The Draw String Bag!

The above is a Draw String Bag and what you are going to read is its story! 
In 2007, Sangeeta got involved in a Green Initiative called “Show We Care” in SAP GD. They got allotted a budget, volunteers were called and Sangeeta joined the team and brainstormed multiple ideas. 
One of the ideas Sangeeta conceptualised was this nice solid cloth bag with the following written on it ( by a creative guy from their marketing team ).
Plastic is Harmful! – Look what it did to Michael Jackson.

Every employee was handed one and were asked to use this instead of plastic packets ( Bangalore had not banned plastic bags yet – ban came in 2011 I guess ). Sangeeta brought one home and I took a liking to it. 
While I loved the bag ( perfect for going shopping on a bike ), I hated the Michael Jackson reference – because I respected him a lot and also after a few months he died.  I always wore the bag in such a way that words are not facing the world. 
Also in 2007, “Show We Care” arranged for a Tree planting drive in SJR Redwoods Apartment Complex in Sarjapur Road. I accompanied Sangeeta on a fine Saturday morning and helped plant trees around the compound wall – around 100 of them. Store this in your register for a while – will revisit this. 
Today, in June 2013, I took it for my morning run – and still the bag is in perfect condition and the Michael Jackson words are still intact unfortunately.
Wondering where the story is? Patience my friend – coming to that. 
In 2008 – a year after the Show we care Initiative –  we were in the process of launching ApartmentADDA. Towards that we wanted a logo and a website. Sangeeta called the Creative guy who designed the Draw String bag. He connected us to the Digital Media company – Cicada Media in Koramangala who printed the nice bag. Also we thought showing her SAP credentials we can get a discount! She even carried the Draw String bag to show it to them for the first meeting. 
We went to Cicada Media one fine morning and met Mr.Deviah – its founder. He saw what we had created and liked it. His team created our first logo and our website design. He introduced us in 2 places. 
He was part of the earlier committees where he lived – in Greenwood Regency, Sarjapur Road – and introduced us to the Management Committee there. Their treasurer saw the potential and signed the cheque and they became our first paying customer. Allelujah!  Mr.Deviah was also part of the core committee of another property still under construction in Whitefield and introduced us there too. They started using us, but will turn paying customers much later. 
One of the members, who later became President, had a brother in a landmark Villa community in Whitefield. He gave us a call and invited us for a demo, we went there on a Saturday and after a nerve wracking demo + wait – they signed us up and also paid for 3 years upfront – it was like seed money for us! 
The initial few customers all came to us because of one person. Sangeeta and I were just 2 years into Bangalore and our network was very limited. We were really fortunate for the initial breaks we got. 
Taking a step back – had Sangeeta not volunteered for the “Show We Care” project and the draw string bag not been conceptualized – ApartmentADDA might have still happened – but we would have gone to any of the web design firms and would not have got the opportunity to meet Cicada’s founder. 
Remember the tree planting drive we did. In 2009 December we organized our first Workshop – on Conserving Water in association with Biome – the Water Experts. We were bootstrapped and revenues were just trickling in. We were burning our Fixed Deposits to keep ApartmentADDA running. We needed a hall – and you don’t get anything less than Rs.5000. Subha from Biome’s team, happened to live in SJR Redwoods and she talked to their Management Committee, who allowed the usage of their party hall for just Rs.500. 
Coincidence? Or it was the good Karma paying us back what we had earned in 2007 – planting trees in SJR Redwood.

Steve Jobs in his famous Graduation Ceremony speech talks of Connecting the Dots. We can always look back and figure out how it all worked out.  But we simply cannot plan these connections. It all happens by itself. 
Sangeeta could not have foreseen that some day her hubby will quit job and start a website – which will be a tool for Management Committees – so let me get involved in this Green Initiative – and that company that printed the cloth bags – their owner – has experienced the pains of being in the Management Committee……and so on – you get the drift. 
Fast forward a few years -This Saturday, June 15th 2013, we are organising an open house on Self Sufficient Apartment Communities – we believe we are doing the right thing – bringing eco warriors and the eco apprentices together under one roof. We are helping spread the eco-virus 🙂
Some day somewhere down the line – it will all get connected. We are just laying the dots. 

MBP is now on SSD

Once gizmos run out of warranty I get excited. Time to try out a few things it was not originally designed for ( definition of hacking )

My Early 2011, Mac Book Pro (MBP) 13″ is soon turning 2 years.  And it was getting slow. Painfully slow. [ Tried Taming Lion but was not enough ]

Meanwhile I was slowly burning in envy ( envy is good. jealousy is bad 🙂 ) – looking at @sanban‘s  Mac Book Air (MBA) – which was so light and ran amazingly fast. All thanks to the SSD – Solid State Drive in it vs the HDD – Hard Disk Drive on my MBP.

Twitterverse advised me to upgrade to SSD. Spoke to @b_hari who advised me – its a no brainer.  And you won’t regret it – the difference is humungous.

I did a search on the local flipkart and ebay.in but could not find any SSDs.  This was some 6 months back I guess.

A few days back I was planning to do a re-install – things had gone painfully slow. This time I went to ebay.in and searched for SSDs and got a few hits.

There were lot of options and I zeroed in on Samsung 840 SSD ( 250GB ). There was a Pro but more expensive. I snagged the non-Pro 840 SSD at Rs.11,500. Took 4 days to reach – felt like I was back in US ordering stuff from newegg!

Here are the steps. Took 4 hours end to end – to get the same setup back on SSD.

1. Moved music and other unnecessary files to the external Hard Disk – have to now fit things from a 3BHK into a 2BHK.

2. Took a time machine backup to an external hard disk. What a time saver this time machine backup was.

3. Burnt the Mountain Lion Installation file to a 8GB USB Stick.

4. Bought a 31 in 1 Screw kit, Chinese made from a fancy store for Rs.110. The DiY blogs,youtube videos specify some Philips Screw Driver, Torc screw driver etc – good luck finding those in India. This Chinese one had it all.

5. All set. Popped open the bottom lid. Tried removing the battery connector ( some of the youtube videos advised doing this ) – but the connector was not coming out – decided not to do something stupid by damaging the connector. So let it stay there.

The Hard disk drive came out easily. The SATA connector also did not give any problems.

6. I spent some time admiring at a cool piece of technology in the MBP – which is now getting obsolete. The HDD rests on a sensor – and when the laptop is moved fast or is dropped – it detects the fall and stops the HDD’s needle from touching the spindle – this prevents any bad sectors / physical damages to the hard disk. You would hear a small cracking noise whenever the motion detection happened. But with SSD there are no movable parts and this piece of hardware is not needed anymore.

7. Then fitted the SSD, bolted it nicely. Put the lid back ( didnt screw it ) and powered the laptop. Heard the Apple chime and the screen just froze white for an eternity. I had a mild panick attack – but then a folder with a question mark showed up. Phoo – thats good. The SSD is windows formatted so it was not detected.

8. Now I put the screws back – thanked the Chinese Screw driver. Plugged in the 8GB USB stick.

9. Powered it on, choose Disk Utility and formatted the SSD – into 3 partitions – Jobs, Gates and Linus.

Screenshot taken after the installation was complete. 

10. Continued with the installation ( remember to make a username which is different from the one you used to have. Time machine when it tries to restore it will ask for a different username if its already taken ). I made this mistake ( not a big deal though )

11. Once installation was over,  connected my external Hard drive, chose Migration Assistant and restored from the Time Machine backup. Forums recommend Carbon Copy Cloner – not needed if you have a Time machine backup.

12. A few things I had to do from what I gathered from the forums.

a. Installed TrimEnabler – this will optimize the writes and will not spoil the SSD ( ahemm. I never really understood the whole file storage and sector concept)

b. Turned off the Hard drive motion sensor – can be disabled from command line.

c. Turned off Last Access time for file – seems the OS will thrash the SSD a lot. Again a command line setting.

You can google for these. Simple ones.

13.  Finally it was done. All the Mail was restored, all applications ( except Microsoft Office which had to be activated once again ), settings, wallpaper – just like before. And it is blazing fast. If you are drooling at the new Retina MBPs or planning to get an MBA – try out the SSD route – for lot less you can breathe another couple of years into your favorite MBP.

I dont see any difference in weight. Its still heavy. I didnt see any significant change in Battery life.

Next : Have to install Windows 7 and Ubuntu. The rEFIt bootloader I had put is still intact ( actually I was worried if I would run into problems because of this – searched in forums if anyone having rEFIt had done SSD swap – could not find any – but thankfully it all went smooth ).

After a couple of months – will either put one more SSD inplace of the DVD Drive ( another piece of technology fast becoming obsolete ) – or remove the DVD Drive itself to reduce the weight a bit.

And friends – if anyone needs any help on how to swap an SSD sitting in India with all parts procured locally – now you know who to talk to!

Meditation and Mindfulness

Meditation

Earlier I used to think Meditation is ‘Focus’. Focus on light, or some sound or an image of a God. I learnt Transcendental Meditation from a Thermodynamics professor in CEG during my 2nd year. Don’t remember his name, but remember his teaching still. His focus was on a Mantra.

I thought I have to focus on the Mantra during meditation. But later realised the Mantra is just a vehicle to go into “Thoughtlessness”.

Actually once I realised the goal of Meditation is to get into Thoughtlessness it became easy as I did not have to fight to focus or control the mind. I just let it loose. When I sit for Meditation a ton of thoughts come to my mind – much like a jelly lorry emptying its load on a road side – the mind is very excited now – finally it is getting a piece of time to analyze everything. I let the mind analyze everything and once in a while remind the mind ( by recalling the Mantra ) that I am here to meditate and not for a psychiatric session.

But some where I drift into Thoughtlessness – do not know how much time I go into this state – I know I have gone into this state as when I get out of my 30 minutes session I cannot remember much of the analysis the mind was doing. I feel fresh and calm – and a kind of happiness and love sets in. Something like the runner’s high.

Meditation puts the mind to rest. This allows the subconscious / soul to surface. The soul gets a chance to come out of the cave – as this mind is like a dog barking all the time outside this cave – and the soul never dares to peep out. When the soul peeps out brilliant things happen – as it is pure and is full of love. The soul/heart is pure intuition and if we let this drive our life wonders will happen as it is not weighed down by ego or the mind.

Mindfulness

Of late I am discovering one more style of Meditation – Mindfulness. This is even tougher to practice but this is the next logical step.

Right now, this very minute – as I am writing this blog – my ego is jumping like a mad monkey from one tree of thought to another – how will the person who is reading judge me, will I get enough Facebook likes etc. I am not completely immersed into this post and writing with my heart and soul.

But when I write being mindful of just this post – I automatically get enough Facebook likes or people call me to appreciate that was a good post. At times after I finish writing I know – this is a good post – I was mindful only about this Post, and the ego was forgotten.

I am noticing this “not being in the moment” during many instances of my waking life. Yesterday I was in Juhu beach standing on the shore with my niece Charu – a 12 year old. She was jumping and talking to the waves and was fully drenched in the moment. I was standing there not drinking in the moment but thinking of work or the thousand things my mind likes to chew upon.

Now and then I get into a “flow” like state when I am immersed in the moment. While coding or while writing some emails or such blog posts – words or code just flow. I get into this meditative state – and I would have dished out ton of good stuff in a short span of time – and yet feel refreshed and energized to produce more.

I should try to get more into the “being in the moment”. When I write code or blog or eating or shaving or cleaning my laptop – should just be mindful of this task. When I am singing or dancing with kids – be there with them – in the moment. This sounds much easier than meditation but it is quite tough.

I have to keep reminding myself to be mindful. Much like the mantra I use during my meditation session to break the train of thoughts and remind myself that I am here to meditate.

When I am doing a task – and if my mind starts drifting – should bring it back to the task at hand. Then I am in a meditative state all day and the very thought is intoxicating!

Mindfulness is Meditation.

Now a Mumbaikar

Life is much like a train that takes you through many Cities.

It has taken me from Coimbatore to Madurai to Chennai to Baton Rouge to Madison to Chicago to Bangalore and now in Mumbai.

Coimbatore is very special to me. The monsoon drizzle in June/July, then the Puja and Diwali rains, the chill in December,  Pongal time visit to a village temple from where my father came from and the summer holidays – visiting the Annual Exhibition – the highlight of the city once. Lot of sweet simple memories – all intertwined among school friends, street friends, relatives and festivals.

Madurai was hot. Super hot. Got Jaundice and Chicken pox. This city lives and breathes Tamil. I still remember one Sugarcane vendor’s rhyming statement when he had to go attend nature’s call after handing over the juice ( thankfully ) “Aatharathai adaku mudiyum aana mootharathai adaku mudiyuma” [ You can control Anger – aatharam, but you cannot control nature’s call – mootharam ]. All the streets, places had beautiful names – Anupaanadi, Thallakulam – and each has a story which the Tamil Miss will tell. Then the school I attended where except me all were somehow related to each other – and at times during marriage season half the class will be gone to attend a wedding!

Chennai was magical. The beach, the crowd, the super hot summers and movies. I tasted freedom. Had my own pocket money to spend between movies, food or books. Life in CEG was even more awesome. Techofes, Waves, Student Union Elections, running a stall during Techofes, the “study” tours, the labs, late night chat parties, editing a magazine, horrible hostel food, the cricket matches in TV room with some 200 people crammed into a 20×20 room – that too in that chennai summer – each day was new and un-predicatable. Then the second phase of Chennai life where I worked in TCS – had lot of money now – could go places where I could never go before – Residency buffet or Ponnuswamy or Anjappar and could buy any book or CD when I wanted. I once blew a months salary on a VCD system and watched umpteen movies week after week from a VCD rental shop in Velacherry who did door delivery. But got bored quickly with this life.

Was once again broke as a student in Baton Rouge, Louisiana where I went for my Masters. It was Super hot in summer when I landed. I thought USA was a cold place. This was year 2000 – did not know of Google or a website to go check for Weather. And it was a place with warm hearts and down to earth people and had a unique culture  Cajun culture. Learnt to cook  and got addicted to American Football, Baseball and Basketball. It was a lazy laid back place with a huge river – Mississippi – and God Awesome hurricanes.

Then shifted from Hottest place in USA to the Coldest place – Madison – another college town. And then to Chicago – a fairy tale place with museums and sky scrapers and parks and lakes and plays and all kinds of restaurants from around the world – so much to do – cycling,trekking – or just walking near the lakes late nights. If I ever go back to live in USA, here is where I will drop my anchor.

Then Bangalore. I actually feel sorry for this nice little city. In the 6 years that I was there, could see the city turn into a concrete jungle. Do not know how the old timers feel. But this city feels young and vibrant.  Here is where the New India ( India 2.0 ) is being forged. Barcamps, Devcamps, cycle commuters, car poolers, Tree planting drives, New Age Politicians, Wasteland turned into a meeting cum work place cum garage sale place, Eco Conservationists…its a long list of new age thinkers and doers. Then the MG Road, Brigade Road, Church Street, Cubbon Park and now Metro – loved to just hang out.  335E Volvo – thanks to traffic will take 1 hour to reach my office – a distance of 8 kms – and I crunched book after book – Leo Tolstoy, Paulo Coelho, Ayn Rand, Robert Pirsig – thanks to Justbooks – a library startup from Bangalore. And Startups – cart loads of them.

Finally since last year – moored in Mumbai. Started on the wrong foot – bike got towed, got hit with a fine next day for jumping signal. Discovered public transport, most are super hard working people, folks who respect and value money, auto drivers who return 1 Rupee, parks everywhere, dirty roads and pan spits everywhere, and Rains that keep going on and on and all festivals celebrated with lot of food, music and dance. This is one crazy city. Folks here do 2 3 jobs and are always looking for new opportunities and to make things work. 200 sqft shops where some 10 people work in this space thanks to the concept of a “mezzanine floor” – like the new office we are to move shortly ( will post photos next week after we move ). Its amazing how Mumbai uses space.

Yet to fully discover Mumbai. It has so many layers which I keep peeling as I continue my journey here. But the thing I have come to appreciate the most are Drinkable Tap Water ( felt guilty drinking bisleri water in Bangalore ), zero power cuts and a Public Transport that is so reliable.

Where next? No idea – I live in the present 🙂

Choice : Easy or Hard

I am noticing this dichotomy everywhere. From life to love to design to coding.

It is easy to eat junk food. But hard to eat healthy stuff.

It is easy to watch TV. But hard to read a book.

It is easy to veg out in the couch. But hard to get out and run.

It is easy to hate someone we despise. But hard to love the same person.

It is easy to create something with lot of code. But hard to create the same functionality with minimal code.

It is easy to get stressed out and feel down. But hard to keep cool and spirits high.

Guess what? – in all cases – the hard part is the most rewarding.

Yet – we all choose the easy part. Again and Again and Again. Even though we know that taking the hard part will be more rewarding and beautiful.

I think this is a test being conducted – and if we have to pass in this we have to keep taking the hard path at every fork.

Eat Healthy.
Read Books.
Run.
Love everyone.
Write beautiful code.
Stay cool & Keep Spirits high.

& Drink coffee / red wine 🙂

ps : some vices are Ok I guess. We need not aim for a 100. An 80 will do!

Spiritual but not Religious

You never know when something deep inside you gets triggered.

Could be a near miss with death, losing a close friend/family – or a chance meeting with a stranger.

4 years back – I had a chance meeting with a retired Bank Manager in Bangalore. He suggested I read Conversations with God.

I then read all of Paulo Coelho’s works – my favourite Brazilian author. Then Steve Jobs died – and read all about him and the spiritual side of him.

I have been trying to figure out Who I am and Why I am here – and I am nowhere close to the truth.

I am confused and clearer at the same time – just like light – which is both a wave and a particle at the same time.

I am not an Atheist

I am clear on one thing. I do believe in God as some mysterious supreme power or light or energy. Earth and Humans are not here by chance. I did briefly stray into being an atheist when my father passed away. Did shake me up and for sometime went around not being bothered about God or Religion or any customs.

I dont practice any Religion

Religion does not make any sense – so I dont pray to any God form anymore. However I like the philosophy that is present in all Religions. I like the meanings hidden in Bible and Hinduism. Love the sufi songs and Quawwali. Yet to read Quran. I don’t believe in the shortcuts in the form of Sanskrit Verses and rituals present in Hinduism to attain Enlightenment.

I am not an Apatheist Either

Though I don’t follow any religion – I am not an Apatheist – one who does not care if God Exists or Not. I believe in God, but not in Religion.

What am I to be classified?

If someone asks me – are you an atheist, or an apatheist, or are you a Hindu/Christian/Muslim?

My answer is none of the above.

It is quite simple. I am in a journey to discover by my self what this is all about. More like my running – I don’t run with any group – I do my own research and discover new techniques and find what works and doesn’t work through trial and error.

I am unravelling the mystery one day at a time – through books, through songs, through movies – keeping my eyes and ears open for any interesting tid bit that helps forming my mental model about God, Life & Death and Love.

Buddha figured it out. Dalai Lama figured it out. Many Saadhus have figured it out.

I know I am not going to run in the Olympics – but I can still run a full marathon ( 42 kms ) some day. Working towards it one run at a time.

Likewise – I am not sure if I will get the enlightenment in this lifetime’s journey. Unlike the sequential model we are so used to – in the next lifetime I will be born in the past like in 10th Century BC or in the future like in 30th Century AD- I might be a wiser man than what I am now and I am sure I will be continuing this journey.

Signing off as someone who is Spiritual but not Religious.

Bong Secrets Revealed!

Alright here it goes – the best kept bong secrets are all revealed.

All these from the observation I made during a Bong wedding I attended in February.

Fish is a vegetarian dish

This is an open secret – but I will not get full marks if I do not list it here. I am yet to figure out this mystery.

Wedding doesn’t get over on the same day

On the night of the wedding day, the boy and girl are kept awake by the 2 sides. There is a mythology where Lakhinder of the Behula Lakhinder legend has to stay awake on their wedding night or he dies. This turned out to be lot of fun – and we all became deep and spiritual ( after 3 am ).

Groom’s Mom should not attend wedding

If this comes up in any of the Tamil TV Serials – all the heads watching the TVs will just explode in unison. I don’t know the reason behind this tradition.

Bongs hate Rosogolla

I am not kidding. Try giving Rosogolloas to them and they will all go – ohh.. eeh.. and if they are pushed to eat and they realise there is no way out – they will take the rasogolla and squeeze all the syrup out of it before putting it in their mouth. Perhaps the bongs living outside Kolkata might not exhibit this behaviour. The only ones who were stuffing ourselves with Rosogollas where the Tams.

Some more enlightenment

Mark my words – My in-law race will take over this world for sure  – and that time most of the words that you know will be replaced. Here is preparing you for the future.

Punjaabi – Its the Kurta as you all know it
Puchhka – Paani Puri
Loochi –  Poori
Shingaada – Samosa

Jokes Apart – I am in total admiration of Bengalis.

They are very deep and spiritual. Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Swami Vivekananda, Paramhansa Yogananda ( Autobiography of a Yogi – very interesting book – the only book Steve Jobs had in his iPad and he read it once every year) – all are Bengalis.

Bengalis are forward thinking in lot of ways. Birthplace of Indian Freedom movement, Music, Art and Literature, Movies and now there are many Rock Bands. Their songs ( once translated to me of course ) are deep and spiritual in many ways.

They are very brave when it comes to naming their kids – the wife’s cousin kids names are based on Currencies for instance ( Rouble, Ringgit and Lira )

Bengalis never give up a fight for whats right – and are an impractical but passionate lot.

Someday I will write a book on just Bengalis – from a 3/4 Tam + 1/4 Kannadiga’s view point.


Case for an Indian SaaS App Store

 
In 2008 when we started ApartmentADDA we were faced with a myriad of questions / objections.

You have all the data with you. What if you close down.
I can build my own.
I want to buy your software and put it on my computer. 
Why can’t I pay onetime and use it lifelong?
I want a backup of all my data, emailed to me every day.

The questions haven’t stopped, and new ones keep getting added.

I look around and see so many Indian SaaS Startups fighting similar battles. Educating the populace on SaaS and its benefits.

We also market our product through SEO, Videos, Posters and a few lucky days when media bothers to write about these interesting SaaS products.

Imagine. If there was a single site which does all the marketing and brings people to its site. It educates the visitors on the advantages of SaaS, lists all the SaaS apps that are available and also lists prices and user reviews. How cool will that be?

Advantages of a SaaS App Store

1. Startups like mine and others need not repeat the same argument over and over to educate customers.

2. Customers will not feel that they are dealing with only one “unique” idea – but lot others are there and will give them confidence – This is where the world is going.

3. Increases Discoverability – I come here looking for a Personal Finance Solution and I stumble upon this interesting Apartment Management Portal or a Telephony App or a Site that helps you find a good guitarist.

4. Customer Reviews. Before I purchase a mobile app ( including the free ones ) I always read the reviews. These reviews have become an important decision point. This will also help in deciding between similar offerings.

5. Single point of invoicing and billing – each portal now has to run its own billing invoicing workflow. I will happily pay to get listed on this site – as this opens a new Sales Channel and I can direct my customers to this site to complete the purchase.

6. The Site also sends reminders for renewals and can also earn when a customer renews.

7. We can focus on building a kickass SaaS product and delight customers – while the Sales, Marketing, Billing, Invoicing, Renewal tracking are all taken care of – even if not 100%, a percentage of it will take away some load off us.

That’s it – go ahead and create this nice SaaS Portal for SaaS products to get listed. I will be your customer – will get listed and also shop for other SaaS products.

The New India.

On 16th December, 2012 Nirbhaya / Jyoti Singh Pandey was tortured and murdered by 6 humans ( sorry cannot use the word animals as animals are much too nobler ). The country woke up to a cold hard truth – this country is going down fast – and without any control.

The establishment has thrown its hands up – we have laws but they are of no use to prevent such atrocities or we cannot enforce it effectively anymore.

Recently saw a video where someone from the audience asked a question to Rahul Gandhi – when kids cannot even read what is the use getting internet in schools?

Rahul Gandhi just asked back – what do you think the answer to the question is.

This video is being circulated and being laughed at – but actually – I am not laughing. Rahul Gandhi has a point – the establishment has given up. They cannot solve the myriad problems facing this country.

Acute Water shortage. Electricity disruptions. Economy in a mess. Movies being banned. India earning just 4 medals from Olympics. Women and Children exploited. Talented Meritorious students not getting a seat they deserve. Media not portraying the truth. Neighbouring country beheading our Jawans.

I can go on and on.

We can point the fingers at the Establishment – the Bureaucrats, the Politicians and write long blog posts, or on Facebook or Tweet gyan – saying fix it.

But like the profound statement Rahul Gandhi has said – it is up to us to fix it. The situation has gone out of control and it has gone beyond the grasp of the establishment.

There are many people who have the answers and are willing to fix it – if they are voted to the position of power. It is upto us to find them and vote them to power.

In the next election – I will do my research and when I find a good candidate I will go campaign. I will do my part to spread awareness. Will do my best to send the right person to the Legislation.

You may ask – but there are no clean candidates? Well – not any more. There are 3 good organisations which are promoting clean politics.

LokSatta – http://www.loksatta.org/leaders.php

I know of Mr.Ashwin Mahesh who is part of LokSatta – he contested the Graduate MLC election ( but lost unfortunately ) in Bangalore. He educated everyone about Graduate MLC post – which I did not know about in the 5 years I had lived in Bangalore. This is a special MLA post where the voters can only be graduates. Till now no one bothered about this as some dummy candidate will get elected by a few votes – but this time lot of awareness was created, Mr.Ashwin Mahesh met lot of Apartment Communities – first explaining about this whole Voter Registration process for this election and also spreading awareness on how Educated Elite should participate in politics. The turn out on election day was not that fantastic but its a start.

Not only that Mr.Ashwin Mahesh has helped Bangalore’s Traffic situation improve a bit and also was instrumental in introducing Big 10 buses all around Bangalore. He is constantly on the news – saving lakes, supporting anti corruption rallies etc.

He is part of LokSatta party – an answer to but there are no good candidates to vote for. He is contesting the Bangalore MLA election now from Bommanahalli. His second attempt – and he he will win this time.

Nav Bharat – http://www.nav-bharat.org

One of the founders of Nav Bharat is R.K.Misra – renowned entrepreneur and winner of Lead India initiative by Times of India in 2007. The concept of Nav Bharat is to back clean candidates – whichever party they belong to – and put them in power by helping them through campaigns, funds etc. This is the essence I have derived – but there is more to their philosophy.

Watch Nav Bharat during Election time – they would have done the background checks for you to go out and vote for the right man or woman.

Aam Aadmi  – http://aamaadmiparty.org

Like him or Hate him – the Magsaysay award winner Arvind Kejriwal is a force to be reckoned with. His party has set its sight on one thing – Corruption free governance – and this focus is what will make them win. Many are skeptical on Aam Aadmi party- corruption is not the only issue we are facing. But I am with Arvind Kejriwal on this.

Roll back to December 16th. The joy riders of the ill fated bus had just bribed the policeman so they will not be stopped anywhere. The horrible deed would have not happened if there was no corruption.

Mr.Manivannan – Bescom MD – https://www.facebook.com/md.bescom?group_id=0

Just a couple of days back one Mr.Manivannan – Bescom MD – has become the darling of Social Media. Using a public facebook page  he interacts with customers and shows the working of his team – how they are trying hard to give continuous power. Hats off to an innovative and honest bureaucrat – you give us tremendous hope.

Well – there are many more such people / ideas / organizations that are rising up to the task to answer Mr.Rahul Gandhi’s question.

Also these might seem too little but remember in 1984 BJP won 2 seats. In 1999 a BJP Prime Minister came to power.

Now lets fast forward to the future.

This is what will happen – in the New India.

In the 2014 election – 2 or 3 of these good candidates will go to the Parliament. They might be independents or from LokSatta or AamAadmi and if its a hung assembly ( in all probability ) – these good candidates will get pulled into the winning party as Cabinet Ministers.

They will get the “useless” ministries – could be Sports ( I may be wrong ), could be water, could be health – and they will run these brilliantly.

Media and the world will take notice. Finance Ministry, Home ministry will get pushed out of the lime light and these small ministries will be spoken everywhere.

The good governance will start spreading through the length and breadth of the Government.

I have tremendous hope on this New India. It is going to be awesome!

2012 Books Roundup

I do this yearly look back of books I have read. [ Here is the 2010, 2011 ]

Following is my 2012 list of books I read or came in touch with

Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson 

Love this man or hate him – do read this book. The phone, tablet or laptop you are reading this post right now has Steve Job’s hand in it somehow. [ Oh Steve Jobs! ]

Nurtureshock by Po Bronson and Ashley Merryman

If you are responsible for a toddler, at times does it send a chill down your spine – gosh I am responsible for this kid now and how am I ever going to bring up to be a good citizen of the world – wish there was a manual! – Well there is – highly recommend this! [ Nurtureshock ]

4 Hour Work Week by Tim Ferris

I am a productivity hacker. I keep looking for new ways of doing more with the limited time I have. 2012 has been very demanding. I tried pomodoro, 3 focus areas a week, even GTD – but will drift off to my bad habits.

However this book made me rethink how I look at the chores I am doing – and how I can effectively blaze through my work day. It gave me new ideas to prioritise tasks on 80/20 rule and also helped me cut off all work distractions – news, twitter,fb.

Highly recommend this one [ 4Hour Work Week! ]

Paulo Coelho – A Warrior’s Life

Biography of my favourite writer – Paulo Coelho. If you don’t know him – dont read this book – instead read his books – Life changing! You will fall in love with his books and then you can read his biography [ Paulo Coelho – A Warrior’s life ]

Isn’t it Obvious – Eliyahu Goldratt

Another favorite author of mine – Author of Goal 1 and Goal 2. I was stuck in a train with this book – so had to finish it. Avoid this.

Necessary but not sufficient – Eliyahu Goldratt

This was good. I recommend this for all Project Managers – has similar out of box thinking present in Goal 1 and Goal 2

Wind up Bird Chronicle – by Haruki Murakami

What a fertile brain this man has. What a story teller. This was one weird ride. Highly recommend this.

Open – An Autobiography by Andre Agassi

Even if you don’t read this book – just read the first chapter. It is the best part of the book and will transport you into Agassi’s mind and body for that duration. I love Tennis – and enjoyed this book thoroughly ( even though I am not a fan of Agassi and rooted for Pete Sampras )

Special Mention : Autobiography of an Yogi

I have started reading an interesting spiritual book – Autobiography of an Yogi by Paramahamsa Yogananda – it is available for free on Kindle. It is very funny in the beginning where he will keep running away from home to Himalayas to become an Yogi – and also has interesting stories on miracles and stories on various Yogis. Then it gets very deep and explains even christianity, the science findings ( book was written in mid-20th century ), his own spiritual experiences etc. In fact I am planning to visit Serampore when I go to Kolkatta next month – where this Yogi lived in an ashram.

Now I follow a little bit of Tim Ferris’s very bad philosophy when it comes to reading books –  he recommends scanning stuff and not diving deep into something in order to do more. I scanned a few books based on this philosophy.

Here is the list of half eaten apples! 

What to do when there’s too much to do – Laura Stack : Avoidable
Business Stripped Bare – Richard Branson – lot of expectation but a dud
Work Less, Achieve More – Fergus O’Connell – 4HWW is much much better.  Nothing of significance
80/20 principle by Richard Koch – If already know about the title you can avoid the book.

I gave up on these

Life of Pi by Yann Martel. Started reading this and saw the trailer. Also the book was going on and on about a sloth. So gave up. After seeing the movie I realized it has got a spiritual bent to it – now I regret not having read this book.

Hermit in Himalayas by Paul Brunton : It was interesting – but I have kept it aside for now.

Dark Tower – Gunslinger – 1st book in the mega series and The Green Mile by Stephen King : I don’t seem to have a taste for Stephen King. Had read a few of his short stories but could not sustain interest and dropped both these books

The Art of Happiness by Dalai Lama – It was a nice book but lost interest mid way.

Tibetan Book of Living and Death – Very good book. I started reading this in beginning of 2012 but gave up. Now when I look back I wish I had not given up – would have helped me later when I had to console myself and my family. Will pick this up again sometime.

I am planning to embark on a 52 books goal this year – 1  per week. [ Inspired by this guy who finished 366 books last year – one per day ]

Wish me luck!

Here is the life story of a speck

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