Friday, December 19, 2008
Sunday, December 14, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
Thank you England ...II
- Harsha Bhogale' IE 19 Dec 08
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Sent using Nokia handheld device
Thank you, England and thank you, KP
To be back to a country where you saw a massive terrorist attack only last month - where foreigners, tourists and the rich were specially targetted, where the very hotel where you would normally stay was under seige - is in deed a matter of courage, in my view. How would you convince your wife and kids, your parents that the place is safe. You might know it because you have travelled to other places in the country but may be not your wife, kids or parents.
Some of my friends want to go to Bangkok for their CFA examinations this June but the recent events have made them rethink and may be opt for Singapore. This despite the fact that Bangkok now appears to be almost safe for tourists/visitors but why take any chance.
Sunday, December 07, 2008
Negotiation lessons from Henry Kissinger
(something that happened at the Agra summit b/w the two heads, Indian PM AB Vajpayee and Pak President Musharraf)
(Read the complete interview at IE, 7 Dec 08)
Mumbai up and running ...
(The Indian Express - Sunday edition dated 7 Dec 08)
Monday, November 24, 2008
Depression and the current scenario
It will take some time (?) to ride out the current storm - the concerted global action will have its effect. The system needed to be shaken and thats whats happening so let there be only depression in history - we are fine with one reference point.
will try to look for more on the topic and post. Till then lets keep working hard and not lose our job. Do value added work, try not to get irritated by what your boss says etc etc
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
E71 (2 of n) - Sportstracker
Install sportstracker from Menu>Installations>Sportstracker.
Monday, November 17, 2008
Nokia E71 (1 of n)
What I am not liking is the way you save the files transferred through bluetooth - the file after getting transferred goes to your new messages, from there you open it and then save it again. Now imagine getting a bulk of images/songs transferred to your phone and then saving them individually. Quite painful. And if you want to see those pics in a sequence or listen those songs, the above exercise becomes all the more painful. I just hope there is a better way of doing the above.
Anyways I love my phone :-)
Attitude towards work
The point "I own this cab and am not a driver of this cab". I mean if you this cab and are driving this cab, you should be doing willingly all the more. In fact you should have it cleaned it at your place if you find it so humiliating. That shows the attitude you have towards your work. You need to have a positve attitude towards whatever you do. If he had promptly cleaned when asked to do, I would have felt good only and would have probably forgotten that the spare tyre is also kept at the back. Wouldn't have wasted time arguing and calling here and there. In the meantime my colleague ( a senior person in the company) tells me 'looks like its us only who would agree to all kinds of client requests...seems like only we are in need of work'. That shows his attitude to work and is probably the reason for his successfuk career.
(and in the meantime the driver finds a flat tyre and then breaks the jack while trying to fix it, is still standing there while we call a new cab and leave for office. You pay for your attitude, in this case, so philosophically, right there).
Sunday, November 16, 2008
Obama and equality in India
I pick up the following from Indian Express and a bit of my own
Facts show how slow and halting America's own march to progress has been. When Obama was born in1961, the marriage between his Black Kenyan father and White American mother was illegal in as many as 19 out of 50 states in the US: The Constitution of lndia, on the other hand, enshrined, in1950 itself, equality as one of the foundational principles - we had the first muslim president in about 20 years after partition and BR Ambedkar, a dalit, was the chief architect of our constitution, we already had a lady prime minister and so on.
No doubt America is the greatest land of opportunities and truly truly rewards meritocracy but it would not be fair to unnecessarily demean ourselves and not look at facts in their entirety.
Friday, November 14, 2008
First blog by mobile
Sunday, September 28, 2008
Thursday, September 04, 2008
Tennis lessons
Tennis lessons
The Indian Express
Posted online: Tuesday, September 02, 2008 at 2347 hrs IST
A few short weeks ago, Roger Federer lost a prize that he had held for 237 weeks, and most thought that he would only give up when he retired — ATP’s ranking as the world’s number one tennis player. Now, as the first major tournament since he lost that ranking gets interesting, and with it Federer’s last chance to salvage something of value from his annus horriblis, the world looks to Flushing Meadows in New York. The Olympics are spectacular; the football World Cup emotional; but for lessons in how to deal with invincibility, overconfidence and inexplicable failure, few sports are more transparent than tennis. This weekend, as Federer tried to explain how his new-found vulnerability would affect his playing, an international audience was forced to adjust, with him, from a unipolar to a bipolar world.
Federer is a once-in-a-generation player, a natural, the Bill Clinton (Charisma, crowd-puller abilities and not Lewinsky-type rapport) of tennis. A year ago, he might have been — no, was — considered unreachable. And yet, there is always someone younger and more determined, someone who might initially appear pedestrian and yet manages to lay sublime greatness low — a Nadal, an Obama . Federer will try to defend his US Open title by finally changing his game to reflect his mortality; just as Bill Clinton eventually settled into playing the senior statesman at last week’s Democratic convention, rather than the role of the main attraction he has always considered his own by right.
For us, in India, these questions might appear theoretical. Indians do not, as a rule, have to consider questions of greatness. India is accustomed to smaller pleasures, three-medal achievements, bottom-of-the-table accomplishments — in sport, and elsewhere. And yet, there is something that should be kept in mind this week: goals that appear unreachable, leads that appear unassailable, are destined to be reached, to be successfully assailed. To the young — and India is young — belongs the future, inevitably. How the adjustment is carried out will make all the difference.
Colored comments are mine
Sunday, August 24, 2008
Vijender kumar

"A promoter like Don King, a ring inside Madison Square Garden, and millions of dollars per bout. That is my dream, that is where I want to be," says Vijender, sitting in his newly built two-storey house in Kaluwas village.by the way did you know Bhiwani is known as "Little Cuba" of India. For boxers coming out of the place, no no, not for drugs or mafia (beware of running into a jat(t) though)!
Phelps & Spitz
Saturday, August 23, 2008
Olympics & Cricket - II
Isn't it so much like cricket when people from all walks stand in front of the TV (the TV owner then has to move the face of his TV towards the public). or does it happen with all sports? (where you expect success)
Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Olympics & Cricket
At the same time you had the second one day cricket match between India & Sri Lanka. The match was in an exciting phase and we are all cricket fans (have our cricinfo.com open while we work!). The point is if you have heroes in other sports(Abhinav Bindra & Sushil Kumar and now Vijender as I write this), you will follow that sport too. Yeah, I know its a chicken and egg problem but am sure you get the point.
Monday, August 18, 2008
Wall Street Analyst moves to India - II
Wall Street’s losses are fast becoming India’s gain. After outsourcing much of their back-office work to India, banks are now exporting data-intensive jobs from higher up the food chain to cities that cost less than New York, London and Hong Kong, either at their own offices or to third parties.Here is the complete article
In addition to moving some lower-level banking and research positions to support bankers and analysts in New York and London, firms are shipping some of their top bankers from those cities to faster-growing developing markets to handle clients there.