Monday, October 27, 2008

Four Days in Hyderabad

A good meal begins with expectation, continues with gratification, and ends with satisfaction.

When it comes to food, Hyderabad is vibrant, innovative and open to gastronomic ideas. It is a city of appetite. A four day restaurant crawl across the city is just not enough to savor the Hyderabadi/Andhra cuisine. There will always be uneaten meals, restaurants unvisited and foods untried.

Friday 10/10 - Chutney's -Chiranjeevi Dosa, Babai Idli, Filter coffee; Angeethi - Roti, Biryani, Karela and Cashew Curry; Paradise - Veg. Biryani, Qubani ka Meetha; Irani Chai, Tie Biscuit at Blue Sea Cafe

Saturday 11/10 - Chutney's -Guntur Idli, MLA Pesarattu; Annapoorna Andhra Mess- Andhra Thali-Gonugura Chutney, Tomato Pappu, Bangaladumpa Veypudi, Aratikayala Kura

Sunday 12/10 - Upma at Home; Mutton Biryani, Sheer Korma at Cafe Bahar; Chai, Osmania Biscuit at Blue Sea; Rayalaseema Thali with Ragi Sangati at Rayalaseema Ruchulu

Monday 13/10 - Kamat, Secunderabad - Rava Idli, Masala Dosa, Filter coffee; Gujju Thali at Gujarati Bhojanalay; Falooda at Shadab; Andhra Thali at Abhiruchi, Chai, Samosa at Hilton Cafe

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Clockwatchers

"I used to work in a bank. There was this button on the desk and I kept looking at it every day for a month, and finally I just pushed it... it was the alarm. They never tell you anything because they're afraid you'll take their stupid jobs." - A dialogue from the film, Clockwatchers(1998).

The experience of being underloaded, of too little responsibility and work is more stressful than being overloaded. If you are overloaded, atleast you feel needed and useful, even if you are overworked, overwhelmed and exhausted. We all have a choice between tolerating the routine ("being a clock watcher"), or standing up and making a change.

Most of us start our careers with lofty ambitions but do we eventually become what we despise the most? Do we all become clockwatchers and architects of our own petty domains and self-important delusions?

Monday, October 13, 2008

Doing a favour to Google

Blogs are the saviours for search engines, as without them the likes of Google would have very little fresh content to index, other than brand new sites which are few and far between.
As someone who belives in Google's credo of doing no evil, i wanted to contribute some content to the blog today.
I did not want to write about the financial crisis because a vast patch in the amazon forests have already disappaeared in analysing the debacle. I did not want to write about Saurav Ganguly's retirement as he will contradict anything he says or does the very next day. I did not want to write on when Sachin will cross Brian Lara's record, as at this rate it will be next year(if he is still around).I did not want to write on the anguish of allowing Ponting to make a century in the first test of the tour as visitors are gods for us and we have a history of redeeming visiting batsmen(remember the resurgence of Matt Hayden?). I did not want to write on the Telugu movie i saw yesterday, as you have to make fun of it to keep from getting angry, I mean really angry. I did not want to write on Lewis Hamilton's disastorous outing in the Japan GP, as he is again messing up his chances to win the championship. I did not want to write on Chinese manufacturing beacuse if they are not manufacturing kids' toys with lead paint or contaminating pet food, they are mixing toxins in toothpaste and milk.
Now that i have put in lot of indexable words in this post, i will stop the rant!

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Are counter offers counter productive?

"The best way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it"- Oscar Wilde

The rationale and resolution of resigning takes a pounding for most people just as a revised compensation package is put on the table. The temptation to continue in a familiar work environment is very strong and many succumb to it.

The moment an employee resigns, if the management needs her/him, they will immediately flatter the employee with:

"We need you" (Until you serve your purpose and we find a replacement).
"You can't do this to us at this time." (You have to feel guilty about leaving)
"We never knew you were unhappy." (We don't care about a employee feedback system)
"We're sorry for the current state but you're too valuable, and we need you" (Of course they're sorry. You're about to leave on your terms, not theirs.)
"We were just about to give you a promotion/raise, and it was confidential until now".( You were'nt worth it till now. We were holding out the promotion till you want to leave, we have saved money till now)
"The big boss wants to meet with you before you make your final decision"(You were invisible to us till yesterday, but as we need to fill your vacany with an expense, the boss will try to save the expense)

The downtrends of accepting a counteroffer are that :

Instantly ruin all credibility with your new employer - he'll never give you another chance; the word will get around, and you'll come off looking like a gold-digger rather than a good employee;

Your present employer will no longer trust you; and you may wonder why you had to go to the point of resignation to get what they now think you're worth.

You can perhaps imagine a counter-offer so enormous that you'd be nuts to turn it down - but there will always be a catch.

Is it better to stay the chosen course?

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

Andalucian idle and the Malaga magic

I have learned that sales can be fun, except at the end of the year, the end of the half year, the end of the quarter, and sometimes the end of the month when you need to reach your quota. This is when your destiny is controlled by Gods, aka customers, who may or may not opt to buy your stuff at fire sale prices. Or, when management makes decisions that take success out of your hands, but places the blame securely in your lap. After the hullabaloo at the end of the year, you look forward to the annual company meetings which promise those free trips to lush tropical resorts, exclusive country clubs, and five-star restaurants. It is also the time that the bean counters enforce all standards of frugality and forces you to travel in cattle class and share rooms.

The smarter among the salespeople have realized that there are many legitimate ways of funding your personal life - to admittedly a small degree - through your business life, like planning a vacation to coincide with your travel to the annual company meeting. This time around, five of us decided to make a visit to Spain. But due to some irrational exuberance, two of the group missed getting the Visa on time and rest of us made the visit. At the outset, there was no intention of making a quixotic tour, but it ended like one.


I expected Spain's Malaga to be a tacky town, brimming over with charter flight tourists on their way to the Costa del Sol, avoided by anyone with an allergy to resort towns. But I found none of the package tourists looking for bacon and egg breakfasts and instead a solid Spanish crowd eating croissant and drinking coffee as they stood at bars late each morning. It seems tourists give AndalucĂ­a’s charming city not a second glance before heading to the horribly crowded beaches of the Costa del Sol.

But it is gorgeous location to happily spend a week, a month, eating tapas and drinking wine, or shopping for bread, cheese and vegetables at the huge indoor market to picnic in a lush park, with friends and a two Euro bottle of sangria. It would take that long for anyone to learn to navigate the winding cobblestone laid old streets, which luckily all seem to lead, in the end, to the main plaza. And to be able to find the Picasso museum - testament to Malaga's famous son - whenever you like, rather than because chance leads you to it.

The Moors occupied Malaga until the mid fifteenth century and have left their mark on the city's historic centre and its 10th century fortress, La Alcazaba. After the Moors, the city became one of the biggest trading centres on the european peninsula. Now Malaga is a charming hybrid of old and new, a shopper's dream as well as an historian's. We submerged ourselves in the streets and the gorgeous markets, which are a food lover's fantasy, overflowing with olives, meats, cheeses and breads, tapas bars and vegetable vendors.

All through Andalusia and especially in sleepy villages like Mijas, we walked hours every day until we began to recognize corners, streets and plazas, knew where to get the best coffee and veg sandwiches, and had been ripped off by street side hawkers.

Our road journey took us inland to Ronda and Granada, where we stopped roadside in golden fields watching others eat delights like calamari and avocados, while we stuffed ourselves with bottle after bottle of mineral water and sandwiches. Ronda is layered with history, with monuments of Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance periods, as well as the impressive neo-classical Plaza de Toros, which is one of the oldest bullrings in Spain. Ronda's bullring is said to be the birthplace of the school of bullfighting on foot (Matadors) rather than horseback (Picadors).
If Ronda and Granada mesmerized us with magnificent manmade structures, the caves of Nerja wore testimony to the fact that nature is the best architect of all. It was as if clothes of rock were folded and stuck to the ceiling. It was truly amazing to be in a place which has been formed over 225 million years. To be reminded of being a speck in the universe is always humbling and gratifying too.

In the land of Don Quixote, you cannot help but follow the legend. On the last day of the sojourn, on a whim, we decide to go the rock of Gibraltar. Till that quixotic moment, we had followed a meticulous plan and the trip was a breeze. We knew that it was in a different administrative territory and our visa did not allow us to enter. However we decided to take a chance and reach there. Things just got better when one of us even forgot to bring the passport along. We entered Gibraltar, without anyone checking our credentials and spent 4 hours exploring the rock and the town. It was heartening to see the city center market full of Indian businessmen and bore testimony to their acumen, ambition and drive. On our way out of Gibraltar, we were told that we cannot reenter Schengen as we had only a single entry visa. But, as the officials were embarrassed and flummoxed by their slip of letting us in, they let us go after we assured that they we were flying out of Spain the same evening.

There are days in your life which you want to package and relive, day after day, exactly the same way. The vacation in Spain merited it, though we were feeling the withdrawal symptoms of being away from work. We returned back utterly glad for the AndalucĂ­an idle and the Malaga magic.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

The Chinese Spectacle

The Summer Olympics got off to a start with a breathtaking and spectacular opening ceremony choreographed by Chinese Director Zhang Yimou. Zhang is known for movies like Raise the Red Lantern, Story of Qiu Ju and the recent blockbuster Curse of the Golden Flower. The opening ceremony was full with deeply symbolic elements of the Chinese culture and history. It was a gigantic task to distill 5000 years of Chinese culture and present it in 50 minutes with such aplomb.

I was left wondering how the Olympic rings were created out of thin air?

After all the controversy that the Olympic torch attracted, I was curious on how the cauldron will be lit. Chinese gymnastics legend Li Ning was hoisted by steel cables from the floor to just below the stadium's rim, where he ran a lap around the crest of the Bird's Nest, then lit the Olympic cauldron.

This was remarkable enough, but fell short of astonishing sight in the Barcelona Olympics where Paralympic games archer Antonio Rebollo lit the Olympic flame by shooting an arrow over the cauldron. The fact that Antonio is blind elevated the spectacle to a whole new level, which is arduous to match.

Sunday, August 3, 2008

Childhood Dreams

Have you really achieved your childhood dreams or are you among the vast majority of people who just swim through life and take it as it comes? Is fulfillment of dreams essential to give a meaning to life or do you have a nihilist approach to life?

Last week saw the passing away of Randy Pausch, a computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon. Randy gave his phenomenal ‘Last Lecture’ at CMU after he was diagnosed with terminal cancer. The lecture he gave-‘Really achieving Childhood Dreams’ combines humour, intelligence and inspiration. It is about overcoming obstacles, enabling dreams of others and seizing every moment. If you have not heard the lecture, do watch it on YouTube at http://in.youtube.com/watch?v=ji5_MqicxSo&feature=related

‘We cannot change the cards we are dealt, just how we play the hand’ – Randy Pausch