Thursday, 21 January 2010

GATE - What is it and how to crack it?


GATE - Graduate Aptitude Test in Engineering

Post Engineering, all Engineering students come to a crossroad, where they have to make a choice – a choice that defines their career for the rest of their lives. The three options available to them are MBA, M. Tech or a job. Given the current situation in India, most of the engineering colleges are not able to give a 100% placement, which results in the candidate making a choice between MBA and M. Tech. This article is about choosing the second option : M.Tech, and the exam that holds the key to the best institutes for M.Tech, the GATE.


Prospects after GATE

Before going into more details, it is important to understand what you can do after clearing GATE. First of all, you can do MTech at many top institutes of the country including IITs and IISc, Bangalore. Alternatively, you may directly apply for PhDs at these institutes and may get through if you have a good undergraduate score, an aptitude for research and a good GATE score. You may also apply for certain public sector jobs in the field of Engineering, Science and Technology. GATE score is considered highly by many top R&D organizations such as ISRO and BARC.


MTech is not for those who are just looking for a job at the end of the course, especially if you think getting to IIT and other top colleges means that. Getting a job after IIT or other reputed institutions is not as important as utilizing the opportunities and facilities provided at the IITs to study more advanced topics in Computer Science and to get your feet wet into Research. A seat into IITs may mean high amount of course work in first year and even more research work in the second year. The impetus here is on creating productive work through assignments and breakthroughs through research. If this is not the profile you are looking for, please do not dream to go there. You will not be able to survive.




Why does one choose CAT over GATE or vice-versa?

Most of the students choose management because they perceive that a management person makes more money than a research person. This might have been true in the past. But now that companies like Google, Microsoft, Motorola, Audi, Mercedes and Honda are beginning to outsource their R&D to India, the demand for Research oriented people is on the rise. "Virtually every single global IT major is rapidly expanding its footprint into India," says Som Mittal, president, Nasscom. As of now, 100 Fortune 500 companies - including Delphi, Eli Lilly, General Electric, Hewlett Packard, DaimlerChrysler and others - have put up R&D facilities in India over the past five years. Considering the scenario, M.Tech is no longer the underdog. And the increasing number of students appearing for GATE has been a testimony to this.

One needs to consider factors other than monetary as well before he makes the choice. CAT is for management, and management means management of people, finance, affairs of a company, strategizing etc. So people who are good at management, and have interest in pursuing this should pursue management as their career. M.Tech, however, entails a research oriented job or a faculty position in a university. Down the line, these people may even take up a management position in a research based enterprise. However, essentially both kinds of careers are for a completely different persona and interests.

Though the number of GATE aspirants is equal to or probably even more than CAT aspirants, it has largely been neglected by the media as well as the coaching institutes. Till date, to my information, there is not a single GATE coaching institute with pan India presence. Though there are so many mock test series available for CAT, none of the coaching institutes are offering that for GATE (I've heard one coaching institute called GateForum has started such stuff recently).

After one makes a choice as to what he would take up as a career, he needs to prepare well for it. And to prepare well, he needs to know and understand what GATE is all about.



So what is GATE all about?

GATE is organized by IITs and IISc, which have pioneered advanced education at master’s level in India. The sole purpose of GATE is not only to conduct a test for admission but to identify the suitable engineers/researchers in various domains and make them choose their area of interest in which they can pursue their master’s degree. As you must know by now, GATE is only organized by IITs and IISc, which always try to innovate and introduce new systems to test the basic knowledge of candidates in various fields. As a part of that innovation, the previous year GATE papers were fully objective type. This year also the same pattern is being used, and aptitude added!! Although this made the job relatively easier for the evaluators, the candidates now have a bound choice to cover all the topics. As you know, the setting of questions papers at IITs and IISc in itself is very interesting. The designated faculties in each of the areas who provide the syllabus of a particular stream have the burden to set the questions which is finally combined to a full length paper. Being set by the highly qualified faculty, the questions papers are not like a very traditional one. They always try to test the very basics of candidates in respective areas by bringing the element of innovation in these papers. It is not surprising that sometimes the questions are mere applications of basic concepts in their area of research. The implication of this, it seems is that cracking GATE with a very high percentile is merely having the basics cleared. No! Absolutely not! As innovations are always a part of the question paper, one needs to be able to apply the basics in a new application, too. That is why similar to JEE, GATE is altogether different from other competitive exams. Here in GATE, one needs to prepare thoroughly by understanding the basics. It’s not at all the mugging up the end results (formulae) and directly applying them; instead, you need to know the principle in the derivation of those end results because in most of the cases the questions are based on the basic principle involved in the derivation, or the case where they may ask the behavior of the system under some other conditions or simple application of that result.

To secure a very high percentile you should always remember the fact that you are adjudged relatively not absolutely. Hence, your rank obviously depends on how you performed relative to your competitors. Many times, it happens that the candidates are sure of getting many questions correct. But one should always know that although the questions have only one correct answer, other probable choices are deliberately put there to confuse the candidates. In that sense, preparing the choices other than the correct one is also a part of bringing the element of innovation into the paper.


What is relative scoring in GATE??

To explain the concept of relative scoring, let me tell u a small story--
Two friends, Ram and Shyam, are out on a safari in Kenya. En-route they see a vast stretch of land covered with velvette-ish green layer of grass. They get out of their car, relax, put off their shoes and start walking bare footed. Suddenly they see a tiger running towards them. Ram starts running whereas Shyam starts putting on the shoes. Puzzled, Ram asks Shyam, "Do you think you can outrun the tiger just by have the shoes on?" Shyam replies back, "I don't need to outrun the tiger. I just need to outrun YOU!"

India has a huge intellectual capital. With so many intelligent brains competing with each other, percentile/comparative evaluation is the most logical solution for admission to IISc and the IITs, which in turn have a limited number of seats. With this kind of comparative evaluation, the institutions are able to simply take the best of the lot and leave the rest. You should be aware that only 4 out of a thousand students giving GATE get a chance to be interviewed by IITs and the IISc. The numbers getting admission to these institutions are even lesser. So being good is not enough. You should be one of the better ones amongst the best.
The question that poses itself to the GATE aspirants now is, how one should prepare, what methods he/she should adopt which would ensure his/her admission into the esteemed IITs or the IISc.



 So how to prepare for GATE?? specifically GATE 2010 and 2011?

 The preparation for GATE should be highly focused. I suggest that GATE must be taken in isolation and not with GRE/CAT etc if you are seriously interested in it. However with the introduction of General Aptitude section (which forms a huge 15 % of the paper), the story is a little different this year. Those who have been preparing for CAT and other management exams will have an upper hand in this section. I suggest one to go through the training materials provided by MBA coaching institutes (TIME, IMS, CL etc) to tackle this section. They are brief and to the point.
Coming to the technical aspect, if you have the stamina to study hard, you’d have probably completed the work in 6 months or so (if you have your basics in place). I believe 6-7 months of preparation is more than sufficient to prepare for GATE. However, as ever, this is a completely speculative stat.
The preparation should ideally be done for the entire course. But, if you can carefully plan your distribution, you can afford to be weak in one or two topics. I ideally suggest that nobody does that. Its kinda risky.


Before the marathon begins, the runner puts in months, even years, of effort before he actually runs the race. As the saying goes, get your fundamentals right. GATE is an exam that tests you on your fundamentals. The questions are generally derivations of the fundamentals. Preparation for GATE is an ongoing process, and is supposed to happen in stages. First get your fundamentals right, and then test yourself on those fundamentals. When you have done this, you should pitch yourself against the competition, which means a mock test which would give you a percentile to let you know where you stand amongst the competitors.

Here are some things apart from working on your engineering concepts that you should do for a complete preparation for GATE:

1. Solve previous years GATE papers: Solving previous years papers gives you a fair idea of what the actual paper would be like. It also brushes up your basics and exposes your areas of improvement. Let me tell you one thing, solving previous 10 year papers and understanding the concepts involved in those questions, forms the 50% of preparation for GATE !!

2. Solve test papers: Solve as many test papers as possible. This actually is the best way to keep improving as you prepare for GATE.


3. Analyze : Analyzing your test results is a very important part of taking the test. If you do not analyze, the test does not add value. You should minutely analyze and define as to where you could have scored more; analyze your accuracy rates in various topics and maintain a topic wise datasheet which lists your performance topic wise for different test papers.

4. Take up an all India test series which gives you your percentile and All India Rank: This is very important to avoid the frog-in-the-pond syndrome. Students tend to take it easy if they attain a high score in the tests. However, GATE is an exam in which people are selected on their relative scores. So even if you have scored 95% it does not essentially translate to a percentile of 95. You are competing with the best in India, and to get through GATE you should know where you stand to be among the top few selected for the interview. A test series of this sort is being provided by some of the coaching centre in India (like Vidyalankar, GateGuru, GateForum, Elite Academy etc.)


5. Simulate actual test environment: This is very important. The actual test happens in a classroom, and is timed. When you take up the test, switch off your cell phone, have a timer which times your tests, and avoid taking any breaks. Also, if possible, take up a mock test series which enables you to take the test in a classroom environment.




How do you choose which coaching material to go with?

This is something that is quite subjective. A coaching material cannot be assessed until you have gone through it. So, you could go by the word of your seniors as to what coaching material they followed to prepare for GATE.

Here are some parameters on which you can decide whether you should go for a particular coaching institute, use a particular coaching material, or tests:

1. Uniqueness in their study material: Study material provided by the coaching institutes is of little assistance if they are compact copy-paste or rewrite of materials taken from other books. If the reading of such material doesn’t increase interest and enjoyment then they are not worth it. There are plenty of standard books on each subject by good authors, which can make your study enjoyable during preparation.

2. Collection of quality books in their library: During the process of theory conceptualization and building application capabilities, you need good books, which can really put your brain on exercise. Check out their library!

3. Flexibility in the Coaching Model: What happens when your pace of learning is much faster or slower than the average? Is there any mechanism by which the model can identify exactly where you need help and provide the same? Is it possible in that coaching model to minimize the wastage of your time?

4. Quality of questions discussed: Number of questions discussed is not that important. By discussing and solving 10-15 conceptual questions on each topic you can build a good application capability. On the other hand solving many tricky non-conceptual questions will simply waste your time.

5. Tests and evaluation model: How is the progress of your preparation tested and analyzed? To what extent the feedback helps in identifying the areas for further work? Here I must say that this is the most crucial part of the preparation. This is the area where most of the students fail due to lack of proper test materials which can help them to build in themselves a real-test-like environment and temperament. Once you are able to choose the correct assistance for your GATE journey, it will be an enjoying and thrilling experience.



What happens after the exam?


By around mid of March, the notifications for various IITs and IISc will start coming out. You have to fill them up with your GATE score. IISc, IITM call people directly on the basis of their GATE score. IITK, IITD, IITB, IITG give direct calls to top rankers that can vary between 1 to 100, depending upon the IIT. IITK closes about 80. Then they call guys for interview. Not more than 30% weight age will be given to the interview. After interview, IITK closed about 133, while others may close about 150-200. (This is based on past trends and my analysis and may change this year)




Opportunities for MTech after giving GATE in CS:

S. No.
Subject of MTech
Department
Institution
Possible ranks till where it may go down. *
1
Comp. & Automation
Comp. & Automation
IISc, Bangalore
50
2
Internet Science
Comp. & Automation
IISc, Bangalore
75
3
CSE
CSE
IIT Kanpur
200
4
CSE
CSE
IIT Bombay
200
5
CSE
CSE
IIT Delhi
225-250
6
CSE, various specializations
CSE
IIT Kharagpur
250
7
CSE
CSE
IIT Madras
300
8
CSE
Electronics
IIT Roorkee
350
9
CSE
CSE
IIT Guwahati
500
10
Comp. Tech
EE
IIT Delhi
300-400
11
IT
KReSIT
IIT Bombay
400 – 800
12
Comp. Appl.
Maths
IIT Delhi
300
13
Various Specializations
--
IIITs
400-550
14
CSE
CSE
DCE/NSIT
600-700

(*) The ranks provided here are pure guess work and have been kept on the higher side. This means that is the actual admissions are expected to close at a higher rank than stated here. But it is reasonable to apply if you have this kind of rank.


Some tips regarding GATE for Applying for a course:
1.   The MTech IT course is run by Kanwal Rekhi School of IT (KReSIT) at IITB. The course is as good as the CS MTech with slightly more impetus on CS applications. However, their selection process was different till last year. They gave call to a lot of students till a low rank and have some tests/interview for them. That's why precisely the rank is low, not because the course is bad or anything. A similar posture was adopted by IITK few years ago. So, some things are unpredictable. This year KReSIT has merged with CSE department of IITB so I am unaware of their selection process. That's precisely why I said that the cut offs there in was just a humble estimations from my side. You accept it at your own risk.
2.   The MTech IT at IITR is pretty bad. Previously, it was not even run at Roorkee. They ran at the ERDC campus at NOIDA. I am unaware about the resent status. Now, the MTech course is a total experience starting from the hostel life through to placements. A major part of it is lost in this course. So, do that at your own peril.
3.   IIITs are placed higher than NITs because they are good. They are having good faculty. They are developing well into research and getting good response from the Industry. The NITs are lacking the impetus to perform well in research. I have many classmates who have done their MTech from NITs and they verify the fact. So, I will maintain my rating for IIITs.
4.   BARC etc are not taking you for education. They are taking you for placement as Scientist. Though, joining them has its own benefits:
You can do your PhD later under the QIP program.
You can join MTech side by side and join BARC and get your MTech converted into sponsored one. You get a higher fellowship during your MTech.
o  You sign a bond and that's a problem.
  
   5.   Your GATE score is your percentile. If they ask you for rank, you may provide that. But GATE score,        nationwide, is regarded as your percentile.



One thing that needs to be kept in mind is that there are various courses that a CS guy can take up. Apart from MTech (CS), you can also do MTech in Aerospace, Industrial and Management Engg., Computer Technology, Computer Applications, Reliability and Industrial Engg., and also MDes at various IITs. If any of you want to do these courses, you may get through with slightly lower GATE score. The exact score needed may be obtained through the sites of the various IITs. You can always mail a student who is doing it at any IIT to get more information.

Of course, after this, there are a host of other A grade colleges like the RECs, NITs, VJTI, DCE, NSIT, VIT, IIITs etc. There has been a lot of talk about eligibility of students with low aggregate in B.Tech. The matter boils down to your GATE rank. If you are good nobody cares, and if not, the Institute has a good reason to reject you - they have others. So a good GATE score absolves you of yous B.Tech sins.
Once you receive your call, you send your draft and acceptance letter. And join on the said date!! Bingo, you are heading towards you MTech!!!!

I wish you all the very best in your attempt.

For any other querry or help, please feel free to contact me.


The author of this article is GATE-2005 qualified with an AIR-259 and did his M.Tech in Networking from VIT University, Vellore with a CGPA of 9.4. After working as an aerospace engineer for more than 3 years, he is currently into a host of services including teaching and educational consultancy.


Thursday, 31 December 2009

Missing the craziness

It has been more than 10 days that I've been enjoying joblessness. Thinking of what to do next, all sorts of crazy ideas are creeping into my mind, and twice in my thought process map, I ended up being a billionaire :D

I finally reached home yesterday and I must say I was waiting (or rather dying) to get out of Bangalore for quite some time. But just as in past, (When as a kid, I was dying to get older and get out of the school, when I was dying to get out of the college, when I was dying get into a company and make money), I am feeling sad after having done for what I was dying for. Yes, I feel sad after leaving Bangalore. I miss Bangalore !! (which I never thought I would)

What do you call a congenial, captivating, cosmopolitan confluence of software and shopping malls, electronics and environment friendliness, salubrious climate and cleanliness, modern outlook and old worldliness, precision engineering and pubs? You call it India's best city for business and fun. It is also called Bangalore. Don't be mistaken, this is what I used to think of Bangalore before I came here. I still feel pretty much the same; its just that the words - congenial, environment friendliness, cleanliness, modern outlook and pubs from the above list are now OUT !!

I had earlier decided to write something else on this blog, but since I'm missing the calmness of Bangalore so much today, I thought I will pen down my thoughts in a series of blogs on Bangalore. I don't know how to organize this stuff so I'm going ahead with the random thoughts that are crossing my mind.

Even though I've stayed in Bangalore for just 30 months, I've more memories of it than any other phase of my life. Its the city where I made some wonderful friends, the city where I spent more than 9 Lacs in 2 years without buying a thing for myself, the city where one fall in love with oneself. The place where 2 things royally screwed me- my office and the traffic .
Add to that the crazy and stupid government !!  It was one hell of a time I've had !!

Let me get over with things I hate about Bangalore first. The pleasent things are saved for future blogs :)
Things that made me run away -

1. One way or no way - "Christopher Columbus did not need directions, and neither do I" has always been my philosophy. In fact it is a philosophy that most men subscribe to. And if you are one of them and decide to drive in Bangalore, you are in deep shit !! The only measure to tackle traffic taken by the stupid government is creating "one ways" in Bangalore. If they still fail to avoid congestion, they come up with an even better solution - "more one ways". To top it all, you'll find traffic signals on a flyover !! How innovative !!

2. Traffic - You can survive cancer, but you cannot survive Bangalore traffic. It is so bad that on numerous occasions I stayed back at office just to avoid traffic jams. In my 30 months of stay at Bangalore, I think I have spent more than 2 months on road. Everyday I used to ride for about 50-60 mins on average (one way) to reach my office which is some 8-9 kms from my home. People in Bangalore strongly believe that lane markings on roads are there for decoration. Under no circumstances, they shall be confused with anything else. Same holds true for traffic lights.
The horn, a vital part of Bangalore driving pleasure,has a number of uses most important being seeking the attention of pretty chicks walking along the road. Bangalore also saves a lot of fuel every year. This, by means of citizens accommodating 4 people on a 100 cc bike. Even though they might be violating a few stupid traffic rules, I believe they are risking their lives for a noble cause - to make this planet greener. I strongly believe such activities shall be encouraged all over India. And we shall influence rest of the world to do so as well by means of summits such as at Copenhagen held this year.
It is common to encounter infinitely long traffic jams. The reason - some guy on a bike is trying to take a U-turn some 20 kms down the road.

The Bangalore metro rail and Bangalore infrastructure corridor projects have been going on since ages. Mr. Deve Gowda was the CM when he started it (the infrastructure corridor project), then he became the PM, then the ex-PM, then the Super-CM and then history. But the project is still as young as Mr. Deve Gowda used to be 45 years ago. May be, my children (or my grand children) would be lucky enough to witness this grand project to completion. (I don't really understand what this project is all about. There is absolutely no structure in Bangalore infrastructure)

We all must have seen stickers that say "Baby on Board". Maybe we should make some that say "Stupid Parent on Board" as well. Few weeks back, a guy was knocked over by a car that suddenly veered into him while he was waiting to cross the road. The reason? The driver of the car had a child on his lap. The kid suddenly pulled at the steering wheel causing the car to go off track. The guy’s excuse.. "I only do it on quiet roads". What is the word that comes to your mind?

While this all seems completely insane (and in some ways it is), I've not seen many accidents, nor are there many vehicles bearing the scars of impact. In some strange way it all works. There is enough respect (if that's the right word) on the roads that plenty of room is made for vehicles of all types, the pedestrians, cows (yes, cows), dogs, pushbikes, and carts.

3. Night life sucks - If you are coming to Bangalore to enjoy the night life, don't bother. Pubs close at around 11.30. And, there is really no time to party. If you start at around 7 pm, by the time you reach you reach the pub(some 6 kms away) after picking up your friends, it's already closing time(all thanks to the wonderful one ways and traffic) !! Now you understand why TRP ratings of all TV shows are up in Bangalore :)

4. Lots of money for value - Yes, Bangalore is a very expensive place. Rent for a 1 BHK house in a semi-decent locality is more than the average monthly income of an average Indian citizen. Thinking of buying an apartment, well forget it !! Even if you decide to spend your 10 year's savings, take a loan equal to thrice the savings and buy one apartment, your panoramic view will be of a village approximately 15 kms from Bangalore city. The prices of vegetables are so high, I wonder why don't they sell them at the jewellery shops.


5. Forum, McDonalds, Microsoft, Google, Audi, but no US visa - You can get a McVeggie burger in Bangalore but if you want a VISA, you'll have to go to Chennai or Delhi. What does that tell you?



Despite all this, there is a strange calm in the madness. It is hard to explain unless you have experienced it yourself. There is something in the place that binds all the Bangalorians together. The madness, I believe becomes a part of us and we become a part of the madness.

I think it is this madness, a part of me, which I am missing now and will miss forever.


Disclaimer : I understand that in India, a war can be started by mentioning one of the three things – Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, Bangalore. (Telengana is catching up fast). The intention of this post is not to hurt anyone's sentiments. It is supposed to be a light hearted funny post and should be treated that way. And yes, I love Bangalore :) 

Tuesday, 22 December 2009

I quit, Now What?

A month back, I did the unthinkable. Right when the signs of recession were disappearing, and people were switching jobs and consolidating their pay packages; I resigned from my full time job at Honeywell. "Shocking" and "stupid" formed the majority of the comments that I received from my fellow colleagues and friends. A handful of them though appreciated the decision as well.

Although the reason for quitting the job originates from my family constraints and issues, I still think I would have done the same thing sooner or later in absence of any such constraint. For the past 3 years, I have thoroughly enjoyed my time working on Aviation Electronics with some the best people I've ever met in my life, but I knew it from day 1 that I don't belong to this place. The 12-hours-in-front-of-a-computer job is
certainly not for me. I guess I've already overstayed my welcome.

I've always been a pretty decent student. Not so bright, but not pathetic as well. The only reason I wanted to
do my M.Tech was I wanted to get out of my home, and the job that I had in my hand right after BE wasn't
encouraging enough (in terms of money and location). A good GATE score(a surprise to me as well) strengthened the decision to pursue higher studies and I finally landed at VIT, Vellore. My 2 years of stay here were a real eye opener and I learned some of the most important lessons of my life (The biggest thing I learned is how to survive without a girl friend on campus when each of your friend is hanging around with a pretty face). No matter what people say, I truly believe that VIT rightly deserves a rank among top 10 institutes in this country (I would write more on this subject pretty soon).

When I came out of VIT, I had 4 different job offers in my hand. And I chose to go along with Honeywell even though the other offers were more rewarding initially, for 4 major reasons -
1. I did my internship at Honeywell Madurai, and I fell in love with the place.
2. The offer honored my Master's degree
3. I still didn't want to go back home.
4. Most importantly, the location was Bangalore !

Bangalore!! The city of dreams, where every engineer in India wants to be, where I wanted to be. The city of
pubs, the city of technology, the city of youth, the city of beautiful faces (The city of crazy traffic and stupid government as well. More on that later). My first day at office and my 1st reaction was - "So many girls
!!! ". Yes, staying in Madurai for 9 months will make you like every single girl in Bangalore.

My initial plan was to work in this place for around an year or so, save a few bucks and look for opportunities to set up a business of my own. But like so many of us who think to do the same and fail to execute the plan, I failed as well.

In the first year, I failed purposely. I never thought I would have such a good time at work. I was loving
every moment of it and I thought I might have been wrong all along...This is the place I belong to...And this
is the job I am good at..I even told my boss that I can't think of working at some other place doing some thing
else. And yea, speaking of my boss (my ex-boss), he was the only reason I stayed back for the 1st year and had a fantastic time at Honeywell. I was given the respect for the work I did, was rewarded suitably and there was no partiality, no sycophancy. I was having a time of my life...I made some very good friends along the way and rejected several offers from other IT majors as well.

Things changed once my boss left the organization and since then I've been trying to foolishly convince myself
that it is the same old "good" place; all in vain. My workplace became a tree full of monkeys. Those at the top
branches could only see monkey faces below them. And all that was visible to the monkeys at the bottom, were assholes ! Nevertheless, we were all monkeys !!

And then something happened ! Some issues back at home and I was needed there. Though I might have a taken a long long leave, I decided to quit !! The entrepreneurship bug has bitten me again, and this time there is no going back !! I've always believed that the risk-reward equation is always completely in favor of the
entrepreneur. There is no way that you will be economically rewarded less for being an entrepreneur than by taking up a job. Though I still don't know what I might be doing, I have a long list of pursuing my long neglected interests which includes traveling, photography and teaching. Lets see where I land up in next few
months.

I still don't know if I did the wrong thing to jump off the monkey tree or not. But all I know that I've been enjoying my time for the past few days. I didn't want to live a complex life, write complex code and have someone breathing down my neck and be under pressure for growth. I am more comfortable, leading an uncomplicated life. A life where all that I will do will be for myself and not for some asshole sitting on top of the monkey tree.


PS: If you are one of my ex-manager or senior at work and if you think that a reference above has been made to you and it makes you angry or offends you, but the same reference to some other guy in the team would make you happier, then I intend the other guy, not you. (And I hope now you understand why I quit !)

Monday, 21 December 2009

Finally on board !!

Well...as the creation date of this blog suggests, I started it some 2 years back but was too busy (or rather complacent) to write something and in between even forgot that I've created this blog. But now that I have all the free time in this world (for people who do not know how? I've quit my job and enjoying the joblessness for the past 3 days), I will make it a point to pen down the eternal sunshine and random stupidity of my brainless head regularly.
It's almost 7.30 now...and I need to get my daily dosage of "Nayan Sukh". Yes, the wonderful serenity created by pretty faces and lush green surrounding makes up for the absurdly high rent that I pay every month for staying at Koramangala in Bangalore.
So its Goodbye for now...will be back with some interesting revelations pretty soon !!

PS: Don't go by the blog title, I created it during the reservation bill time...But anyways, anything and everything that I'm gonna write will be directly or indirectly related to India :)

PPS : Please excuse the grammatical errors. They were the reasons for my not being able to clear CAT last year :D