Monday, October 13, 2008

Questionnaire?????

  • How is the age of the earth calculated?
The concept of radioactivity, according to which atoms of certain heavier elements like uranium and its salts have the power of emitting some penetrating radiations spontaneously and gradually change into atoms of stable elements, is an excellent tool which can throw light on the age of rocks or the earth. If a radioactive isotope and its decay products remain trapped in a rock, the measurement of the portion of the parent isotope that has decayed enables the age of the rocks to be determined. For example, in uranium bearing rocks, U238 reached equilibrium with its decay products in about 2 million years. After this time, the net result of the disintegration process is the production of Pb206 from U238, while the intermediate products remain in constant concentration. The measurement of the ratio of Pb206 to U238 enables the age of the rocks or the earth to be established. The measurement of the oldest rocks have established that age of the earth must be about 4,500 million years.


  • How is an American diamond different from ordinary diamond?
Synthetic diamonds are called American diamonds. Although now they are manufactured by various countries. Synthetic diamonds are man-made diamonds and they differ from naturally found one in shape, size and impurities. Synthetic diamonds are produced by putting fraphite to very high pressure (10,000 atmospheric) and very high temperatures (above 3,000 degree Celsius). Du Pont, De Beers, GE(General Electric) are some of the companies producing synthetic diamonds for commercial purpose.


  • What is reservoir-induced seismicity?
The filling of lake water in a dam site and its pressing down the ground with its load, generating new stresses underground is responsible for reservoir-induced seismicity(RIS). It is noticed that the stresses build up to the peak slowly over several years after the initiation of the filling and then there is a sudden failure of ground, releasing these stresses in the form of earthquake. The earthquake that occurred in the Koyna dam site, near Shivaji Sagar lake in Maharashtra in 1967 as an example of this. RIS depends on
(a) Rate of increase of water level,
(b) Duration of high water level maintained,
(c) Maximum height attained,
(d) Deeper infiltration of the impounded water through passage provided by faults, joints, fractures, shear zones and cavities,
(e) Existence of deeper tectonic conditions such as stresses build up in pre-existing fault planes and wark zones,
(f) Brittleness of the rocks such as quartisites, granites, basalts etc. Only if all the last time conditions are present would there be an earthquake.


  • Why are T-shirts and bush shirts called so?
Col Bush, a British Army Officer attached to the Indian Army in the early 1930's invented this kind of coat-cum-shirt for wear during the summer. It became very popular and came to be known as bush shirt. Originally it had four pockets, a belt and shoulder straps. T-shirt is so called because when it is spread out, it looks like the English letter 'T'.




  • How is jogging different from running?
Jogging implies running at a slow, steady and gentle pace, especially on regular basis as form of physical exercise. The word 'jog' originated in the 14th century. It is probably a variant of dialect 'shog' meaning to shake. Running implies going faster than walk, espeacially going steadily by springing steps so that both feet leave the ground for an instant in each step. The word 'run' is derived from Old English 'rinnan'.


  • What does devil's advocate mean?
Origin of the term 'devil's advocate' lies in the tradition of the Roman Catholic Church wherein a person appointed to challenge a proposed beatification, canonisation, etc., is known as devil's advocate. Beatification is an act by which a dead person is formally declared as blesses while canonisation is the process through which one may be declared as saint in Christian tradition.



  • Why is acid test called so?
An acid test is a rigorous or decisive test of worth or quality. It is so called due to the fact that in earlier days, gold was dipped in Nitric Acid, whenever there was any doubt about its purity. Nitric Acid damages every metal except pure gold ( hence the latter is called the noble metal).







Sunday, October 12, 2008

"...mumkin hai"

  • Chahte ho toh sochna kya?
The moment one identifies an opportunity, one should head straight for it. Mumkin hai. People call him a prodigy, but science accepts his feats. Just a boy next door, Tathagat Avtaar Tulsi holds a Master's degree in Physics. And he's not even 12 years old! Already in the Guiness Book for having successfully cleared his call Xth exams at the tender age of 9-and-half years. On being asked, he attributes it to his confidence and determination.

It's all about knowing what all is possible. Making the right moves. Being updated. And of course, creating wonder all around.
  • Dooriyan banee nazdikiyaan!
Wishful thinking can take one to the farthest of places. Mumkin hai. Chloe Ingham from Ribchester, Lancashire, was just 9 years old when she cycled 1056 miles with her mother and two sisters. Even tender age couldn't deter the young one's determination to achieve this feat. Undoubtedly, it was the will to do it.

It is about people who desire, want and pursue their thoughts and equip themselves to do so.
  • Baaton baaton mein aavishkar!
Sometimes the need to do something makes way for a new way to wlife. Mumkin hai. A vacation in Hawaii interested Richie Stachowski (aged 11) into snorkeling. But when he needed to share his amazing underwater discoveries with his father, he realished he wouldn't be heard underwater. So he went on to dedign a prototype of an underwater megaphone. Today commonly known as Water Talkies. Sheer need sometimes makes it all so much possible. isn't it?

Get talking with life the way you want to. Share, care and make things happen.

  • Jo bhi chahoon, woh main paoon!
Discovering the lack of something ofter leads to getting it by all means. Mumkin hai. Take for instance Jacob Dunnack, all of 8 years, who had a unique incident. While he went meeting his grandma, he forgot to take his baseballs. So he was stranded with his baseball bat alone. Realising that he can't play baseball without a ball, he felt extremely disappointed. He went on and invented JD Batball! It's a uniquely styled baseball bat with a removable cap. In the space provided inside the bat, one can store the balls inside so they won't get lost. So kids can have as much fun playing baseball without having to forget or lose baseballs.

A plethora of services makes life more enjoyable. And as you move ahead in life, things will happen. Just as you want.

  • Balance bhi carried forward, aur kaise!
Can any person really walk across water? Mumkin hai. Charles Blondin, the celebrated acrobat and tightropewalker did just that. He stopped his way over a rope stretching across the roaring Niagara Falls not once, but a couple of times. He even did it blind-folded!! Of course, looking down those thousands of feet below at the swirling waters wouldn't have helped at all, so he really was better off!

A commitment of going farther, both in technology and services, because that's where you want to take your life.









Sunday, September 7, 2008

Customized Search Engines.

Hey there..
Now you can make your search engines, one of the facility provided by google.
Try it once, its interesting.

Steps:
1. go this link http://www.google.com/coop/cse/.
2. click on the create a custom search engine.
3. get started customizing your ideal search engine. put the settings and click on next button, then on the next page you can see how it works.
4. click finish. now you can make it your homepage by copying the url of your search engine and pasting in the options under the tools menu(mozilla firefox) or it can be embedded into your webpages or blogs.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Fact of the Matter...part 3

  1. Due to a retinal adaptation that reflects light back to the retina, the night vision of tigers is six times better than that of humans.
  2. Glaciers occupy 5.8 million square miles, or 10 percent of the world's land surface - an area as large as South America.
  3. The colours in a hummingbird's feather are created by tiny platelets, called interference colours, and are much like the shimmering colours seen in a soap bubble or in a drop of oil.
  4. The only part of the human body that has no blood supply is the cornea, It takes its oxygen directly from the air.
  5. Playing cards were invented by the Chinese as early as 1120.
  6. A person's nails and hair continue to grow throughout his or her life, and even after death.
  7. Butterflies cannot fly if their body temperature is less than 86 degrees.
  8. The world's fastest reptile (measured on land_ is the spiny-tailed iguana of Costa Rica. It has been clocked at 34.7 kmph.
  9. A snake's stomach is located in the front one-fifth portion of its body.
  10. The North Atlantic Deep Water Current is an oceanic 'river' that carries twenty times more water than all the rivers of the world put together.
  11. Lemon sharks grow a new set of teeth every two weeks. They grow more than 24,000 new teeth every year.
  12. A thousand tons of meteor dust fall to Earth every day.
  13. The Sun provides our planet with 126,000,000,000,000 horsepower of energy every day. This means that 54,000 horse power is delivered to every person in each 24-hour period.
  14. Pet parrots can eat virtually any common 'people-food', except for chocolates and avocados. Both of these are highly toxic for the parrot - can even by fatal.
  15. The 1988 movie Titanic lasts 3 hours and 14 minutes. The actual ship took 2 hours and 40 minutes to sink after hitting an iceberg.
  16. Rubies and sapphires are made of corundum - the hardest known rock after diamond.
  17. If you were to rub garlic on the heel of your foot, it would be absorbed by the pores and eventually show up on you breath.
  18. Rivers in the northern hemisphere scour their right-hand banks more severely than their left-hand banks. This effect is due to the rotation of the Earth.
  19. The height of the 984-foot-tall Eiffel Tower varies, depending on the temperature, by as much as 6 inches.
  20. The Dead Sea is not a sea, but a landlocked salt lake, 72 km long by 14.5 km wide.
  21. On the stone temples of Madurai, there are more than 30 million carved images of gods and goddesses.
  22. The owl parrot can't fly, and builds its nest under tree roots.
  23. In the time it takes to turn a page of a book, we lose about 3 million old red blood cells and our bone marrow produces the same number of new ones.
  24. The pupil of an octopus' eye is rectangular.
  25. Lightning bolts generate temperatures five times hotter than the 6,000 degrees Celsius found at the surface of the sun.
  26. Jupiter is the largest planet, and it has the shortest day. Although Jupiter has circumference almost 11 times that of Earth, it makes one turn in 9 hours and 55 minutes.
  27. Victor Hugo's Les Miserables contains one of the longest sentences in the French language - 823 words without a period.
  28. The average adult stands 0.4 inch (1 cm) taller in the morning than in the evening, because the cartilage in the spine compresses during the day.
  29. When a person dies, hearing is generally the last sense to go. The first sense lost is usually sight. Then follows taste, smell, and touch.
  30. The phrase 'a red letter day' dates back to 1704, when holy days were marked in red letters in church calendars.


Sunday, August 10, 2008

Fact of the Matter...part 2

  1. Because its eyeball is fixed, the whale must move its huge body to shift its line of sight.
  2. Blype is the skin that peels off after a bad sunburn.
  3. Drusus Caesar, son of the Roman emperor Tiberius, so loved broccoli that he ate little else for more than a month. He only stopped when his urine turned green.
  4. Without any greenhouse effect, Earth would be cold and lifeless with an average temperature of 0.4 degree Fahrenheit.
  5. If the Antarctic ice cap were to melt, the sea level would rise by an average of 230 feet.
  6. Winking at women, even to express friendship, is considered bad manners in Australia.
  7. The shallow champagne glass originated with Marie Antoinette, from wax moulds made of her breasts.
  8. An adult female ladybug will eat about 300 medium-size aphids before it lays eggs. About three to ten aphids are eaten for each egg the beetle lays.
  9. Our galaxy has approximately 250 billion stars and it is estimated by astronomers that there are 100 billion other galaxies in the universe.
  10. Next to wood, coal is the oldest of fuels. The Chinese mined it as long ago as 1000 BC nad used it to smelt iron and copper.
  11. The Japanese word for chef, itamae, literally means 'in front of the cutting board.'
  12. Paul Gauguin, the French painter, was a labourer on the Panama Canal. About 25,000 workers died during its construction.
  13. A species of starfish known as the Linckia columbiae can reproduce its entire body - that is, grow back completely - from a single severed piece less than a half-inch long.
  14. Bugs hold special places in the hearts of many Japanese, who often keep crickets, beetles and fireflies as pets.
  15. Most insect repellents used by humans work on the principle of either masking odours that might attract insects or by creating smells that are repulsive to them.
  16. A quarter horse gets its name from its speed in running the quarter-mile.
  17. The American opossum, a marsupial, bears its young just 12 to 13 days after conception. The Asiatic elephant takes 608 days to give birth, or just over 20 months.
  18. Moonstones are so named because they have a soft, luminous glow, like moonlight. The Greeks believed that the stones became brighter or dimmer with the phases of the moon, A moonstone was also believed to be a good luck charm, and wearing one was considered to guarantee success in any endeavor.
  19. As a rule, many birds generally lay fewer eggs in a clutch in the tropics, where the amount of daylight is shorter than in northern latitudes.
  20. Cattle branding was practiced 4,000 years ago. Old tomb paintings show Egyptians branding their fat, spotted cattle.
  21. Did you know that even a racehorse loses weight? A racehorse averages a weight loss of between 6.75 and 11.25 kg during a race.
  22. Chocolate has over 500 flavour components, more than twice the amount found in strawberry and vanilla.
  23. At 840,000 square miles, Greenland is the largest island in the world. By comparison, Iceland is only 39,800 square miles.
  24. The letter 'O' is the oldest letter. It has not changed in shape since its adoption in the Phoenician alphabet in circa 1300 BC.
  25. The term 'rhinestone', from the French caillou du Rhin, came to be because the colorless, hard-glass artificial gems were originally make at Strasbourg (on the Rhine).

Friday, August 8, 2008

Fact of the Matter...part 1

  1. Soap was considered a frivolous luxury of the British aristocracy from the early 1700s until 1862, and there was a tax on those who used it in England.
  2. Every second, a hurricane releases as much energy as the explosion of a Hiroshima-type atomic bomb.
  3. The highly seasoned stew of meat or fish called ragout(rhymes with 'blue') is prepared without vegetables. The name is derived from French and means 'to restore the appetite of'.
  4. Since white tigers have pigmented stripes and blue eyes, they are not albinos.
  5. A tanka is a Japanese verse form of 31 syllables in five unrhymed lines, the first and third having five syllables each, and the others seven.
  6. The first city to reach a population of 1 million people was Rome in 133 BC. London reached the mark in 1810 and New York City made it in 1875. Today, there are over 300 such cities in the world.
  7. Originally a palace, the Louvre was made into a museum after the french revolution.
  8. Light from the moon takes about a second and a half to reach the earth.
  9. Grey whales migrate 12,000 miles each year, farther than any other mammal.
  10. Polaris is the closest visible star to true north and is thus called the North Star. By about 2100 AD, the wobble of the Earth's axis will slowly begin pointing the North Pole away from Polaris.
  11. The herring is the most widely eaten fish in the world. Nutritionally its fuel value is that equal to that of a beefsteak.
  12. Uncontrollable winding is the physical symptom of those suffering from blepharospasms.
  13. At one time it was believed that citrus fruits could provide protection against poisons.
  14. No matter how popular the show, a serial (or soap opera) on Mexican television runs no longer than just one season.
  15. The natural diet of lady beetles consists of soft-bodied insects, such as aphids, spider mites, and young caterpillars, Adults can consume up to 100 aphids a day.
  16. Bananas do not grow on trees. They grow on plants that are giant herbs and are related to the lily and orchid family.
  17. The Hope diamond was acquired by King Louis XIV in 1668. It was wore 120 years later by Marie Antoinette and now resides in the Smithsonian Institution. It weighs 44.5 carats today.
  18. While the bones of most airborne birds are hollow for lightness, penguins are endowed with solid bones for ballast when they dive, sometimes to 850 feet or more.
  19. Dinner guests in medieval England were expected to bring their own knives to table. The fork did not appear until the sixteenth century, and fork-and-knife pairs were not in general use in England until the seventeenth century.
  20. Pleonexia is a clinical term for morbid greediness.
  21. Sunflower seeds in bird feeder will attract the greatest variety of wild birds.
  22. One of Napoleon's drinking cups was made from the skull of the famous Italian adventurer Cagliostro.
  23. A 'jiffy' is an actual unit of time for 1/100th of a second.
  24. The first college on record to use the word 'campus' to describe its grounds was Princeton in the USA. 'Campus' is Latin for 'field'.
  25. Some form of bowling is played in more than 90 countries around the world. Approximately 100 million people participate in bowling today.
  26. The number two is the only number greater than zero that, when added to or multiplied by itself, gives the same result: 4.
  27. When traveling in Jordan, it is important for foreigners to know that the host may ask a visitor to stay for dinner. It is customary to refuse twice before accepting.
  28. Pine, spruce, or other evergreen wood should never be used for barbequeing. These woods, when burning or smoking, can add harmful tar and resins to the food.
  29. The whale has the slowest metabolism of all animals. Despite its great size, it lives on one of the smallest of all creatures: the microscopic plankton, found throughout the sea.
  30. In 1986, Rob Angel, a 24-year-old waiter from Seattle, Washington, developed Pictionary, the game in which partners try to guess phrases based on each other's drawings.
  31. All pet hamsters are descended from a single female wild golden hamster found with a litter of 12 young in Syria in 1930.
  32. A father sea catfish keeps the eggs of his young in his mouth until they are ready to hatch. He will not eat until his young are born, which may take several weeks.
  33. The Nile is the longest stretch of river in the world without any tributaries.
  34. Horse racing is one of the most ancient sports, originating in Central Asia among prehistoric nomadic tribesmen around 4500 BC.
  35. Evergreens, because of their long life span and their needles' year-round exposure to pollution are the trees most vulnerable to air pollution.
  36. Jupiter is the largest planet, and it has the shortest day. Although Jupiter has a circumference of 280,000 miles, compared with Earth's 25000, Jupiter manages to make one turn in 9 hours and 55 minutes.
  37. Lightning bolt charges can propagate for up to 160 km; however, the actual channel of lightning is rarely larger than the width of a pen.
  38. Nyctitropism is the tendency of the leaves of petals of certain plants to assume a different position at night.
  39. The venom of the king cobra is so deadly that one gram of it can kill 150 people. Just to handle the substance can put one in a coma.
  40. Increasing herbicide use has created a jungle of at least 48 'super-weeds' that are resistant to chemicals.
  41. It takes approximately 69000 venom extractions from the coral snake to fill a 473 ml container.
  42. It was reported that Napoleon carried chocolate with him on his military campaigns, and always ate it when he need a boost of energy.
  43. Nine ways to pronounce 'ough' - A rough-coated, dough-faced, thoughtful ploughman strode through the streets of Scarborough; after failing into a slough, he coughed and hiccoughed.
  44. The alteration of the architectural appearance of a city by the contruction of skyscrapers and high-ride buildings is known as 'Manhattanisation'.
  45. During World War II, the US Navy commissioned the world's first floating ice cream parlour for service in the Pacific theatre. It made ten gallons of ice cream in seven seconds.
  46. Winds ten times stronger than a hurricane on Earth blow around Saturn' equator. Wind speeds can reach 1760 kmph.
  47. Richard Cadbury invented the first Valentine's Day candy box in the late 1800s.
  48. The winning term in chess, 'checkmate' comes from the Arabic phrase shah mat, meaning is dead.
  49. Apricot trees were first cultivated in China, then they made their way to India, Armenia, and Persia. Before the thirteenth century, they arrived in England via Italy.
  50. Butterflies cannot fly if their body temperature is less than 86 degrees.
  51. In France, chocolate was initially considered a barbarous, noxious drug. The French court accepted chocolate after the Paris faculty of medicine gave its approval.
  52. Some insects, after their head is severed, may live for as much as a year. They react automatically to light, temperature, humidity, chemicals, and other stimuli.
  53. The body has 120000 km of blood vessels. The heart pumps blood through this labyrinth and back again once every minute.
  54. Just 50 years after Johannes Gutenberg invented his printing press in the mid-15 th century, more than 6 million books had been published on law, science, poetry, politics, and religion.
  55. There is just one known species of ostrich in the world-it is the one called Struthioniformes.
  56. An elementary rule of mushroom collecting is never to place edible and poisonous specimens together. The slightest tough may contaminate.
  57. 73 percent of people who buy flowers for Valentine's Day are men, while only 27 per cent are women.
  58. Left-handed people are 20 per cent more likely to sample a forkful of food from the plates of fellow diners than are right-handed people.
  59. Notre Dame de Paris ranks as one of the greatest achievements of Gothic architecture. The massive interior can accommodate over 6000 worshippers.
  60. Redhaven, fairhaven, elberta, desert gold, and sunhaven are varieties of peaches.
  61. Birds may travel great distances on their migrations. The Arctic tern travels from the top of the world, the Arctic, to the bottom, Antarctica. Round trip in a single year: 40000 km in all.
  62. Hail destroys crores of rupees' worth of crops and property each year, a greater toll than that taken by tornadoes.
  63. The hides of mature female blue sharks are more then twice as thick as those of males, probably as a protection against courtship bites.
  64. There are mice that nest in trees. These creatures may spend their whole life without ever touching the ground.
  65. After his infamous 1997 attack on Evander Holyfield, the Hollywood Wax Museum moved boxer Mike Tyson's figure to the Chamber of Horrors-next to the figure of Dr. Hannibal Lecter.
  66. To make a daguerreotype, an early photograph, required a 15-minute average exposure time.
  67. The first bit of gold that Christopher Columbus brought back from the Americans was used to gild the ceiling of the Church of Santa Maria Maggiore in Rome. The ceiling and the gold are still there.
  68. The islands of Bermuda have no river or lakes. The inhabitants must use rain for water.


Saturday, July 26, 2008

First Novel that Chetan wrote and First Novel that I'd read in my life.

Prof. Sen distributed the answer sheets in class two days later.
"Five? I got a five out of twenty," I said to Alok, who sat next to me in class.
"I got seven. Damn it, seven," Alok said.
"I have three. How about that? One, two, three," Ryan said, counting on his fingers.
Prof. Sen wrote the customary summary scores on the blackboard.

Average: 11/20
High: 17/20
Low: 3/20

He kept those written for a few minutes, before proceeding with his lecture on cantilever beams.
"I have the lowest. Did you see that?" Ryan whispered to me, unmoved by cantilever beams. It was hard to figure out what he was feeling at this point. Even though he was trying to stay calm and expressionless, I could tell he was having trouble digesting his result. He re-read his quiz, it did not change the score.

Alok was in a different orbit. His face looked like it had on ragging day. He viewed the answer sheet like he had the coke bottle, an expression of anxiety mixed with sadness. It is in these moments that Alok is most vulnerable, you nudge him just a little bit and you know he'd cry. But for now, the quiz results were a repulsive enough sight.

I saw my own answer sheet. The instructor had written my score in big but careless letters, like graffiti written with contempt. Now I am no Einstein or anything, but this never happened to me in school. My score today was five on twenty, or twenty-five per cent, I had never in my life scored less than three times as much. Ouch, the first quiz in IIT hurt.

But take Ryan's scores. I wondered if it had been worth it for him to even study last night. I was two points ahead of him, or wait a minute, sixty-six per cent ahead of him, that made me feel better. Thank god for relative misery!

Alok had the highest percentage amongst the three of us, but I could tell he did not find solace in our misery. He saw his score, and he saw the average on the board. I saw his face, twisting every time he saw his wrong answers.

We kept our answer-sheet, the proof of our underperformance, in our bags and strolled back to Kumaon. We met at dinner in the mess. The food was insipid as usual, and Alok wrinkled his pug nose as he dispiritedly plopped a thick blob of green substance mess-workers called bhindi masala into his plate. He slammed two rotis on his stainless-steel plate and ignored the rest of the semi-solid substances like dal, raita and pulao. Ryan and I took everything; though everything tasted the same, we could at least have some variety of colors on our plate.

Alok finally brought up the topic of the quiz at the dinner table.
"So, now you don't have anything to say?"
Ryan and I looked at each other.
"Say what?" I said.
"That how crap this is," Alok said.
"The food?" I said, fully aware Alok meant otherwise.
"No damn it! Not the damn food," Alok said, "The apmech quiz." His expression changed from the usual tragic one to a livelier angry one. I found that expression marginally more pleasant to look at and easier to deal with.

"What about the quiz? That we are screwed. What is to discuss in that?" Ryan simplified.
"Oh really. We are screwed, no damn doubt in that," Alok said.
I think Alok picks up a word and uses it too much, which ruins the effect. There were too many 'damns' in his dialogues.

"Then drop it. Anyway, you got the highest amongst us. So, be happy."
"Happy? Yes, I am happy. The average is eleven, and someone got seventeen. And here I am, at damn seven. Yes, I am happy my damn Terminator ass," Alok scoffed.

I told you, Alok ruins the effect. I wanted to tell him that he should stop 'damn' right now but something told me he would not appreciate the subtleties of cursing right now.

"What? What did you just say?" Ryan said, keeping his spoon down on the plate, "Did you say Terminator?"
"Yes. It was a stupid idea. Your stupid damn idea," Alok said.
Ryan froze. He looked at Alok as if he was speaking in foreign tongue. Then he turned toward me.
"You heard what he said? Hari, you heard? This is unbelievable man," Ryan turned to me.
I had heard Alok, nothing being the matter with my eardrums but I wasn't paying attention to anything apart from keeping counts of the 'damns'.

"Hari, you think I screwed up the quiz?" Ryan asked slowly.
I looked at Alok's and Ryan's faces in quick succession, mediating on something I did not understand yet.
"Ryan, you got three. You still need me to tell you that you screwed up?" I counter-questioned.
"No. I mean Alok is saying I screwed up the quiz for both of you because I took you to the movie. You think so or...?"
"That is not what I said..." Alok interrupted even as Ryan raised his hand to indicate silence.

Really Amazing Book...A must read..!!!

The night train ride from Kanpur to Delhi was the most memorable journey of my life. For one, it gave me my second book. And two, it is not everyday you sit in an empty compartment and a young, pretty girl walks in.
Yes, you see it in the movies, you hear about it from friends' friends but it never happens to you. When I was younger, I used to check the reservation chart stuck outside a train bogie to see all the female passengers near my seat (F-17 to F-25 is what I'd look for most). Yet, it never happened. In most cases, I shared my compartment with talkative women, snoring men and wailing infants.
But this night was different. Firstly, my compartment was empty. The railways had just started this new summer train and nobody knew about it. Secondly, I was unable to sleep.
I had come to IIT Kanpur for a talk. Before leaving, I drank four cups of coffee in the canteen chatting with the students. Bad idea, given it was going to be boring to spend eight insomniac hours in an empty compartment. I had no magazines or books to read. I could hardly see anything out of the window in the darkness. I prepared myself for a silent and dull night. Of course, it was anything but that.
She walked in five minutes after the train had left the station. She opened the curtains of my enclosure and looked puzzled.
"Is coach A4, seat 63 here?” she said.
The yellow lightbulb in my compartment had a mood of its own. It flickered as I looked up to see her.
"Huh..,” I said as I saw her face. It was difficult to withdraw from the gaze of her eyes.
"Actually it is. My seat is right in front of you,” she said and heaved her heavy suitcase on the upper berth . She sat down on the lower berth opposite to me, and gave out a sigh of relief.
"I climbed on the wrong coach. Luckily this train is connected,” she said, adjusting her long hair that ended in countless ringlets. From the corner of my eye I tried to see her. She was young, maybe early to mid twenties. Her waist length hair had a life of its own, a strand falling on her forehead repeatedly. I could not see her face closely, but I could tell one thing - she was pretty. And her eyes - once you looked into them, you could not turn away. I kept my gaze down.
She re-arranged stuff in her handbag. I tried to look out of the window. It was completely dark.
"So, pretty empty train,” she said after ten minutes.
"Yes, I said. It is the new holiday special. They just started it, without telling people about it.”
"No wonder. Otherwise, trains are always full at this time.”
"It will get full. Don't worry. Just give it a few days,” I said and leaned forward, " Hi. I am Chetan by the way, Chetan Bhagat.”
"Hi,” she said and looked at me for a few seconds, "Chetan as in...I don't know, your name sounds familiar."
Now this was cool. It meant she had heard of my first book. I am recognized rarely. And of course, it had never happened with a girl on a night train.
"You might have heard of my book - Five Point Someone. I am the author,” I said.
"Oh yes,” she said and paused, "Oh yes, of course. I have read your book. The three underperformers and the prof's daughter one, right?” she said.
"Yes,” I said, "So how did you like it?"
"It was all right,” she said.
I was taken aback. Man, I could have done with a little more of a compliment here.
"Just all right?” I said, obviously fishing a bit too hard.
"Well,” she said and paused.
"Well what?” I said after ten seconds.
"Well. Yeah, just all right...ok ok types,” she said.
I kept quiet. She noticed my facial expression of mild disappointment.
"Anyway, nice to meet you Chetan. Where are you coming from? IIT Kanpur?"
"Yes,” I said, my voice less friendly than a few moments ago, "I gave a talk there.”
"Oh really? About what?"
"About my book - you know the just ok-ok type one. Some people do want to hear about it,” I said, keeping a sweet tone to sugar-coat my sarcasm filled words.
"Interesting,” she said and turned quiet again.
I was quiet too. I didn't want to speak to her anymore. I wanted my empty compartment back.
The flickering yellow light above was irritating me. I wondered if I should just shut it off, but it was not that late yet.
"What's the next station? Is it a non-stop train,” she said after five minutes, obviously to make conversation.
"I don't know,” I said and turned to look at the windows again. I couldn’t see anything in the darkness.
"Is everything ok?” she asked softly.
"Yes, why?” I said. The tone of my ‘why' gave away that everything was not ok.
" Nothing. You upset about what I said about your book right?"
"Not really,” I said.
She laughed. I looked at her. Just like her gaze, her smile was arresting too. I knew she was laughing at me, but I wanted her to keep smiling. I pulled my eyes away again.
"Listen. I know your book did well. You are like this youth writer and everything. But at one level...just forget it.”
"What?” I said.
"At one level, you are hardly a youth writer.”
I turned silent and looked at her for a few seconds. Her magnetic eyes had a soft but insistent gaze.
"I thought I wrote a book about college kids. That isn't youth?" I said.
"Yeah right. So, you wrote a book on IIT. A place where so few people get to go. You think that represents the entire youth?” she said and took out a box of mints from her bag.
She offered me one, but I declined. I wanted to get this straight.
"So what are you trying to say? I had to start somewhere, so I wrote about my college experiences. And you know the story is not so IIT specific. It could have happened anywhere. I mean, just for that you are trashing my book.”
"I am not trashing it. I am just saying it hardly represents the Indian youth,” she said and closed back the box of mints.
"Oh really..,” I said but was interrupted by the noise as the train passed over a long river bridge.
We didn’t speak for the next three minutes, until the train returned to smoother tracks.
"What represents the youth?” I said.
"I don't know. You are the writer. You figure it out.,” she said, and brushed aside a few curls that had fallen on her forehead.
"That's not fair,” I said, "that is so not fair.” I sounded like a five year old throwing a tantrum. She smiled as she saw me grumbling to myself. A few seconds later, she spoke again.
"Are you going to write more books?” she said.
"I'll try to,” I said. I wasn't sure if I ever wanted to talk to her again.
"So what is going to be? IIMs this time?” she said.
"No.”
"Why not?"
"Because it does not represent the country's youth,” I said.
She started laughing.
"See I am taking feedback. And now you laugh at me,” I said.
"No, no,” she said, "I am not laughing at you. Can you stop being so over-sensitive?"
"I am not over-sensitive. I just want to take feedback,” I said and turned my face away.
"Well, well now. Let me explain. See I just felt the whole IITian thing is cool and all, but what does it all mean in the broader sense. Yes, the book sells and you get to go to IIT Kanpur. But is that what it is all about?” she said.
"Well, then what is it about?"
"If you want to write about the youth, shouldn't you talk about young people who really face challenges? I mean yes, IITians face challenges, but what about the hundreds and thousands of other youth?"
"Like whom.”
"Just look around you. What is the biggest segment of youth facing challenges in modern India?"
"I don't know. Students?"
"Not those Mr. Writer. Get out of the student-campus of your first book now? Anything else you see that you find strange and interesting? I mean, what is the subject of your second novel?” she said.
I turned up to look at her carefully for the first time. Maybe it was the time of the night - but I kid you not, she was one of the most beautiful women I had ever seen. Everything about her was perfect.Her face was like that of a child. She wore a little bindi, which was hard to focus on as her eyes came in the way.
I went back to her question.
"Second novel? No, haven't thought of a subject yet,” I said.
"Really? Don't you have any ideas?"
"I do. But nothing I am sure about."
"Inte….resting,” she drawled, "Well, just bask in your first book then.”
We kept quiet for the next half an hour. I took out the contents of my overnight bag and rearranged them for no particular reason. I wondered if it even made sense to change into a nightsuit. I was not going to fall asleep anyway. Another train noisily trundled past us in the opposite direction, leaving silence behind.
"I might have a story idea for you,” she said, almost startling me.
"Huh?” I was wary of what she was going to say. For no matter what her idea was, I had to appear interested.
"What is it?"
"It is a story about a call center.”
"Really?” I said," Call centers as in business process outsourcing centers or BPOs?"
"Yes, do you know anything about them?"
I thought about it. I did know about call centers, mostly from my cousins who worked there.
"Yes, I know a little bit,” I said, "Some 300,000 people work in the industry. They help US companies in sales, service and maintenance of their operations. Usually younger people work there in night shifts. Quite interesting, actually.”
"Just interesting? Have you ever thought of what all they have to face?” she said, her voice turning firm again.
"No,” I said.
"Why? They aren't the youth? You don't want to cover them?” she said, almost scolding me.
"Listen, let's not start arguing again..."
"I am not. I told you that I have a call center story for you.”
I looked at my watch. It was 12.30 a.m. A story would not be such a bad idea to kill time, I thought.
"Let's hear it then,” I said.
"I can tell you. But I have a condition,” she said.
Condition? I was puzzled. How can you have conditions in storytelling?
"What condition? That I don’t tell it to anyone else?”
"No. Just the opposite, in fact. You have to promise me to write it as your second book.”
"What?” I said and almost jumped from my seat.
Wow! Now that was something. OK, so I meet a girl who appears interesting and had a pair of nice eyes and looks like she can tell me a story to kill time. However, it does not mean I will listen to it and spend two years of my life turning it into a book.
"Like a full book? Are you kidding? I cannot promise that. It is a lot of work,” I said.
"Up to you,” she said and turned silent.
I waited for ten seconds. She did not speak.
"Can't I decide on that after you tell me the story?” I said, "If it is interesting, I may even do it. But how can I decide without listening to it."
"No. It is not about choice. If I tell you, you have to write it,” she said.
"Like write a whole book on it?” I said.
"Yes. Like it is your own story. In first person - just as your first book. I’ll give you the contacts of people in the story. You can meet them, do your research, whatever it takes, but make it your second book.”
"Well then I think it is better if you don't tell me,” I said.
"Up to you,” she said and became quiet. She turned around to spread a bedsheet on her berth, and arranged the pillows and blankets. I guess she was planning to go to sleep.
I checked my watch again. It was 01:00 a.m., and I was still wide awake. This was a non-stop train, and there were no stations to look forward to until Delhi in the morning. She switched off the flickering yellow light. A mysterious blue light bulb was the only night light in the compartment.It felt strange, like we were the only two people in the universe.
As she was sliding under her blanket, I asked, "What is the story about? At least tell me a little bit more.”
"Will you do it then?"
I shrugged in the semi-darkness. "Can't say. Do not tell me the story yet. But at least tell me what it is about.”
She nodded and came out of her blanket. She sat cross-legged opposite me as she began talking.
"Allright,” she said, "It is a story about six people in a call center on one night."
"Just one night? Like this one?” I interrupted.
"Yes, one night. One night at the call center.”
"You sure that can be a full book? I mean, what is so special about this night?”
She heaved a sigh and took a sip from her bottle of mineral water.
"You see,” she said, "It wasn't like any other night. It was a night there was a phone call.”
"What?” I said and burst out laughing, "So a call center gets a phone call. That is the special part?"
She did not smile back. She waited for my amusement to end.
"You see,” she continued, "It wasn't an ordinary phone call. It was the night...it was the night there was a phone call from God.”
Her words had me spring to attention.
"What?”.
"You heard me. That night there was a phone call from God,” she said.
"What exactly are you talking about?”
"I just told you what the story was about. You asked, remember?” she said.
"And then.. how...I mean…”
"I am not telling you anymore. You know what the story is about. If you want to hear the story, you know my condition.”
"That is a tough condition,” I said.
"I know. Up to you,” she said and lifted her blanket again. She lay down and closed her eyes.
Six people. One night. Call Center. Call from God. The phrases kept repeating in my head as another hour passed. At 2:00 a.m., she woke up to have a sip of water.
"Not sleeping?,” she asked with eyes only half open.
Maybe there was a voltage problem, but this time even the blue light started flickering in the compartment.
"No, not sleepy at all,” I said.
"OK, goodnight anyway,” she said, as she was about to lie down again.
"Listen,” I said, "Get up. Sit down again.”
"Huh?” she said, rubbing her eyes, "Why? What happened?"
"Nothing. You tell me what happened. Tell me the story,” I said.
"So you will write it?"
"Yes,” I said, with a bit of hesitation.
"Good,” she said, and sat up again. The cross-legged position was back.
Over the rest of the night, she told me the story that begins from the next page. It is a story about six people, three guys and three girls who worked at the Connexions Call Center. I chose to tell the story through Shyam's eyes. This is because after I met him, I found him closest to me as a person. The rest of the people and what happened that night - well, I will let Shyam tell you that

Great Book By Simply Great Writer


It is not everyday you sit in front of your computer on a Saturday morning and get emails like this:
From: Ahd_businessman@gmail.com
Sent: 12/28/2005 11:40 PM
To: info@chetanbhagat.com
Subject: A final note

Dear Chetan,
This email is a combined suicide note and a confession letter. I have let people down and have no reason to live. You don't know me. I'm an ordinary boy in Ahmedabad who read your books. And somehow I felt could write to you after that. I can't really tell anyone what I am doing to myself - which is taking a sleeping pill everytime I end a sentence, so I thought I will tell you.

I kept my coffee cup down and counted. Five full stops already.

I made three mistakes, I don’t want to go into details.
My suicide is not a sentimental decision. As many around me know, I am a good businessman because I have little emotion. This is no knee-jerk reaction. I waited over three years, watched Ish’s silent face everyday. But after he refused my offer yesterday, I had no choice left.
I have no regrets either. May be I’d have wanted to talk to Vidya once more – but that doesn’t seem like such a good idea right now.
Sorry to bother you with this. But I felt like I had to tell someone. You have ways to improve as an author but you do write decent books. Have a nice weekend.

Regards,
Businessman

17, 18, 19. Someone had popped nineteen sleeping pills while typing a mail to me. Yet, he expected me to have a nice weekend. The coffee refused to go down my throat. I broke into cold sweat.
“One, you wake up late. Two, you plant yourself in front of the computer first thing. Do you even know you have a family?” Anusha said. In case it isn’t obvious enough from the authoritative tone, Anusha is my wife.
I had promised to go furniture shopping with her – ten weekends ago
She took my coffee mug away and jiggled the back of my chair. “We need dining chairs. hey, you look strange?” she said.

I pointed to the monitor.
“Businessman?” she said as she finished reading the mail. She looked shaken up, too.
“And it is from Ahmedabad,” I said, “that is all we know.”
“You sure this is real?” she said, a quiver in her voice.
“This is not spam,” I said. “It is addressed to me.”
My wife pulled a stool to sit down. I guess we really did need some extra chairs.
“Think,” she said. “We got to let someone know. His parents may be.”
“How? I don’t know where the hell it came from,” I said. “And who do we know in Ahmedabad”
“We met in Ahmedabad, remember?” Anusha said. Pointless statement, I thought. Yes, we’d been classmates at IIMA years ago.
“So?”
“Call the institute. Prof. Basant or someone,” She sniffed and left the room. “Oh no, the daal is burning.”
There are advantages to having a wife smarter than you. I could never be a detective.
I searched the institute numbers on the Internet and called. An operator connected me to Prof. Basant’s residence. I checked the time, 10:00am in Singapore, 7:30am in India. It is a bad idea to mess with a Prof early morning.
“Hello?” a sleepy voice answered. Had to be the prof.
“Prof. Basant, Hi. This is Chetan Bhagat calling. Your old student, remember?”
“Who?” he said with nil curiosity. Bad start.
I told him about the course he took for us, and how we had voted him the friendliest prof.
“Oh that Chetan Bhagat,” he said, like he knew a million of them. “You are a writer now, no?”
“Yes sir,” I said, “that one.”
“So why are you writing books?”
“Tough question, sir,” I stalled.
“OK, a simple one. Why are you calling me so early on a Saturday?”
I told him why and forwarded the email to him.
“No name, eh?” he said as he read the mail.
“He could be in a hospital somewhere in Ahmedabad. He would have just checked in. May be he is dead. Or may be he is at home and this was a hoax,” I said.
I was blabbering. I wanted help – for the boy and me. The prof had asked a good question. Why the hell did I write books, to get into this?
“We can check hospitals,” Prof said. “I can ask a few students. But a name surely helps. Hey wait, this boy has a gmail, may be he is on Orkut.”
“Or-what?” Life is tough when you are always talking to people smarter than you.
“You are so out of touch, Chetan. Orkut is a networking site. Gmail users sign up there. If he is a member and we are lucky, we can see his profile.”
I heard him clicking keys and sat before my own PC. I had just reached the Orkut site when Prof Basant exclaimed,“Aha, Ahmedabad Businessman. There is a brief profile here. The name only says G Patel. Interests are cricket, business, mathematics and friends. Doesn’t seem like he uses Orkut much though.”
“What are you talking about Prof Basant? I woke up to a suicide note, exclusive to me. Now you are telling me hobbies. Can you help me or…”
A pause, then, “I will get some students. We will search for a new young patient called G Patel, suspected sleeping pill overdose. We will call if we find anything, OK?”
“Yes, sir,” I said, breathing properly after a long time.
“And how is Anusha? You guys bunked my classes for dates and now forget me.”
“She is fine, sir.”
“Good, I always felt she was smarter than you. Anyway, let’s find your boy,” the prof said and hung up.

Besides furniture shopping, I had to finish an office presentation. My boss Michel’s boss was due from New York. Wanting to impress, Michel had asked me to make a presentation of the group, with fifty charts. I worked three nights last week until 1:00am, but had gotten only halfway.
“This is a suggestion. Don’t take it the wrong way. But do consider taking a bath,” my wife said.
I looked at her.
“Just an option,” she said.
I think she is overcautious sometimes. I don’t bite back.
“Yes, yes. I will,” I said and stared at the computer again.
Thoughts darted through my head. Should I call some hospitals myself? What if Prof Basant dozed off again? What if he could not collect the students? What if G Patel was dead? And why am I becoming so involved here?
I took a reluctant shower. I opened the office presentation, unable to type a word.
I refused breakfast, though regretted it moments later – as hunger and anxiety did not go well together.
My phone rang at 1:33pm.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

~~>A Total Disaster<~~

In my whole life, I have never seen such a depressed person. I am talking about a guy who has been my classmate for four long years and it is only me that knows how I have spent this time with him. Wait! Is it really me? Hmm....I think all the person who have come in contact with that guy would have suffered a lot more than I did. To be honest I don't want to mention his name here but let's name him Mr. Psycho. So I got to meet him in my first year of undergraduate program. He seemed to be good guy at first sight but as I started knowing him better, I got the idea that he isn't correct to be with. Well in two years I wasn't much in contact with him. But our talking started in third year to a sufficient extent. I got to know that he is suffering from a dangerous disease related to backbone. He even couldn't stand for long.
Time spent, we were moving on. Although I knew that he is a short-tempered guy but he never expressed physically in front of me. I came to know he had altercations with most of the guys in hostel. But I didn't care about that until the same happened to me one day.

He had visited my home 2-3 times before but the last journey of his to my home changed everything for him. Or in other words, I can say that I got a relief from a big trouble. This was the day when the examinations forms were being filled in our college. We finished it in time but forgot to tell him as I didn't know about his whereabouts. Later I came to know that he was in Rajasthan while chatting with him on the internet. There he asked me about the aforementioned. I replied affirmatively and expressed my apology to him. He then came to the college just to fill up the form with a fine of 500 rupees. He had informed me in advance that he would stay at my home and I felt no problem in this. So he came to my home and stayed for 2-3 hours. We worked for sometime on the internet and then he was ready to leave for Rajasthan again. While packing his luggage, he checked his amount of 3000 rupees which he had been carrying. And to his f****** surprise, he found it nowhere. There came the most horrible moment of my life. In no time, he was so much depressed that I thought that he is going to fall down anytime on the floor in unconsciousness. He threw all his belongings from his bag. He checked his pockets several times in front of me but all in vain. Finally he threw the locket which he was wearing on the floor and rubbed hard with his feet. The locket was holding the pictures of God and his Guru I think. Although this was a shock to me as well but I kept my cool and told him to be cool while on the way to his uncle's home in Sikandrabad.

Completely unaware of the fact that he hadn't reached his uncle's home, I was taking a deep nap and it lasted for two and half hours. It broke when my mobile rang and a female voice came from the other end. It was Psycho's mother's voice. She told me that Psycho hadn't reached his uncle's home. After having the conversation on the phone, I noticed the time and it was 6.30 pm while Psycho left at 4.00 pm. Now this was enough to sweep me off from my feet. I called to his uncle's home and got to talk to his cousin. On asking if he had reached there, he replied in negative. I told him perhaps he would have stuck in the traffic but his cousin had just come from that way and told me that there was no traffic. I then called another friend who used to be Psycho's room partner while he was in college hostel but that didn't help too.

Although this whole event was enough to make me tensed but I left it to the time. I thought he would reach his home. Later in the evening I got a call from my friend Nitin and I narrated the whole incident to him. He suggested me that perhaps he was roaming around his sister's home who never liked this Psycho. And Psycho is totally mad about his sister. He usually said that he loves her more than anything in this world. That's not of my concern. Some days later, I got to chat with Psycho on the internet and asked him where he had gone. He replied that to his uncle's home. I again narrated the whole event and asked and Psycho replied perhaps he was late. I asked to tell the truth, but got the same reply again. Finally I said ok! fine, but you never have to come to my home in the future and expressed my final bye to him.

But you know dog's tail is never going to be straight. He tried everything to talk to me. Firstly he was saying sorry to me, but when I didn't respond, he started telling everyone in the class whom he knows and they all wanted to know the reason. So the reason is that I can't tolerate his abnormalities, his depression and most of all his possessiveness. Give me space rather a lot of space so that I couldn't see you in my whole life again.