Sandeep’s New Rating System

September 17th, 2008 admin

Sandeep Somani came up with this scheme of rating TV shows, movies, plays etc. It takes away the relative interpretation and quantization associated with stars, and instead gets to the meat of the matter with an absolute measure in terms of the dollar value you are willing to pay to see the show/movie etc. To add to your ability to express your dissatisfaction you may also choose to quote how much money you will need to be paid, to go see the show. For example, if you hate a show, but your wife wants you to go see it again, she’d have to pay you some amount of money before you will budge. A third innovation of this scheme (other than the abslouteness of a dollar value it allows and the negative dollar value it allows) is the ability to express “repeat potential” by saying how the dollar value you rate it at changes with each extra viewing. The rating allows changes based on “viewing format” (DVD vs movie hall vs TV) and “control potential” (access to the remote control to allow fast forwarding through non-sensical song sequences improves the rating a bit) . I buy it. A dollar value does make it a little bit harder to average across a collection of ratings, unless the number of reviews is large, because the absoluteness of the measure can be significantly skewed by what people consider a “normal” show should cost. That said, the dollar vlaue reveals a lot about the reviewer and what is being reviewed in a certain independent fashion, without being tied to a normalized scale. Could be an interesting experiment. Below is the explanation of the scheme in Sandeep’s own words.

So, the idea is that rather than give a rating of good, bad, hopeless, etc., quote a dollar amount you would be willing to pay to watch a certain movie, play etc. given that the alternative is to watch a random sitcom on TV (like what i am doing right now ! )

Some examples  - You could say,
I’ll pay upto $100 to watch     O for the first time
…           $40    …        O for the second time
…           $60     …        spamalot for the first time
…           $20     …        spamalot for the second time
…           $60     …        sheer madness for the first time

for something more familiar (note the negative)
I’ll pay upto  -$50     …       taare zameen par for the first time in theatre
…                   - $10    …       taare zameen par for the first time on DVD with full access to remote
…                   - $40     …      taare zameen par for the first time on DVD with no access to remote
…                   - $100    …     taare zameen par for the second time anyhow  :)

Negative amount means you will have to pay me to watch this (this may be substituted by equivalent beverage servings)
So you see, this system is much more flexible and informative than the normal yahoo rating
.”

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Bharat Ek Khoj - Shyam Benegal’s discovery of Nehru’s Discovery of India

September 14th, 2008 admin

My good friend, Rajeev, discovered this treasure trove online - Bharat Ek Khoj, a TV series based on Jawahar Lal Nehru’s book, The Discovery of India. Nehru, the first Prime Minister of free India after the British Rule, wrote most of this book while imprisoned. The effort evokes in me pride, respect and awe. Attempting to capture the essence of the spirit and history of India in a 500-odd paged book, is in itself a courageous attempt. Doing so, while in prison, also shows inspiring determination, discipline, value for time and sense of duty. I cannot comment on the literary and factual quality of the book; I have not read it yet. However, this TV series, which started in 1988, is something I can comment on. Directed by one of the great Indian film directors, Shyam Benegal, and with a cast that clearly is stellar when you look back at those names (Om Puri, Roshan Seth, Ashok Kumar, Anjan Srivastav, Sadashiv Amrapurkar, Neena Gupta, Salim Ghouse, Tom Alter etc.) with a couple of decades of work since then for proof, Bharat Ek Khoj is a gem in history of Indian television. Even though I was quite young when this series was on TV, and even though it was quite serious in tone and not a childrens’ show, I distinctly remember loving it. It’s catchy, yet philosophical, credits set the tone for the self-discovery that the series embidied. The seriousness of the attempt to discover that spirit of Indianness in each episode, the honest, accurate and non-fantasized version of epics and other historic records, and the wonderfully rich use of Hindi and Urdu languages were all aspects of the show that drew me to it. When I watch it today, I can watch it with the same dedication and curiosity to learn about India. I realized that though nostalgia is a part of discovering any such childhood treasure, that is just a fleeting feeling. I have seen several other old TV hits online, such as Ye jo hai zindagi, Hum Log and Mr. Yogi; however, with those the interest typically dies out after a few episodes because the nostalgia wears out and the paucity of quality hits you, and you wonder, “Well, may be it was good in its day, but it is not really that special”. Bharat Ek Khoj, on the other hand, still seems fresh. With each episode, my interest in wanting another one increases rather than diminishes. After 20 years since the show first appeared, I can still learn from it, and formulate a more complete picture of India. I found that series is available in DVD format for purchase here. It is quite expensive, with 2 episodes costing $30. This would run the total series to over $600. So the decision for now, for me, is I will read the book.

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On the role of the media in sports in India

September 13th, 2008 admin

Some things are only visible from the corner of the eye; they vanish when you try to look at them directly. Similarly, I believe, the best approach to religion  is not a headlong dive to grab its elusive essence, but rather, an indirect infusion of those ideas and ideals via a more concrete medium. One such concrete medium, which India seems to have never given much chance to, is sports. My friend, Akshay, sent me an article by Professor V. Raghunathan (author of the book “Games Indians Play: Why we are the way we are”) on why India’s performances in sports in general and Olympics in particular falls way short of what one would expect from a nation of over a billion people. The article is called “Games Indians Don’t Win“.

I agree with most of Dr. Raghunathan’s observations though I find that some of the arguments could be further strengthened by factual details. I also felt that the article does not point out one factor which can elevate the status of sports in India - media. I see many children and young people nowadays finding no outlet for their natural instincts to exercise their bodies and minds via sports. Instead much of their energies are being channeled towards unimaginative, creativity-sapping shows on the TV and the inescapable din created by the industry that religion is becoming. Lot of it is because in population heavy urban areas, there are not enough facilities and open spaces for the young to play. In rural areas where there are open areas and, arguably, time at hand for kids to explore sport, facilities and, more importantly, awareness are severely lacking. There is no incentive to try to be great at a sport.

The young minds of the country, with no reason or facilities to go out an play, are increasingly being moulded by what the see on the TV. Some get influenced by the western media and the western culture they see on the TV and blindly jump on to that bandwagon. The remaining shun the western influence so much that they lean to the other extreme, and get swept by fundamentalist religious rhetoric. In either case, the TV influences their ability to think for themselves. Instead of making the youth broad-minded in their approach to cultures, science and entertainment, it makes them confused, at first, and, dogmatic and narrow-minded, eventually.  Religion in India is losing its real meaning; it has become a service industry. It is encroaching the airwaves via loud speakers and TV and radio shows. It is encroaching every free piece of land, which should have been left as play areas for children, by temple construction projects. It is sucking up every rupee anyone can and cannot spare to feed its furnace of the self-fulfilling prophecies. It is taking over people’s ability to think. Its misinterpretation and misrepresentation over the years is reaching a point where sense and rationality no longer prevails, and democracy itself, that fairest social system, might no longer be able to see right from wrong. The opium of the masses, as Karl Marx called it, is finally taking over the sanity of a democracy. If a majority in a democracy are disillusioned, I wonder what keeps a democracy from self-destruction? The economic prosperity that India now enjoys is a great opportunity to keep religious and other extreme influences in check by clearly communicating to the masses the true reasons for this economic upturn; this upturn is in spite of the religious fervor gripping the country, not because of it.

Coming back to the topic on hand, I think the media is best equipped to extricate the population from such extremes and let some sense prevail. Sports is a great leveler and is one of the best ways to bring a nation together. The media has a huge role it can play to help kids play in their free time, rather than watch soap operas and immerse themselves in religious discourses. Here is a snippet from an email I wrote on this topic to some of my family members.

“Media, especially television, has a tremendous control over the nation’s psyche. Media can make or break national opinions. The current fascination with game shows, song-and-dance competitions or soap operas is by and large a media created state of mass-hypnosis. The same power of the media can get people to start appreciating the importance of physical exercise and sport. More importantly, it can be an enabler for pulling in interest and, therefore, money into regional and national sporting events. An example is the recent city-based cricket leagues. An entire industry, a multi-billion dollar enterprise, can be built around sports in India. It is an largely untapped market. Doordarshan’s depressing, half-hearted, monopolistic attempts at covering sporting events in India makes people even more reluctant to try sports professionally. Sports is real-life drama and entertainment. It needs professionally trained media-men to bring out that drama on screen. Once that excitement, that tension, and the drama can be conveyed, the audience will pay attention. This might require bringing out the personal backgrounds of the players, their histories, their stories of hardships and determination to the people. Once people are latched, competition increases both in the sport and the coverage of the sport. The advertising revenue starts to flow in. With money flowing in, there is a feed back effect. More people want to take part in sports, more people want to watch sports, more people want to cover sports and make money. For example, why do we prefer Harsha Bhogle to Sanjay Manjrekar in the cricket commentator’s box, and why do we prefer Star Sports to Doordarshan for sports coverage? Quality. People can perceive quality differences. Similarly, why is Praveen Kumar, the cricketer, evoke national interest? Because of his background as a wrestler from a small town. These small-town heroes are the media pets. They help catch the public’s fancy. “If it can be him…it can be me!”, they aspire.

In India, shooting, archery, wrestling, boxing are relatively easy to make popular. The sports persons have to be cast into media demi-gods… only then will people know their names and their existence, let alone pay much attention. When the drama of sports is discovered and conveyed by the media to the audiences, even shooting can be made into a heart-racing, edge-of-the-seat thriller.”

One thing that I should clarify is “Why should children play sports - a rather mundane, pointless exercise?”, “Why is winning medals at the Olympics that important?”, “Why not let the entire nation, instead, spend all their energy and time learning their place in God’s scheme of things?”. The answer, I think, is because they will discover their God, their place in the scheme of things, their goals, better, by participating in sports and playing their heart out, than by cracking coconuts, lighting agarbattis, exchanging bananas or watching TV.

Posted in Experiences, Friends, Information | 1 Comment »

Comments on my older webpage

May 20th, 2008 admin

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Vijay Vadali: Akka told my friends and me about your website.”You have made imagination turn real”. Some of my friends are so inspired by the pics of your house that they now are drawing inspiration. Wonderful pictures.

Anil’s Response: Thank you (also for bringing to my notice the problems with the previous guestbook)

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Venkat Moncompu: Hi Anil, It’s by far the most well created website by a working individual that I have come across in the recent times. The pains taken to keep it chronologically and meticulously organised, speaks for the enthusiasm and effort that does go into such an excellent website. One of your picture - that of the cyclist in motion - fascinated me since I’v been always wanting to take one such picture at high shutter speed. Have read about the techniques in photography books but never tried it. Looking forward to meeting you in early october.. till then. cheers, Venkat

Anil’s Response: I’ll tell you more about how to take such pics the next time we meet which I suppose would be this April!

December 22, 2004 - 08:22 PM

Saurabh Mishra: Awesome job anil!! Very well organized and excellent collection of poems, pics, thoughts and just everything else. Keep up the good work. Best wishes to you and Kavita for the wedding. -Saurabh

Anil’s Response: Thank you

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Prashant Kaushal Hi Anil, Congratulations for maintainig such a wonderful site. Good Job!. Also, CK’s pictures were great. Cheers, Prashant.

Anil’s Response: Thank you, CK’s pictures are usually great!

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Meenakshi Chandrasekar: anil!! ur poems are awesome!!the website on the whole is great! meenu

Anil’s Response: Thank you Meenu. Keep in touch!

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Giridhar Appaji Nag: Anil, surfed over here from Samya’s site. Good to read your poems again.

Anil’s Response: Thank you and your webpage inspires me. Good stuff.

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Babji Gudapati: Good work Anil. Keep it up. Picures are very good and your sketch work is excellent.

Anil’s Response: Thank you for your kind words!

March 22, 2005 - 08:22 PM

Amit Juneja: Great website, Anil. It was nice to put the tips for parents’ visit to the US. Of course, great sketches and paintings. And what is mango dal? Next time we meet, you are cooking this for us!

Anil’s Response: Most certainly we shall make mango dal the next time we meet!

Anil Krishna: The guestbook items posted March 22, 2005 are actually collected over a period of about a year or so prior to that date. The reason they all show up on the same date in this guestbook is because I moved these entries from my previous guestbook which did not have the date information

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Whaatay Wondraful!!

June 1st, 2007 admin

The old joke goes, “Are you ready?”. “No, I am Zail Singh.”. Zail Singh, a former President of India, misinteprets the question to mean “Are you Reddy?”, where Reddy refers to Neelam Sanjiva Reddy, the President of India prior to Zail Singh’s term. In any case, here, though Reddy was not part of a joke, he was responsible for keeping the jokes coming along at a fast clip thoughout the weekend. Sandeep Reddy’s non-stop nonsense, off-the-cuff lines kept us all in good spirits. His “Whaatay wondraful!” or “What it is?” or “No way! Jose.” or the dozens of other mimicry/impersonations of popular phrases were inimitable. Nandu’s “Let’s make a U-turn”, “Let’s all calm down” and his forays into telegu literature (restricted to “Aithey?”, “Ouna?”, “Yenti?” etc, through sheer self-control), or my “Have a happy” also come to mind as other quotes that were overheard during the trip.

Memorial Day weekend, 2007, was May 26th , 27th and 28th. Kavita and I left Raleigh on Friday evening, May 25th, and reached Cincinnati at 9:30 PM. Sandeep and Gayatri picked us up while Nandu and Shalini picked up the 7-seater, Hyundai Entourage, which we were to use for our trip to Gatlinburg the next morning. The occasion was the yearly reunion that Mili organizes and this year we had 20 members participating. Mili and Sandeep live in Florence, Kentucky and people (related or otherwise, like us) converged onto Florence from places as varied as California(Nandu and Gayatri), Chicago(Kavita akka, Kanth uncle, Shalini, Ashwini, Kavita akka’s brother Karthik and Kavita akka’s parents), Anderson, Indiana(Uma auntie, Guna Uncle, Deepak and Guna uncle’s sister), Kansas City(Varun, Sushant and Prasanna) and Raleigh(Anil and Kavita). The influx went on until 4:30 AM on Saturday. The venue of this gathering changes every year and this time it was decided that after initially coverging at Florence, the group would head to Gatlinburg, Tennessee, which is at the northern foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains.

Friday night, when we got home, dinner preperations were going on, although mostly done - Grilled vegetables on skewers, barbeque chicken, vegetable biryani, Raita, bottle Gourd curry and Sandeep’s ‘hit’ dessert made from Marie biscuits stacked together side by side with cocoa and cream sealing them together. After the wonderful dinner, our hostess, Mili, clarified what everyone’s sleeping arrangements were, and everyone prepared to get some sleep, although I hear from Kavita that they were talking deep into the night.

We left at 7:30 AM on Saturday in 4 cars, after a thankfully brief discussion of whether to fit 20 people into 3 cars and save both gas (which is hovering around $3 a gallon) and the communication/co-ordination overhead, or, to take 4 cars and pay the extra price but get some flexibility with space in the cars. We wisely decided on the latter. 7:30 AM was surprisingly nimble-footed for a group with the inertia that 20 people generate. Mili, Uma auntie, Kavita akka and her mom took care of the kitchen activities with utmost efficiency. Throughout the trip they made sure we all got our morning teas or coffees, breakfast, lunches and dinners. In whatever was prepared in the kitchen, there was usually a range of choices, no repeats, and everything was prepared with gusto, speed and expertise.

In our car (a 7-seater van to be more accurate) were Sandeep and Mili, Nandu and Gayatri, Kavita and I, and 11 year old Shalini, aka Shalu or Leany. The drive, both during the onward and return journies was smooth sailing except in the vicinity of Gatlinburg. Sandeep’s Garmin, his portable GPS (Global Positioning System), would show exemplary patience, calculating and recalculating routes for us even when we missed innumerable exits and turns. Enchanted by the patient, sagely, mastery of the roads, Sandeep referred to “her” as his girlfriend, Garmin Electra. (By the way, there is a real actor by the name Carmen Electra.) However, by the time we got to our cabin, the relationship was a disaster. Sandeep lost his faith in Garmin Electra’s sense of direction and “patience being a virtue” notwithstanding, conceded that she took us for a ride towards the end. After countless U-turns on steep, hilly roads, we somehow got to our lodge two hours behind schedule. The U-turns were lent an added dimension of thrill because there were three other vehicles in tow and the ‘leader’, me in this case, had to keep them in mind when making any U-turn decisions or pull-over decisions.

The lodge at “Gatlinburg Hills” resort was a full-fledged, all-furnished house with 4 bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen, 3.5 bathrooms, 3 balconies with rocking chairs and one with a hot tub where Shalini and Ashwini had a great time and an entire floor devoted to the entertainment/game room with a pool table, a video-game machine, an air-hockey table, a big screen TV, a long L-shaped couch and a 2-storey bunk-bed. On Saturday, after reaching the lodge, we mainly relaxed. We had an early, yet sumptuous, dinner, which mainly Kavita akka and Uma auntie expressly prepared. Dinner included sambar, rasam, curd-rice, egg-curry etc. Later we enjoyed a short walk downhill to the rental office for the luxury homes, came back and played a lot of games in the game room. Eventually, everyone retired for a night of well-deserved sleep. I slept on the lower level of the bunk bed in the game-room.

On Sunday, we woke up a little late to make up for the lack of sleep everyone subjected themselves to the previous night, thanks to the excitement of seeing old and new faces. The checkout time was 10 AM, so we all got ready and had a wonderful breakfast of scrambled eggs, tea or coffee, and upma. Once we were all ready, packed and loaded, and after we completed a final inspection of the lodge to make sure we were leaving it in good shape, we checked out of it on time. Then we drove towards Clingman’s Dome. We stopped along the way at several lookout points as our cars began the climb into the hills. There was a beautiful creek that the road was never too far from, for a while, during the drive. We stopped and went up to the creek at one spot and took some pictures there. We took about an hour to reach the Clingman’s Dome parking area, from where a 20 minute hike took us to the highest point in the Smokies. The lookout tower on the Clingman’s Dome point had a long spiral ramp that allowed us to get to the lookout platform, which gave us a 360 degree view of the Smokies around us. The point is at a height of 6643 feet, the highest point in the Smokies and the second highest point in the US, east of the Mississippi river. Also, half the hill is in Tenessee and half in North Carolina. So in one way, Kavita and I went from North Carolina to Florence, Kentucky twice this weekend and came back twice this weekend. On the way back down to the parking lot from the Clingman’s Dome tower, Gaay suggested we take a hiking trail called the Appalachian Trail, instead of walking down the same paved path that we came up on. Some of us were up to it and took the trail, the others, especially elders and children, went down the regular paved path. Many of us taking the trail were not sure it would eventually get us back to the parking lot, but gauging Gaay’s confidence, decided to be obedient followers. After Clingman’s Dome we drove down to downtown Gatlinburg where we took the “Sky Lift” (chairlift) trip up a different hill. With our feet dangling in the air, and the landscape we crossed including a large creek, it was a fun ride. Sandeep and Mili in the chair in front and Nandu in the chair behind our’s (Kavita and mine) kept us good company. Kavita was semi-petrified, clung on the the chair and refused to turn around when Nandu wanted to take a picture.

The return drive, for the most part, was uneventful. We did spend a lot of time getting out of Gatlinburg because Garmin Electra was still confused and we did not have good maps. We were late enough that it did not make sense to try and return the car the same day and pay late charges. So, Sandeep called Hertz and extended the rental by a day for the same daily rate ($71, I think). Nandu and I shared the driving while Sandeep navigated. Kavita and Gaay’s murmuring could be only faintly overheard as it deflected the beautiful strummings of Simon and Garfunkel, whose music we played.

Monday was a relaxed day. The families/groups left one by one. Nandu took care of the rental and the gas for the van throughout the rental. Sandeep took care of paying for the lodge, the groceries etc. Kanth Uncle had paid for the Sky Lift tickets. Monday morning we decided to let Sandeep get back to all of us with the expense report and payment options later. Overall, in spite of the the minor driving direction fiascos, rental extension etc., it was a good break from work and life. I had semi-voluntarily (upon Kavita’s request) decided to not carry my laptop during this trip. My cell phone decided to use the opportunity and die on Friday evening. So I was disconnected from the rest of the world in more ways than one. A few minutes of checking email and cricket score on Kanth uncle’s laptop, Sunday night, were my only contact with the outside world. As we await the flight to Raleigh, to start boarding at Gate C3, at Charlotte’s Douglas International Airport, I look back at the last few days as a happy experience where I met lots of wonderful people, saw a beautiful part of the country, relaxed and refreshed myself for summer 2007. Next year’s meet might be in San Francisco, Yellow Stone National Park or Raleigh. Nandu, of course, wants an advance notice in case it is in SFO, so that he can make other arrangements and sneak out before the troops show up.

Anil Krishna
May 28th, 2007

Pictures from this trip are here

Posted in Experiences, Friends, Travel | 1 Comment »

Visiting the Somanis

May 21st, 2007 admin

It is Sunday evening, May 20th, 2007. Kavita and I are currently driving back home to Cary, North Carolina, after a weekend with Sandeep and Anu Somani in Maryland, and Tarun and Sarmishtha Pruthi, who drove down from Cleveland. The main motivation for the trip was Tarun’s commencement ceremony at University of Maryland, College Park, which drew the Pruthis down. We wanted to use this opportunity to meet with them all, and so we drove up from Cary to Columbia, Maryland. Kavita’s Pontiac Vibe has a 100W, 110V power outlet built into the dashboard, which makes it easy for me to use this time, sitting in the passengers’ seat, to recollect or form my thoughts about the last few days, type them out on my laptop, free from any concerns about the battery in my octogenarian (in computer years) laptop running out.

The weekend with friends was relaxing and enjoyable thanks especially to some excellent, yet almost unnoticed work by our hostess, Anu. Kavita and I reached Friday night around 11:30 PM, stifling away yawns the entire second half of the 5-hour drive. It had been a long day for both of us. I had several long drives that day even before embarking on the one to Maryland - drive to work, then to NC State to meet Dr. Gehringer, and finally to UNC to pick up Kavita. A few minutes after we reached, Tarun and Sarmishtha reached the Somani residence. Seeing them all, the aches and sleepiness of the journey, and the entire day, slowly evaporated. The night returned more than the lost evening hours, turning younger, refueling our energies. The chatter of catching-up cheerfully filled the air. The night, with wives’ reporting on their newly discovered traits of their respective husbands to each other, and the husbands, selectively reflective, selectively opaque, enjoying the harmless jabs, drifted on until about 4:30 AM. Even then, in that state between sleep and waking, as practical considerations of plans for the next morning waged small battles in every mind with the anticipatory urge to spend just a few more minutes to relate one more story, it was hard to notice, let alone resist, the soothing and welcoming shoulder of sleep. Through individual failings or general consensus, sleep, deemed inescapable, was respectfully accepted.

The highlights of Saturday were the ladies going out together for pedicures, manicures, facials and other such maintenance procedures, apparently required for continued warranty coverage, the men breakfasting at the Double T Diner and, later, discovering new muscles in their body after playing squash in a racquetball court (the discovery followed the play by a few hours for took that long for the soreness to set in), a wonderful lunch of exquisitely decorated dahi-vadas, black gram curry, jeera (cumin-seed) rice, poppadams (rice crisps) and almond pudding thanks to Anu, and, an evening visit to downtown Washington DC, where after enjoying a stroll through Dupont Circle, Claude’s photo shop, a couple of coffee shops and swinging to street jazz, Dr. Tarun Pruthi treated us all to dinner at Taberna Del Alabardero, celebrating the completion of his PhD. Earlier, during the day, Sandeep and I also planned to go to see the famous Preakness horse race. We eventually gave up after a call to the racecourse informed us that only General Admission tickets were available, were $25, and would only allow us to see the horses on monitors.

The first highlight of Sunday was a trip to an IHOP (International House of Pancakes) near College Park, for breakfast, where exceptionally long lines and unavailability of a table in spite of making a reservation, forced Sandeep to generate a brain wave, suggesting we go to a nearby Hindu temple, where we could also eat. Manish Saxena (Mau) and his wife, Archana, also joined us at IHOP. We all headed to the temple, had “darshan” followed by lunch. We did start out with breakfast in mind, but settled on using a more appropriate name for the eating performed at the temple, with a sincere regard for time. The second highlight of Sunday was a visit to IKEA, the Scandinavian furniture/home-furnishings store, which due to its sparse locations across the country, and due to its cheap, yet good decoration ideas and furniture, is often on our list of places to visit when in the Baltimore area. In the morning, Tarun had to also, in parallel to the activities of the others, exchange his convocation gown because Sandeep, who was supposed to pick up the gown and cap for Tarun, mistakenly reported Tarun to be 5 foot 10 inches in height. The gown Sandeep picked, therefore, did not fit the 5 foot 7 inches frame of Tarun’s when he eventually tried it, although, interestingly enough, the cap fit perfectly. We attributed Tarun’s PhD to his disproportionately bigger head. He did manage to get a correct-fitting gown today. Tarun and Sarmishtha headed out for the convocation ceremony by around 6 PM, and Kavita and I, started our return journey around the same time.

Of course, Anu, starting Friday night itself, prepared or arranged for tea and snacks or other beverages for all of us, at regular intervals. Everyone was quite appreciative of my photography experiments using my Canon Rebel XT, and everyone was quite content to let me click around as they played scrabble, or sipped their drinks, or generally displayed a range of natural emotions. I, in my role as a cameraman, was ignored, and I was thankful for it, just as I am currently, in my role as a writer.

The sun is setting to my right, as we hurtle down I-95. Tomorrow is another day, in another week, in another May, of another few lives. Not a big deal, this weekend, nothing to write back home about, but then, I did think it was special in its own circumstance, in its unplanned, uneventful, unsurprising way. I did decide to write about it.

Anil Krishna
May 20, 2007

Pictures from this trip are here

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CK’s trip and a Dosa Quickfix

December 19th, 2004 admin

CK, my friend from IIT Guwahati (undergrad) was in the US for a couple of weeks. Knoxville, Tennessee was where Philips Software Center, Bangalore, India, wanted him to be. He came over to see me the weekend of 11th and 12th December. It was a fun trip all in all. You can check out some of the pictures in the photographs section . When CK was here I was still perfecting the art of the instant dosa and let him be a benefactor of my evil experiments. Follow the link the read more about this dosa.

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