Sunday, August 1, 2021

Win at Work and Succeed in Life

Key Takeaways:

  • Work is only one of many ways to orient your life, and you can define what winning at work and succeeding at life looks like for you;
  • Constraints foster productivity, creativity, and freedom, and you can constrain your workday;
  • Work-life balance is not a myth, and you can schedule what truly matters to you and those people most important to you;
  • There’s incredible power in nonachievement, and you can maintain nonwork activities that delight and rejuvenate you; and
  • Rest is the foundation of meaningful, productive work, and you can begin each day with a good night’s sleep.

1. Work is only one of the many ways to orient your life:

  • Many of us fall for Hustle Fallacy: We think if we just crank a little harder, we can push past all the pressure. The demands keep mounting, and we try running faster still. We hope to catch up—maybe even get ahead—if we just work smarter and master personal productivity. But no matter what we do, the obligations outpace our hustle.
  • Opposite of Hustle Fallacy is Ambition Brake: Stress and crazy hours no longer crush our health or personal life, but unfulfilled professional dreams and ambitions could just as well crush our souls.
  • What is Cult Of Overwork:
    - work provides the primary orientation for life;
    - constraints stifle productivity
    - work-life balance is a myth;
    - a person should always be busy; and
    - rest wastes time that could otherwise go to work.
  • Technology was supposed to free us from overwork, not saddle us with more. They predicted automation would provide us gobs of free time. In 1930, for instance, economist John Maynard Keynes said we’d only need to work fifteen hours a week. “Three hours a day is quite enough to satisfy the old Adam in most of us,” he said.
  • Keynes's prediction holds true for manual labor but not true for knowledge workers, executives, managers, creatives, and other professionals.
  • Work is only one of life's many domains:

  • The three non-negotiables:

  • DEFINE YOUR OWN DOUBLE WIN:
    You have a choice. You can either live on purpose, according to the plan you’ve set. Or you can live by accident, reacting to the demands of others. The first approach is proactive; the second is reactive.
    - The process begins by admitting we’re not Superman. We don’t have a cape. We can’t face insurmountable odds and accomplish everything that comes our way. Since it’s impossible to do everything, we can’t make doing everything our definition of success. It’s important for us to stop and clarify the kind of success we’re after.
    - When you define the win at work, consider these questions:
      
    • What’s my unique contribution?
    • What are the things that only I can do?
    • Which of my activities drive the biggest results?
    • Where do my skills and abilities best match my passions and interests?
    • Where do I want to be in my career three years from now?

    - When you define the win at home, consider these starter questions:

    • How do I want to be remembered by the people who matter the most to me?
    • What steps can I take to ensure proper self-care and good health?
    • In what ways can I invest in my marriage to help it thrive?
    • Where can I invest my time to make the people I love feel loved by me?

2. Constrain Your Workday:

  • Start and stop of the workday are essential
  • We need to give time to Non-achievement and rest apart from the achievement.
  • Try to strike a good balance.
  • Warren Buffett says, “The difference between successful people and really successful people is that really successful people say ‘no’ to almost everything.
  • Work and life operate as a symbiotic whole. Work gives you confidence, joy, and financial provision to bring home, and investing in your health, hobbies, and home life nurtures a clear mind and rested body to bring to work.
  • Constraint enable:
    - FOCUS
    - CREATIVITY 
    - PRODUCTIVITY
    - FREEDOM
  • Thinking, If I just work a little bit harder right now, we’ll get the payoff, the rest, the family time, the me time—whatever—later. But as we all discover sooner or later, there’s really no end to working. It’s easy to live in denial, thinking the extra hours will be temporary. But in the blink of an eye, three, five, and ten years slip by, and we’re still overworking while our life spins off another direction.
    The solution? Create hard edges around your workday, workweek, and weekend. You probably know Parkinson’s Law: “Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.” Well, here’s Hyatt’s Corollary: “Work contracts to the time permitted.”

3. Schedule what truly matters:

  • Plan an Ideal Week:
    Must include Non-negotiables
    - self-care
    - Relational priorities
    - Professional results
    We can also look at the ten life domains.
  • Preview the coming week:
    - Balance is much easier to manage when we rule out surprises
    - Previewing the work week with your partner at home and colleague or manager at the office
  • Schedule the specifics when you can:
    - Nature abhors a vacuum. So does work
    - So, plan your weekends as well.


4. Power Of Nonachievement:

      Hobbies and their benefits on the brain:
  • Exercise improves long-term memory, decreases the risk of dementia
  • Reading increases left temporal cortex brain connectivity
  • Learning a new language slows brain aging, improves later life cognition
  • Playing video games improves spatial navigation, strategic planning, motor performance
  • Playing a musical instrument enhances cognitive skills, verbal fluency, academic achievement
       Albert Einstein played violin, an instrument he taught himself. He sometimes played with Max Planck, who, when he wasn’t busy developing quantum theory, enjoyed playing the piano.

       The most productive thing you can do is to be unproductive from time to time. Your body and mind will be better rested. You’ll have more energy and better ideas. And you’ll probably enjoy life more as well.

        Nonachievement doesn’t necessarily mean you’re doing nothing at all. In all the cases we’ve seen, breakthrough ideas were a byproduct of being in a context where achievement wasn’t the driving force, where the mind was given free rein to wander, imagine, innovate, and dream. This is what we mean when we say there’s power in nonachievement.

       The problem with overworking is that we marginalize or utterly miss these periods of profitable pause, where we can put other parts of our minds and bodies to use, and thereby benefit from use of our whole person, instead of the aspect most focused on work.

       History, business case studies, and magazine profiles are replete with stories of innovations, solutions, products, even whole companies, born out of periods of nonachievement. And a surprising number of our Michael Hyatt & Co. clients have likewise experienced breakthrough innovations, solutions to complex problems, or complete career changes leading to a happier, healthier life once their ideas had a chance to percolate during a period of nonachievement.

       Strong connections exist between mind wandering and creative thinking, lateral problem solving, and generating unique ideas. “By encouraging our minds to wander, leisure activities pull us out of our present reality, which in turn can improve our ability to generate novel ideas or ways of thinking,” he says. “When we let our minds drift away from work, we return to our tasks capable of tackling them in more inventive creative ways

5. Rest:

“The rest time precedes the work time,” says Leithart. “And that gives us a clue for how we should think about sabbath and rest within our own lives. We’re not simply working toward rest.” It’s not that we work so we can earn time off, time to sleep. We work because we have slept because we are rested. “We’re working out of a sense of rest,” he says. “It keeps us from being frantic, it keeps us from workaholism because our work is done not scrambling so that we can get to the holiday. It’s done out of a rest that’s already achieved


Sunday, January 2, 2011


A year to remember..2010 marks the end of a decade..decade of our teenage lyf..many a dreams and aspirations of our childhood seem to be meeting dr ends..we experienced the various faces of lyf ..really thankful to 2010 for bringing us to such a level that we could dream of our bright future ahead...describing the changes it has bought in sort ..FroM,
aPoloGy LettEr to OffEr lettEr
Amateur RomAnCes to InFATuations
Hrs of DepreSSion to UnfOrgeTTaBle MoMenTs
DisCo(Discplinary Committee) to DJ's
4rm being Peon To SecReTary
UndesirabLe SorrOws To UnControllaBle HaPPiness
BunKing MeAls to OveRwhelmiNg TrEats
SleePleSS Nites to NeVerEndinG SwEEt ConVersAtions
Days Of IdlEneSs to HardShip DurinG InterNsHip
ThOSe revision DaYS to SkiPPing ModuleS With Guts
FrIends Turning Into MenTors
this list simply goes on....and on..
Just wish if we cud get another chance to relive those moments...
But 2011 comes with even greater promises..Hope all these learning takes us into a new heights...
WiSH All of U a VerY HAppY NeW YeAr 2011..!!!!!!!

Monday, August 30, 2010

Cool IT Challenge


The announcement of Apple’s iPad has been much anticipated by a world with an ever-increasing appetite for mobile computing devices as a way to connect, interact, learn and work... From their smart phones and netbooks, the crowd feverishly blogged and tweeted real time updates out to a curious world. Whether you actually want an iPad or not, there is no doubt that it is a harbinger of things to come. The iPad relies upon cloud-based computing to stream video, download music and books, and fetch email. Already, millions access the ‘cloud’ to make use of online social networks, watch streaming video, check email and create documents, and store thousands of digital photos online on popular web-hosted sites like Flickr and Picasa.

What is CLOUD……?
The term cloud, or cloud computing, used as a metaphor for the internet, is based on an infrastructure and business model whereby - rather than being stored on your own device - data, entertainment, news and other products and services are delivered to your device, in real time, from the internet. The creation of the cloud has been a boon both to the companies hosting it and to consumers who now need nothing but a personal computer and internet access to fulfil most of their computing needs.


Citing examples……..
Google is perhaps the most famous cloud-based company to demonstrate the potential of a cloud platform to drive a hugely successful business model. All of Google’s signature products - Gmail, Google Documents and Google Earth - are delivered from the cloud. The cloud is growing at a time when climate change and reducing emissions from energy use is of paramount concern. With the growth of the cloud, however, comes an increasing demand for energy. For all of this content to be delivered to us in real time, virtual mountains of video, pictures and other data must be stored somewhere and be available for almost instantaneous access. That ‘somewhere’ is data centres - massive storage facilities that consume incredible amounts of energy.

Facebook in January 2010 commissioned a new data centre in Oregon and committed to a power service provider agreement with PacificCorp, a utility that gets the majority of its energy from coal-fired power stations, the United States’ largest source of greenhouse gas emissions. Effectively becoming an industrial-scale consumer of electricity, Facebook now faces the same choices and challenges that other large ‘cloud-computing’ companies have in building their data centres. With a premium being placed on access to the cheapest electricity available on the grid. In many countries, this means dirty coal.

How big is the carbon footprint of the Information Technology and Communication sector (ICT)?
In 2008, The Climate Group and the Global e-Sustainability Initiative (GeSI) issued SMART 2020 in which it was found that:
• PC ownership will quadruple between 2007 and 2020 to 4 billion devices, and emissions ill double over the same period, with laptops overtaking desktops as the main source of global ICT emissions (22%).
Mobile phone ownership will almost double to nearly 5 billion accounts by 2020, but emissions will only grow by 4%. Broadband uptake will treble to almost 900 million accounts over the same period, with emissions doubling over the entire telecoms infrastructure.

Cloud Computing Growth….. WHY?
• Continued significant expansion of cloud-based computing despite economic downturn.
• Greater attention and growth in deployment of energy-efficient data centres design.
• Increased size and scale of data centres being built by major brands.

Key trends that will impact the environmental footprint of the cloud…..

Projected regional growth of data centres
Unless cloud data centres are strategically placed to utilise or be co-developed with renewable sources of electricity, the data centre operators are stuck with the same problem everybody has, and having to accept the mix of clean and dirty energy sources that the electric utilities rely upon to feed the grid.
Growth of energy-efficient data centres
More cloud-computing companies are pursuing design and siting strategies that can reduce the energy consumption of their data centres, primarily as a cost containment measure. For most companies, the environmental benefits of green data design are generally of secondary concern. Increasing the energy efficiency of its servers and reducing the energy footprint of the infrastructure of data centres are clearly to be commended.
Virtualization Technology
Virtualization dramatically improves the efficiency and availability of resources and applications of an organization. Technology like Virtual storage and Virtual server reduces capital costs by increasing energy efficiency and requiring less hardware and increasing your server to admin ratio.

Cool IT Campaign…… “Brown cloud or green cloud?”
Greenpeace’s Energy [R]evolution Scenario provides a practical blueprint for the worlds Renewable energy future. The ICT sector holds many of the keys to reaching our climate goals by innovating solutions to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions and increase energy efficiency by rapid deployment of renewable electricity generation economy-wide, and place greater R&D into storage devices that will deliver electricity from renewable sources 24/7. Technologies that enable smart grids, zero emissions buildings, and more efficient transport systems are central to efforts to combat climate change. The ICT sector’s abilities to lead and to innovate are the reasons Greenpeace began its Cool IT Campaign in 2009. The campaign uses direct company engagement (Companies like Facebook, Google, and other large players) and public engagement to provide pressure on the ICT industry to put forward solutions to achieve economy-wide greenhouse gas emissions reductions and to be strong advocates for policies that combat climate change and increase the use of renewable energy. .

I have always believed that IT is the engine of an efficient economy; it also can drive a greener oneMichael Dell, Forbes magazine

We cannot solve the world’s problems with the same thinking that created them…….Albert Einstein.

Let’s work together to transform these words into reality……

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Recession.....

These days the most talked about news is the current financial crisis that has engulfed the world economy. Every day the main headline of all newspapers is about our falling share markets, decreasing industrial growth and the overall negative mood of the economy. For many people an economic depression has already arrived whereas for some it is just round the corner. In my opinion the depression has already arrived and it has started showing its effect on India.
So what has caused this major economic upheaval in the world? What is the cause of falling share markets the world over and bankruptcy of major banks? In this article, I shall try to explain the reasons for recent economic depression for all those who find it difficult to understand the complex economics lingo and are looking for a simple explanation.
It all started in US…
In order to understand what is now happening in the world economy, we need to go a little back in past and understand what was happening in the housing sector of America for past many years. In US, a boom in the housing sector was driving the economy to a new level. A combination of low interest rates and large inflows of foreign funds helped to create easy credit conditions where it became quite easy for people to take home loans. As more and more people took home loans, the demands for property increased and fueled the home prices further. As there was enough money to lend to potential borrowers, the loan agencies started to widen their loan disbursement reach and relaxed the loan conditions.
The loan agents were asked to find more potential home buyers in lieu of huge bonus and incentives. Since it was a good time and property prices were soaring, the only aim of most lending institutions and mortgage firms was to give loans to as many potential customers as possible. Since almost everybody was driving by the greed factor during that housing boom period, the common sense practice of checking the customer’s repaying capacity was also ignored in many cases. As a result, many people with low income & bad credit history or those who come under the NINJA (No Income, No Job, No Assets) category were given housing loans in disregard to all principles of financial prudence. These types of loans were known as sub-prime loans as those were are not part of prime loan market (as the repaying capacity of the borrowers was doubtful).
Since the demands for homes were at an all time high, many homeowners used the increased property value to refinance their homes with lower interest rates and take out second mortgages against the added value (of home) to use the funds for consumer spending. The lending companies also lured the borrowers with attractive loan conditions where for an initial period the interest rates were low (known as adjustable rate mortgage (ARM). However, despite knowing that the interest rates would increase after an initial period, many sub-prime borrowers opted for them in the hope that as a result of soaring housing prices they would be able to quickly refinance at more favorable terms.
Bubble that burst…
However, as the saying goes, “No boom lasts forever”, the housing bubble was to burst eventually. Overbuilding of houses during the boom period finally led to a surplus inventory of homes, causing home prices to decline beginning from the summer of 2006. Once housing prices started depreciating in many parts of the U.S., refinancing became more difficult. Home owners, who were expecting to get a refinance on the basis of increased home prices, found themselves unable to re-finance and began to default on loans as their loans reset to higher interest rates and payment amounts.
In the US, an estimated 8.8 million homeowners - nearly 10.8% of total homeowners - had zero or negative equity as of March 2008, meaning their homes are worth less than their mortgage. This provided an incentive to “walk away” from the home than to pay the mortgage.

Foreclosures ( i.e. the legal proceedings initiated by a creditor to repossess the property for loan that is in default ) accelerated in the United States in late 2006. During 2007, nearly 1.3 million U.S. housing properties were subject to foreclosure activity. Increasing foreclosure rates and unwillingness of many homeowners to sell their homes at reduced market prices significantly increased the supply of housing inventory available. Sales volume (units) of new homes dropped by 26.4% in 2007 as compare to 2006. Further, a record nearly four million unsold existing homes were for sale including nearly 2.9 million that were vacant. This excess supply of home inventory placed significant downward pressure on prices. As prices declined, more homeowners were at risk of default and foreclosure.
Now you must be wondering how this housing boom and its subsequent decline is related to current economic depression? After all it appears to be a local problem of America.
What complicated the matter?…
Unfortunately, this problem was not as straightforward as it appears. Had it remained a matter between the lenders (who disbursed risky loans) and unreliable borrowers (who took loans and then got defaulted) then probably it would remain a local problem of America. However, this was not the case. Let us understand what complicated the problem.
For original lenders these subprime loans were very lucrative part of their investment portfolio as they were expected to yield a very high return in view of the increasing home prices. Since, the interest rate charged on subprime loans was about 2% higher than the interest on prime loans (owing to their risky nature); lenders were confidant that they would get a handsome return on their investment. In case a sub-prime borrower continued to pay his loans installment, the lender would get higher interest on the loans. And in case a sub-prime borrower could not pay his loan and defaulted, the lender would have the option to sell his home (on a high market price) and recovered his loan amount. In both the situations the Sub-prime loans were excellent investment options as long as the housing market was booming. Just at this point, the things started complicating.
With stock markets booming and the system flush with liquidity, many big fund investors like hedge funds and mutual funds saw subprime loan portfolios as attractive investment opportunities. Hence, they bought such portfolios from the original lenders. This in turn meant the lenders had fresh funds to lend. The subprime loan market thus became a fast growing segment. Major (American and European) investment banks and institutions heavily bought these loans (known as Mortgage Backed Securities, MBS) to diversify their investment portfolios. Most of these loans were brought as parts of CDOs (Collateralized Debt Obligations). CDOs are just like mutual funds with two significant differences. First unlike mutual funds, in CDOs all investors do not assume the risk equally and each participatory group has different risk profiles. Secondly, in contrast to mutual funds which normally buy shares and bonds, CDOs usually buy securities that are backed by loans (just like the MBS of subprime loans.)
Owing to heavy buying of Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS) of subprime loans by major American and European Banks, the problem, which was to remain within the confines of US propagated into the word’s financial markets. Ideally, the MBS were a very attractive option as long as home prices were soaring in US. However, when the home prices started declining, the attractive investments in Subprime loans become risky and unprofitable.
As the home prices started declining in the US, sub-prime borrowers found themselves in a messy situation. Their house prices were decreasing and the loan interest on these houses was soaring. As they could not manage a second mortgage on their home, it became very difficult for them to pay the higher interest rate. As a result many of them opted to default on their home loans and vacated the house. However, as the home prices were falling rapidly, the lending companies, which were hoping to sell them and recover the loan amount, found them in a situation where loan amount exceeded the total cost of the house. Eventually, there remained no option but to write off losses on these loans.
The problem got worsened as the Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS), which by that time had become parts of CDOs of giant investments banks of US & Europe, lost their value. Falling prices of CDOs dented banks’ investment portfolios and these losses destroyed banks’ capital. The complexity of these instruments and their wide spread to major International banks created a situation where no one was too sure either about how big these losses were or which banks had been hit the hardest.
Mayhem in the banks….
The effects of these losses were huge. Global banks and brokerages have had to write off an estimated $512 billion in subprime losses so far, with the largest hits taken by Citigroup ($55.1 billion) and Merrill Lynch ($52.2 billion). A little over half of these losses, or $260 billion, have been suffered by US-based firms, $227 billion by European firms and a relatively modest $24 billion by Asian ones.
Despite efforts by the US Federal Reserve to offer some financial assistance to the beleaguered financial sector, it has led to the collapse of Bear Sterns, one of the world’s largest investment banks and securities trading firm. Bear Sterns was bought out by JP Morgan Chase with some help from the US Federal Bank (The central Bank of America just like RBI in India)
The crisis has also seen Lehman Brothers - the fourth largest investment bank in the US and the one which had survived every major upheaval for the past 158 years - file for bankruptcy. Merrill Lynch has been bought out by Bank of America. Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, two giant mortgage companies of US, have effectively been nationalized to prevent them from going under. Reports suggest that insurance major AIG (American Insurance Group) is also under severe pressure and has so far taken over $82.9 billion so far to tide over the crisis.
From this point, a chain reaction of panic started. Since banks and other financial institutes are like backbone for other major industries and provide them with investment capital and loans, a loss in the net capital of banks meant a serious detriment in their capacity to disburse loans for various businesses and industries. This presented a serious cash crunch situation for companies who needed cash for performing their business activities. Now it became extremely difficult for them to raise money from banks.
What is worse is the fact that the losses suffered by banks in the subprime mess have directly affected their money market the world over.
Now what is a money market?
Money Market is actually an inter-bank market where banks borrow and lend money among themselves to meet short-term need for funds. Banks usually never hold the exact amount of cash that they need to disburse as credit. The ‘inter-bank’ market performs this critical role of bringing cash-surplus and cash-deficit banks together and lubricates the process of credit delivery to companies (for working capital and capacity creation) and consumers (for buying cars, white goods etc). As the housing loan crisis intensified, banks grew increasingly suspicious about each other’s solvency and ability to honour commitments. The inter-bank market shrank as a result and this began to hurt the flow of funds to the ‘real’ economy. Panic begets panic and as the loan market went into a tailspin, it sucked other markets into its centrifuge.
The liquidity crunch in the banks has resulted in a tight situation where it has become extremely difficult even for top companies to take loans for their needs. A sense of disbelief and extreme precaution is prevailing in the banking sectors. The global investment community has become extremely risk-averse. They are pulling out of assets that are even remotely considered risky and buying things traditionally considered safe-gold, government bonds and bank deposits (in banks that are still considered solvent).
As such this financial crisis is the culmination of the above mentioned problems in the global banking system. Inter-bank markets across the world have frozen over. The meltdown in stock markets across the world is a victim of this contagion.
Governments and central banks (like Fed in US) are trying every trick in the book to stabilize the markets. They have pumped hundreds of billions of dollars into their money markets to try and unfreeze their inter-bank and credit markets. Large financial entities have been nationalized. The US government has set aside $700 billion to buy the ‘toxic’ assets like CDOs that sparked off the crisis. Central banks have got together to co-ordinate cuts in interest rates. None of this has stabilized the global markets so far. However, it is hoped that proper monitoring and controlling of the money market will eventually control the situation.
How it has affected India?
In the age of globalization, no country can remains isolated from the fluctuations of world economy. Heavy losses suffered by major International Banks is going to affect all countries of the world as these financial institutes have their investment interest in almost all countries.
As of now India is facing heat on three grounds: (1) Our Share Markets are falling everyday, (2) Rupee is weakening against dollars and (3) Our banks are facing severe crash crunch resulting in shortage of liquidity in the market.
Actually all the above three problems are interconnected and have their roots in the above-mentioned global crisis.
For the last two years, our stock market was touching new heights thanks to heavy investments by Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs). However, when the parent companies of these investors (based mainly in US and Europe) found themselves in a severe credit crunch as a result of sub-prime mess, the only option left with these investors was to withdraw their money from Indian Stock Markets to meet liabilities at home. FIIs were the main buyers of Indian Stocks and their exit from the market is certain to wreak havoc in the market. FIIs who were on a buying spree last year, are now in the mood of selling their stocks in India. As a result our Share Markets are touching new lows everyday.
Since, the money, which FIIs get after selling their stocks, needs to be converted into dollars before they can sent it home, the demands for dollars has suddenly increased. As more and more FIIs are buying dollars, the rupee is loosing its strength against dollar. As long as demands for dollars remain high, the rupee will keep loosing its strength against dollar.
The current financial crisis has also started directly affecting Indian Industries. For the past few years, the two most preferred method of raising money by the companies were Stock Markets and external borrowings on low interest rates. Stock Markets are bleeding everyday and it is not possible to raise money there. Regarding external borrowing from world markets, this option has also become difficult.
In the last fiscal year alone, India borrowed $29 billion from foreign lenders and got $34 billion of foreign direct investment. A global recession has hurt external demand. International lenders who have become extremely risk aversive can limit access to international capital. If that happens, both India’s financial markets and the real economy will be hurt in the process. Suddenly, the 9% growth target does not seem that ‘doable’ any more; we should be happy to clock 7% this fiscal year and the next.
However, one positive point in favor of India is the fact that Indian Banks are more or less secured from the ill-effects of sub-prime mess. A glance at Indian banks’ balance sheets would show that their exposure to complex instruments like CDOs is almost nil. In India, still the major banking operations are in the hands of Public Sector Banks who exercise extreme cautions in disbursing loans to needy people/companies. As a result, we are not likely to see a repeat of sub-prime crisis in India. Though there have been a presence of big US/European Banks in India and even some Indian banks (like ICICI) have some foreign subsidiary with stake in the sub-prime losses, there presence is miniscule as compare to the overall size of Indian banking industry. So at least on this major front we need not worry much.
However, a global depression is likely to result in a fall in demand of all types of consumer goods. In 2007-08, India sold 13.5% of its goods to foreign buyers. A fall in demand is likely to affect the growth rate this year. Our export may get affected badly.
A negative atmosphere, shortage of cash, fall in demands, reducing growth rate and uncertainties in the market are some of the most visible aspects of an economic depression. What started as a small matter of sub-prime loan defaulters has now become a subject of global discussion and has engulfed the global economy scenario.
Greed of some…woes of billions
If you think about this with a cool mind, you will find that the underlying cause of this depression is the greed of those who failed to anticipate the consequence of their actions. On a more ideological front, it is high time to have a rethink on the very idea of free markets and capitalism. I think the time has come to evolve a capitalism where everything works under a broad regulatory framework and we do not see a repeat of this condition where greed of some people can affect the lives of billions.

Saturday, September 6, 2008


Computing just took quantum leap.....

Behold your computer. Your computer represents the culmination of years of technological advancements beginning with the early ideas of Charles Babbage (1791-1871) and eventual creation of the first computer by German engineer Konrad Zuse in 1941. Surprisingly however, the high speed modern computer sitting in front of you is fundamentally no different from its gargantuan 30 ton ancestors, which were equipped with some 18000 vacuum tubes and 500 miles of wiring! Although computers have become more compact and considerably faster in performing their task, the task remains the same: to manipulate and interpret an encoding of binary bits into a useful computational result. A bit is a fundamental unit of information, classically represented as a 0 or 1 in your digital computer. Each classical bit is physically realized through a macroscopic physical system, such as the magnetization on a hard disk or the charge on a capacitor. A document, for example, comprised of n-characters stored on the hard drive of a typical computer is accordingly described by a string of 8n zeros and ones.

Will we ever have the amount of computing power we need or want? If, as Moore's Law states, the number of transistors on a microprocessor continues to double every 18 months, the year 2020 or 2030 will find the circuits on a microprocessor measured on an atomic scale. And the logical next step will be to create quantum computers, which will harness the power of atoms and molecules to perform memory and processing tasks. Quantum computers have the potential to perform certain calculations significantly faster than any silicon-based computer.

Modern digital computers are based on bits - something which can be toggled back and forthbetween two states (e.g. magnetized or demagnetized). By representing these two states as 0 and 1, we can do binary arithmetic with sets of bits and the devices that toggle them. Everything else is built from there ... In quantum mechanics we see many physical systems as have two states (e.g. spin up or spin down). We refer to each such "bit" as a qubit. However, qubits are quantum mechanical and as such they behave much differently than bits. They exist in a superposition of 0 and 1 states simultaneously and may couple with neighboring qubits.

There is an old saying that "when all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail". To somebody trained in conventional computing a qubit might look completely impractical because they have learned to see problems in terms of how you can solve them with bits and bit operations. However, as we examine what can be done with qubits, there are many problems where they are clearly the superior tool to use.

An array of qubits operates as a parallel computer capable of performing a large calculation in one step, and the power grows rapidly with the number of qubits. One application is the factoring of numbers. This is significant because it is the basis of standard security schemes for encrypting numbers.A 30 qubit computer would be 5 times more powerful than the worlds fastest present supercomputer and could break any known code.

A quantum computer is a device for computation that makes direct use of distinctively quantum mechanical phenomena, such as superposition and entanglement, to perform operations on data. In a classical (or conventional) computer, information is stored as bits; in a quantum computer, it is stored as qubits (quantum binary digits). The basic principle of quantum computation is that the quantum properties can be used to represent and structure data, and that quantum mechanisms can be devised and built to perform operations with these data.

At present, quantum computers and quantum information technology remains in its pioneering stage. At this very moment obstacles are being surmounted that will provide the knowledge needed to thrust quantum computers up to their rightful position as the fastest computational machines in existence.Thereby, quantum computers will emerge as the superior computational devices at the very least, and perhaps one day make today's modern computer obsolete. Quantum computation has its origins in highly specialized fields of theoretical physics, but its future undoubtedly lies in the profound effect it will have on the lives of all mankind.



Friday, June 20, 2008

Manage your life through alphabets...........

Manage your life! A-Z

  • Always take time for yourself, at least 30 minutes per day.
  • Be aware of your own stress meter: Know when to step back and cool down.
  • Concentrate on controlling your own situation, without controlling everybody else.
  • Daily exercise will burn off the stress chemicals.
  • Eat lots of fresh fruit, veggies, bread and water, give your body the best for it to perform at its best.
  • Forgive others, don't hold grudges and be tolerant -- not everyone is as capable as you.
  • Gain perspective on things, how important is the issue?
  • Hugs, kisses and laughter: Have fun and don't be afraid to share your feelings with others.
  • Identify stressors and plan to deal with them better next time.
  • Judge your own performance realistically; don't set goals out of your own reach.
  • Keep a positive attitude, your outlook will influence outcomes and the way others treat you.
  • Limit alcohol, drugs and other stimulants, they affect your perception and behaviour.
  • Manage money well, seek advice and save at least 10 per cent of what you earn.
  • No is a word you need to learn to use without feeling guilty.
  • Outdoor activities by yourself, or with friends and family, can be a great way to relax.
  • Play your favourite music rather than watching television.
  • Quit smoking: It is stressing your body daily, not to mention killing you too.
  • Relationships: Nurture and enjoy them, learn to listen more and talk less.
  • Sleep well, with a firm mattress and a supportive pillow; don't overheat yourself and allow plenty of ventilation.
  • Treat yourself once a week with a massage, dinner out, the movies: Moderation is the key.
  • Understand things from the other person's point of view.
  • Verify information from the source before exploding.
  • Worry less, it really does not get things completed better or quicker.
  • Xpress: Make a regular retreat to your favourite space, make holidays part of your yearly plan and budget.
  • Yearly goal setting: Plan what you want to achieve based on your priorities in your career, relationships, etc.
  • Zest for life: Each day is a gift,smile and be thankful that you are a part of a bigger picture.