more club issues…

part of this finance club in IIMB. there’s a huge looming opportunity coming up in the way of a mega online game our Forum for Industrial Interaction (people who organize Vista, the bizfest) have offered us.

Sad part is i’m the guy in the team who will have to do the work connected to that if we are doing it. and i DON’T want to do it. and everyone else thinks it’s a “wonderful opportunity” and want to do it. anyone in their positions will – they aren’t going to put too much effort into it anyway. and they are VOLUNTEERING ME to do the work…

have gotten my resignation letter ready… will be sending that off now…

paper!

wrote a paper for Vista, the IIMB BizFest. Couldn’t imagine that such fraud jobs can also qualify as “papers”. It wasn’t even a neat copy-paste job. read up a couple of websites on a topic, made up a fraud “lever model”, applied it to the topic, wrote about whatz wrong with the topic… and gave a list of “just like that” recomendations…

halfway through the paper, i felt really pathetic about it and suggested we not send the paper. however, my partner said that we wouldn’t lose anything by sending and since we had already put in that much effort we might as well send it across…

still can’t stop laughing about it… and i’m definitely not going to wait for the results!

prof

as i sit and think about my career choices, i suddenly have this feeling i want to become a prof. in something like economics or public policy. at one of the top institutes in India (IIT,IIM, types). i enjoy teaching, i enjoy research in stuff like this, if i’m a prof people will LISTEN to me, i’ll have the opportunity of interacting wiht some of the best people in india.

guess after my MBA i’ll work for 3-4 years (my mom says 2), then go for a PhD and come back and bcome a prof.

those of you who’re into research/teaching please tell me the cons of such a career. money is not an issue. i don’t mind not getting extremely high salaries as long as i get enough to keep me and my family happy.

feeling like a ganguly…

yet another quiz today where we missed qualification by one point.

me kinda feel that i’m not as good a quizzer as i used to be. maybe the last time i played a really major role in my team’s victory was at least three years ago (talking of conventional quizzes). i still think i’m pretty good in formats such as the University Challenge but it unfortunately wasn’t held this year :((

used to be a strike bowler around four years ago. used to singlehandedly win quizzes. managed to get a pretty good partner. settled down into a lethal combo together. then in 2003, we got a pretty good third guy, who seemed to be so good he started opening the bowling and i settled down into a good third bowler.

moving to IIMB got me introduced to a few more great quizzers. and with KQA quizzes being 4 a side, i’ve comfortably settled as a FOURTH BOWLER. i’m the Kasprowicz to my team which is McGrath, Gillespie, Lee. I’m the Hoggard (who gets wickets only when the ball swings wildly) to my team which is Harmison, Flintoff and Jones.

And considering my current form (and using the bowling analogy) i’m like Sourav Ganguly to my team that is Dravid, Tendulkar and Sehwag! Not a very comforting thought!! banking upon history and ancient records (and good performances in intra-college quizzes) to keep my place in the team.

sumo, yet so far.

the new JEE pattern

After 30-odd years of “successful conduct”, the fundamental JEE patterns are being revised. People have gone on protest everywhere in the country; “factories” are crying foul; and i’m pretty sure the larger community in IIT is also claiming blasphemy – saying that the “quality” of the exam is falling further.

The director of IITM, MS Ananth, has gone on record saying that the only people this decision will adversely affect are the coaching centers (“factories” that manufacture IITians). The other group that i would find affected by the new system is the set of people who rely purely on the factories to get into IIT.

IIT JEE was initially intended to be an exam which would identify the brightest of the bright students in the country. These could be trained to become top-class engineers who could contribute to the development of the world. The examinations were designed such that each question was new and there was no way anyone would have done them in advance, thus putting everyone on an equal ground and testing only the concepts and sharpness.

However, slowly (and sadly) this exam has become “muggable”. There is only a certain degree to which one can design new problems in the given syllabus and coaching institutes have mushroomed in different parts of the country where the students are rigorously made to go through thousands of such problems several times. The training imparted is such that by the time of the JEE, any problem that will appear in the paper would have been “seen” by the candidate and just like our board exams, it has become an indicator of how well one can remember the solution!

There are two factors which go into making a student successful ? raw brilliance and hard work. While the former is a natural thing and is influenced by early life, the latter can be inculcated at any point of time in life. Hence, if the IITs want the ?best? students in the country, they should rather be looking for ?brilliant? people rather than ?hardworking? people. By making the course more rigorous and assignment oriented, hard work can be easily inculcated into the students (?brilliant? students would definitely have the ability to work hard but may not have the willingness). However, over the last few years the JEE has laid more stress on the hard work aspect rather than on brilliance.

Given all these above factors, the IITs have indeed taken a step forward by adopting new procedures for conduct of the examination. As for critics of multiple choice exams who say that it can be a lottery, suitable negative marking can ensure that only people who genuinely attempt are successful. Also, an objective exam would test the speed of the candidate, which is sometimes an indicator of the ?raw brilliance?. And critics must note that any evaluation based on a single examination is a lottery and hence there is no increased randomness being introduced by the new format.

Other criticisms for this new format would be that coaching institutes were helping many students from rural areas and backward classes get through and that their reduced influence may bias the exam towards urban candidates who have had the luxury of good schooling. It may also be argued that many people could earlier hope to make up for their natural talent by sheer hard work and the new pattern defeats the hopes of such people.

In response to these, it must be argued that the IITs are elitist institutions where merit is the only criterion to be looked at. The IITs haven?t been set up in order to promote equity. They are meant to be for the best people and only the best should deserve to get in. The new pattern also helps people from disadvantaged sections of society who may not be able to afford the expensive coaching classes.

There are also the issues of minimum qualification marks in the boards and restriction on the number of attempts. As for the restriction on the number of attempts, it must be argued that people who prepared for JEE longer got an ?unfair advantage? over people with lesser years of preparation. This again comes to the point of brilliant versus hardworking students. Two seems to be a fair number because it is very unlikely that a student is ?unlucky? twice over and even if he/she is, it could also mean that he/she is unable to handle pressure.

There have been protests all over the country regarding these new rules. Initially all of them were applicable effective from 2006. However, the IITs have been right in allowing people with less than 60% marks or those in multiple attempts to write the exam in 2006, given that these people have already invested since some of them have given up another year of their career preparing for this exam.

An issue where I would like to differ from the IITs? views is the point that the system will be reviewed after 2006. I believe that it takes some time for any system to show its true colors and hence the government should study the new system for at least 3-4 years before they decide to revise it.

In conclusion, the decision by the IITs about revising the JEE pattern is a positive one and would ensure better quality of students in the IITs. Apart from this, it would decrease the pressure on the students and also make the logistics of conducting the JEE (in terms of corrections) easier and bring in greater objectivity. If the implementation (in terms of quality of question papers) is also good, it will ensure that brilliance is the only criterion for entry.

design issues…

Vista is happening end of next month. As part of the team incharge of finance events, i’ve been asked to conduct a particular game at an all india level which was played at college level last year.

just found out that our mahaanubhaava seniors have made such a bad design that it’s simply not scalable… it’s really pissing off (as a comp sci engineer) when i see really badly designed software which isn’t scalable/portable.

had a similar experience last month with an internal trading game we organized. i was asked to “take over” the game halfway thru. found out that hte s/w was so badly designed that despite extensive programming there was a large degree of manual work left. really pissed me off.

and when i chided the programmers and designers about the bad design, they said, “three of us have spent the entire weekend (around 40 man hours) designing and programming this. how can you say we haven’t done our job properly?” had a little fight after that and i handed control back to them.

another pet peeve – people measuring their performance by the amount of effort (typically measured in man-hours) put in! They refuse to believe that people can be smart (perhaps because they themselves aren’t so) and can do more work in less time than them… (in this context i like the new JEE format, but i’ll reserve that for another post).

arbit calls…

just got a call from some software engineer who i don’t know… said he got my number from some IITians’ network!

he talked about some “royalty business” which one can do by the side of a software job…

he said we’d need to invest 5-6 hours a week and Rs. 5K initially and then can earn around 2 lakh per month in 4-5 years’ time… and talked of some IITD guy who’s retired at 28 doing this…

tried to convince me to go meet him TODAY… and said that i have an extremely closed mind and stuff when i told him “no”… said that the max i can get from an IIM job is around $100000 a year (more than what JPM (i’ve almost forgotten about that!) was offering me) and that i can make many times more through this…

one of the flip-sides of being part of a well-connected network i guess…

Aapta Mitra

Just saw that movie. Refreshingly, a good kannada movie. one of those rare movies which will appeal to even the “balcony class”.

kinda spooky stuff. a few illogical things in the plot (such as a 17th century court dancer haunting a 21st century house – forms the basis of the plot) but still the director (forget his name) has made a pretty good effort in piecing it all together. and for a change, the screenplay is excellent (a prereq for a spooky movie such as this) and the music by Gurukiran (who seems to be going the anu malik way – only thing is he doesn’t lift entire songs, just pieces from different songs in a “collage”) isn’t very inspiring. but hte background score is amazing and adds to the plot.

and of course, there’s the customary vishnuvardhan-dwarakish song (this movie has been produced by dwarakish) and the acting is also pretty good. and with “sahasasimha” vishnuvardhan, “chocolate hero” ramesh, soundarya, “gatti haalu” (tough milk) prema, dwarakish, shivaram, etc. it is only expected.

this film also happened to be soundarya’s swansong before she passed away in a helicopter crash during last year’s election campaign. god, she did look good! the homely type though. definitely lived up to her name (which i heard she acquired upon entry into films).

the movie completed a year at Santosh Theater sometime mid-august and was shortly taken off. that it caters to all kinds of audience (and not just to the gandhi class unlike most other kannada movies) did help. critics may argue that the reason for this movie doing so well was teh ban on other language films which was on when this was released.

however, that (and the fact that it’s “inspired” by a mallu movie) must not take away any credit from this. easily among the 10 best kannada movies i’ve seen.

PS: no wonder the tam movie “inspired” by this Chandramukhi didn’t do too well. Rajni played the role played by vishnu in this one and one simply can’t imagine rajni as a top-notch psychiatrist. he’s fit only for the conductor-auto driver-type “gandhi class level” roles.

ring road on bike…

yesterday evening i decided to go all round bangalore’s “intermediate ring road”. on a bike (methinks wasting so much petrol in a car for no purpose is criminal). went all the way to hebbal (through the eastern side – btm,sarjapur road, marathahalli, etc.). then got bored and decided to cover the rest of the journey some other day.

and since it was a sunday evening, there was little traffic. and the road, for long stretches, is simply beautiful. three lanes each way, wide median, greenery for 10 feet on either side of the road – also implies no establishments on the road.

and i’m “zipping” along at 80 kmph (my bike refuses to go faster than that) and still feeling as if i’m going at 20 kmph. typically if i cross fifty on a busy road i start feeling a little insecure…

reminds me of Claude Shannon’s second law of information theory (called the channel coding theorem or something): You can transmit data reliably across a channel if the speed of data transfer is less than the speed of the channel.

similarly with roads. you can drive safely as long as your speed is within the speed of the road!!

anyways, as i was driving yesterday i thought of lots of stuff to write about the experience. but now i’m feeling too lazy so i’ll stop here. just want to add that this “road trip” was among hte most heady experiences of my life so far…