Wednesday, August 15, 2007

A "really" Happy Independence Day

According to The Guardian, “India is the best place in the world to be born right now”
. Somewhere else in the British press, they were busy celebrating "the arrival of a golden (Indian) age".

OK, let us come out of our anglophilistic [or, westophillistic would be more appropriate :)] mindsets (which makes us respect an Amartya sen, only when and once they have been recognized by the west). So even if we ignore what Guardian commented - we know that India is now THE HAPPENING THING, indicated by numerous things which our medias, both electronic and print, have been enlightening us about all these days preceding the independence day and beyond.

But not only that - We, I, can also feel it as an individual. Parents of most of us would perhaps had never dreamt that we would be sitting in AC offices, doing nothing [most of the time :)], earning paid vacations to Europe / US [and if u r in TCS, Uruguay / Nicaragua and may be arctic / antarctic, and may be moon too :)], (some of us) would earn so much money in a month that it took the parents a lifetime to save, would fly, would drive cars [and other than ambassadors / premier padminis / marutis :) ].


So many factors combined to give us this lifestyle, this progress, this 'giant leap in human development index' - like technological advancements (mobile and internet come immediately to mind), but these revolution in technology had thrown an opportunity to the entire world - not just India.

The reason why Indians could tap it, where as most of the rest of the developing world could not, or being more correct, politically and otherwise, why India could tap it more than the rest of the world, is - we had few people, few visionaries, which rest of the world did not. This blog entry, on 60th ID of India, is a tribute to those people.
Here they are:


Nehru
Praising him now a days is one of the most politically incorrect things in here (unfortunately). But it was his vision of what he called 'the temples of modern India', which created, among other things, the IITs, perhaps our most valuable & respected brand name in US (and the developed world) today. I need not waste time, yours and mine, commenting upon the IITs :), but let me share a conversation I had with an American colleague outside our office building (somewhere north of DC), where I was waiting for a friend and he was taking a smoking break - we started talking casually and he was curious about where I graduated from. Upon me mentioning one of the IITs*, his comment was: "O man, IITs!!! ppl who don't get admission there come here and study at MIT" - [M for Massachusetts, not for Manipal, mind u :)]

Rajiv Gandhi
His name here may be surprising to most of u. Cause almost nothing has been written about his visions (or, whatever has been written, got over shadowed by bofors / shahbano / shilanyas etc ). Anyway, i think it was 1986, when i read an interview he gave to some kids (i think on the occasion of 14th nov), for a children's hindi monthly called Parag. At that time, very few things (toffees, biscuits, summer vacations and daadi's stories) made sense, and this interview was definitely not one of them. It was not till i finished BE and joined Wipro and till terms like information revolution started appearing in the media, and grew familiar to me, and to most of India, that i recalled one of his comments from that interview.
Rajiv to kids: "aap logon ne parha ho ga ki qareeb 200 saal pahle duniya mein ek audyogik kranti aayee thhee. par ham us mein peeche rah gaye the. Dunia me ek aur kraanti aane vaali hai, 'soochna kranti', aur is baar hamein peeche nahi rahna hai."
And then he went on to mention that he was working towards bringing computer technology to India - so that this time India wont fall behind.

Apparently, it hasn't.
Thanks to him, (and i m sure many others too).

Also, he added, with things like these, he wanted to take India to 21st century ...
How prophetic words, and whatta vision ...
It is his vision that we (particularly the IT people) are living today.

Narsimha Rao / Manmoahn singh
The architects of economic liberalization that swept (and continues to seep) India (well, at least the urban middle class and beyond), off its feet, catapulted it to the forefront of world stage. Somehow, i feel this jodi was not given the credit that it deserved, neither in India, nor in the world. This jodi was to India what Deng was to china, and perhaps more - cause unlike Deng, they were working in a democracy. While Deng is universally recognized as the man who put China in the big league, this jodi is not as much recognized as it deserved to be (it is just my observation, and it may be wrong - i hope i am)

PS: Read India as "urban India" - for, unfortunately, rural India, like most of the rest of the world, could not tap this opportunity in such a big way - which should be and is a cause of concern, but let us celebrate what we have achieved, instead of feeling guilty over what we should have but not - achieved. Also, the still existing poverty in rural (and urban as well) India, and other things associated with it, are not 'because of the progress of Urban Middle class India' - it is indifferent of it. And though indifference is questionable and should be corrected, it is not objectionable - i guess.

So Happy Independence Day guys (and gals) - and salute to those who are responsible for the most of the "Happy" part of the above greeting.

Shadkam Islam
http://shadkam.islam.googlepages.com/
http://shadkamislam.blogspot.com/
http://shadkam19.blogspot.com/

* though my college became an IIT after my passing out - i took the liberty to not to bother him with all those details :)

Monday, August 13, 2007

Searched, to my pleasant surprise, could find clippings from Chanakya ... Listen to / watch this one [aisi hindi na dekhi thhee na suni thhee] http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z7V0w9u1CsI

Apart from being hindi mind-twister,
it would be nostalgic for some of us (who were old enough to have watched chanakya on DD those days), and prehistory for some of us ... but either ways, it would be nice :) ...
Weekly Updates
Over the weekend i happened to go to Luthra's den ... and though I had been there before and was expecting it to be as messy as Ashu Gupta's hair - I got a cultural shock still - it was as full of electronic items - most of em stale (seem to be no longer in use) as a govt primary school toilet in UP is of, well :), s.h.i.t :) [stale condition applies, here also, in its entirety :)], and as guy's minds are full of, well :), gals [stale condition does not apply here :)], and as Anurag's mind(?)* is of wipro policies / politics / quarterly results ...

i found, apart from the regular stuff of 5 laptops (4 of them so dusty ki they look straight out of harappa / mohan-jo-daro :), a LCD TV, a home theater system, 3 professional class cameras, and numerous others which i, owing to my not so great knowledge of gadgets, can not name, all crammed into a space u get by combining a dozen janitor's closets together [volume wise, crammedness wise, gandagi-wise, and otherwise :)], - a brand new 30 inch LCD monitor :), on the kitchen slab,
near the sink, placed on top of some dirty vessels, tilted but not falling, just like the leaning tower of PISA ... :)

Here went the conversation:
-

An Astonished Me (will be called AAMe. though abbreviation, my bong friends will feel at home)
:Luthra, y did u need to get this one bhai, u already have this 36 inch TV, and all the lappies have got their own monitors ...
Luthra
: [silence for 10 secs]

Arshad Miyan : Array, zaroorat ki kyaa baat hai ... mil raha thhaa ... le aaaye :):)

AAme
: But y have kept it on the kitchen slab, so near to the sink, and on top of toBeWashed vessels ... maid will certainly maanjofy it if she finds it there ... :)

Luthra
: [once again the same answer, silence :) for 15 secs]

Arshad Miyan : Array, bhai ... kaheen aur tab rakhein ge jab 'kaheen aur' jagah ho gi ... :)

Anurag / Ashu / gydec25, commento!!


Also happened to finish Dan Brown's this weekend, and life is again back to the normal aimless phase - till Dan Brown comes up with his next novel ... :), that is.
Nepolean is rumored to have not understood the meaning of fear for first 9 years of his life ... something similar occurred while reading Angles and Daemons - i did not know what a thriller is - before reading it ... :) Jabardast che ... maza aa gaya ... I liked it even more than Da Vinci code - and the other Deception Point, is also at the same level as A&D. Guys .... read em.

* before girija puts it there, let me only do it

http://shadkam.islam.googlepages.com/
http://shadkamislam.blogspot.com/
http://shadkam19.blogspot.com/

Friday, August 10, 2007

Surprising ... isn't it. While growing up DD was something like a punching bag to us ... and it appeared that nothing in DD was good ... but believe me - today after accidentally finding one of em and then searching / finding and listening to the others - i ended up getting a feeling Jagjit Singh has no nicely voiced thru "ye daulat bhi le lo, ye shohrat bhi le lo"

Njoy ... and if u have time [which is something none of us, the software engineers / managers can claim to not to have :)], do let me know ur feelings about em ...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7OkWpfTz1U [mile sur mera tumhara]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBbSbCczYeM [bharat ek khoj]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpT3TqsNqBY [ek anek ekta]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9RVgTX55vo [jungle-2 pata chala hai]

--
Shadkam Islam
http://shadkam.islam.googlepages.com/
http://shadkamislam.blogspot.com/
http://shadkam19.blogspot.com/