hoping that the diesel part would not enter the engine until we reached home. Finally in the darkness of the night (with occasional bursts of fog) we finally managed to get back through three freeways and reached home by 1.30am.

It was an unforgettable day in many respects and now, I am more confident of my driving than I have ever been in my life!!!

Yours,
Arvind Sharma.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

Microsoft@Redmond

Well, we didn't get the opportunity to get into any of the Microsoft buildings in the first 2 days and it got us really restless...we had seen them from outside ofcourse, because Redmond is filled with them. Redmond is a small village in Washington state and I should say it is "filled with" Microsoft. To my knowledge there are atleast 115 buildings there...these are not huge ones though, each would have a maximum of two floors, the exceptions being the buildings containing offices of Bill and Steve which are 4 storied ones. Since Washington area is prone to earthquakes, there are limits on the number of floors a building can have.

The buildings are all surprisingly similar from outside (even our new campus at Hyderabad has the same exteriors), but very distinct on the interi0rs. Each building has a theme for the interior decorations. Ours was Paintings, and the walls were filled with illustrated paintings. JP's building theme was customers, they would be filled with life-size "cut-outs" of different customers of Microsoft, one would be a German customer, explaining his features, like "Marc was born in Germany and is an accountant, he has been using Windows 98 for a long time and is thinking of moving over to XP. But of-late he has been hearing a lot of stuff about something called Linux. He is an advanced user of Excel 98 and..." I am not doing a good job of reconstructing the profile here..:(...anyway it would be focussed on a German customer's perspective on software.

There is no concept of cubicles here and everyone from the lowest level programmer to the CEO gets a cabin for himself/herself. We saw cabins decorated in every wild way possible. In one cabin we saw some 200 cans of pepsi, coke etc piled neatly one on top of another to form a man-sized pyramid. Some people had comfortable sofas installed on their office. We saw a few people who used to sit on the floor outside their offices working on their laptop..couldnt figure out why...maybe they liked it that way.

I and JP were lucky to get our own cubicles all for ourselves since others had to share an office due to lack of space. But I got so bored sitting all alone day long that when Arun came over I made him share the office with me.

The kitchen deserves a special mention, the principle seemed to be anything liquid is free and everything else is charged...there was a really huge refrigirator housing hundereds of cans of coke, pepsi, chocolate milk (my favourite ofcourse:)), sprite and a number of American drinks like Dr. Pepper (it has a real horrible taste) and canned fruit juices like apple, cranberry, grape etc. There was also a pay-with-a-coin style parlour which housed stuff like chips chocolates and everything to make you fat (and people blamed me for getting fat after the trip!!!!)

People who were really busy (or atleast pretended to be) put a sticker outside their offices saying "DND-Email Only". I really liked the way in which people respected other's privacy. Even my mentor (an Indian) would get my consent before setting up a meeting or even for coming over casually to meet me).

There is a huge ground where football and cricket(!!!) were the favourite sports. We played quite a bit there. Apart from these, things that deserve a passing mention are the continuous shuttles which carried people around these 100-odd buildings, huge (really huge) car parks below the buildings, the fooseball table(which we managed to get here as well), the state a hall in Building 34 (Bill Gates's office is in this building!!) was after some beer-bash (it was just like what a director would love to show if he wanted to protray some "Saraaya-kadai" fight scene in Usilampatti-really nasty and last but definitely not the least my own office overlooking the street and the beautiful drops of rain dripping on the glass every time there was a drizzle:).

Life after Hostel...

This is a mail I wrote recently to my hostel groups...(edited a few sentences to protect privacy of some of my friends)

Hi all,

So nice to see this group up and running. I thought I would do my bit to keep the discussions flowing in the group.

There are quite a few things I miss about college life...the comforts of life have definitely increased manifold mainly due to the new-found financial independence...but still here are a few things that have changed....

  1. My slippers dont get lost anymore...a few days back I was searching wildly for my pair of bathroom slippers to go to the terrace….and then found them on my roommate's feet. We laughed over the fun times we used to have searching for our slippers in the hostel from room to room early in the morning and I have been guilty of putting on the first pair that I can set my eyes on in PN’s room or AN’s room or wherever with the good intention of returning it where I took it…just when I am done..someone would come over and ask for it “Machan…koncham seruppu kodaen…” then I would give it saying “Return it to PN’s room…” and there begins the never-ending journey of the chappals…
  2. No more gang-watching of movies…though we guys in Hyderabad gather together almost every weekend to watch a VCD movie (we even watched 2 telugu movies..) there is nothing like those “hot” days when 15-20 people used to cram into a room to watch a movie (the first movie on my comp was “Kadhal Azhivathillai…” and I had to run some 4 shows daily for 3 days as the demand was so high).
  3. No more queues in bathrooms….first year we used to run all the way from yoga class to the bathrooms and whoever reached first would bath first….then we used to have buckets queued outside…but when people started putting their buckets a day before…then we started the amazing practice of “solli vaippathu..” till date that is the best application of a linked list I have seen…
  4. No more birthday fun…we do celebrate birthdays….but nothing like those wonderful nights when starting 12am we used to be dripping wet after lots and lots of bums and a dip in the holy “thotti” water…I was lucky to be among a benevolent set of friends to be getting only some 5-minute bumps….I really used to pity (though I also gave them my share) some fellows whose bumps kept going endlessly for hours with stalwarts like AN doing their job…
  5. No more discussions…But the thing I miss the most are the marathon discussions we used to have on anything from sex to Ramayana and Mahabaratha….every time there was an assessment we would go to some room with the sole intent of “studying”…then as we dozed off with the books…someone would ask some doubt…that would lead to something else…then something else….finally after 2 hours we found ourselves at the same page but having discussed 101 “important” things…boy that was fun….

These are only a few things I can spell out right now…but I am sure there are 100s of other things which made those four years memorable…


Those were really memorable days...every minute was fun:)

Monday, February 21, 2005

The Stay

We had a few imaginations about the place we were going to stay in. But the one we got surpassed our wildest imaginations. We were given the biggest apartment I have ever lived in. The entire floor was covered with a soft (I am not sure what to call this..) flooring which is the norm here for all apartments. I felt sleeping on the floor more comfortable than my bed back home:). The rooms were spacious and we had every home appliance that one could think of- Refrigerator, microwave oven, dish-washer, knife-set, washing machine and so on. Ofcourse for $100 a day which my company was paying them these were the least they could do:).

Ofcourse we left all the kitchen equipment almost untouched. The appliance we found the greatest use were indeed the TV and VCR (you read it right-here VCRs and video cassettes are are still immensely popular. We watched a movie almost every weekend. More about that in
another post.

I was feeling a bit eerie with the huge house and living all alone and decided to move in with Raghu (he had a two-bedroom apartment). Then began the party-time. Raghuram often became so sick with hotel-food that he used to cook at home and ofcourse I helped with him in the most crucial part-eating and certifying his cooking skills. He is so sweet that inspite of being enraged at my watching TV endlessly while he toiled with rice and puliyotharai mix (he became a specialist in making puliyotharai-tamarind rice) and making empty threats of cooking for him alone-always at the end of it there it was....I had steaming rice, watery, but tasty sambhar, sometimes curry, curd and to top it all-Puliyotharai:). You are a pleasure Raghu:):)

Towards the end we took detailed videos of the whole house. Here apartments are not stand-alone entities. They have a set of apartments forming a community kind of thing and they have facilities common to them. There was a small swimming pool for the place and we deigned on it only once during the whole stay. They had a tennis court as well.

We had the chance of watching the firemen in action twice during our stay. When there is smoke in one of the apartments there is an alarm that goes off for the entire building. Everyone in every apartment who hears that is supposed to leave everything and rush outside. The firemen are automatically alarmed and they arrive within few minutes. They are very professional. In full gear, a few of their men march inside the house and make sure there is nothing serious and declare "All Clear". People can go in only after that. Both the times thankfully only the fireplace had had some problems and was emanating too much of smoke.

Thursday, February 17, 2005

The Flight.

I actually had imagined quite a few things about the flight journey after hearing that in Singapore Airlines each seat had a LCD monitor and each passenger had a choice from 17 movie CDs to watch and also that Lufthansa was even better than Sing Air. Well...it turned out to be otherwise. The seats were cramped and there was one small monitor for some 20 seats, the person in the corner seat has to stick out his head to see it avoiding the over-head baggage box and as luck would have it I was in the corner seat quite a few times.

Frankfurt airport was quite something. It is not huge, but it is bustling with activity. There are 2 magnetic levitation train between the 2 terminals with a frequency of about 1 in 5 minutes. It was truly amazing to go in that. We saw the freeway of Germany and the speed with which cars flew (literally!!) was just amazing. We did a lot of window shopping until we were tired enough to return to the boarding gate. There are car-like vehicles inside the airport for old people to commute!! The security check was amazing. Each person was asked to remove everything metallic (even shoes..if they have metal strips) and put in a seperate box which goes through the scanner. They frisk you completely with gloved hands (no metallic detectors). Then we flew to Los Angeles and got down. The queue at the immigration check was simply amazing. There must have been atleast a thousand people there!! We waited for almost an hour on our queue. After that was done came the dreaded customs and agricultural dept checks (where they throw out most our indian foods if they are not satisfied with our explanations) and whew..there was no checking at all. They let us go without even stopping us for a moment. LS airport is huge with a lot of terminals.

Finally we reached Seattle and took a taxi home. The taxi was moving at a speed of almost 75mph (120kmph)..little did I imagine that I would be driving at 100mph very soon!!!

Redmond....

I was fortunate enough to be sent over to Redmond by Microsoft for three whole months to undergo training. These three months were definitely an experience I would cherish for a lifetime, not just because this was my first foreign trip or because the place was "so cool", but more because I was there with a set of very close friends, an opportunity that few people being sent "offshore" get. We had so much fun there the term weekend itself has acquired a special meaning for most of us:)

And while I was there, I used to write mails to myself describing the experiences at the place, starting from the flight, to the food, places we visited etc. I couldn't complete it there. I will try to do that here. From now on I will post our experiences under different headings.

I wanted to do this earlier, but didn't get the bandwidth to do it. I will delay this no longer....