Is the Appointment of Satya Nadella as CEO of Microsoft , A Feather in India”s Cap ?

Is the appointment of Satya Nadella a feather in India’s cap or a slap in the face for the Indian system? While Indian newspapers were over the moon about Nadella’s elevation, with some justification, there is another side to the story we need to consider: why is it that India’s tech and other geniuses flower only in the US or Silicon Valley?

Satya-Nadella_microsoft_7

 

Satya Nadella Why is it that every India-origin person to win a Nobel after independence in the sciences is not an Indian citizen any more? Hargobind Khurana won the prize for medicine in 1968, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar for physics in 1983 and Venkatraman Ramakrishnan for chemistry in 2009. All of them flowered only because they left India, and not because they were Indians per se. They left India behind. In fact, Ramakrishnan was downright rude when Indians called to congratulate him in 2009. He said: “We are all human beings, and our nationality is simply an accident of birth.” He also complained about “all sorts of people” writing to him and “clogging up my email box. It takes me an hour or two to just remove their mails.” While his immediate reaction may seem churlish to us, underlying it all is the real issue: our “Indian” successes abroad have little to do with the fact that they are Indian. They succeed because they abandoned India. We need to ask ourselves: why does our system kill future heroes, while the US helps raise even ordinary Indians to iconic levels? It would not be out of place to mention that it is well-nigh impossible for 99 percent of Indian aspirants to get admissions even to an IIT or IIM, but it is far simpler to get into an Ivy League institution. If you don’t get into an IIM, you try Harvard. The short point: our system is designed to keep people out, not get them in. The true value of an IIT or IIM is not the intellectual capital they produce, but their filtering expertise – which keeps all but the superlisters out of these institutions. When the people entering the institution are the best among the best, they will shine no matter what the quality of faculty or the curriculum. Perhaps this comes from our caste system, where castes try and keep others out, but we are stuck with this system of exclusion. Our system encourages talkers rather than doers.We think this makes us “argumentative” and democratic, but what this actually makes us is obstructionist rather than problem solvers. Our politics is about name-calling and running others down, not about doing something yourself. A Narasimha Rao and a Vajpayee who achieved something are voted out; a UPA-1 which did little beyond distributing taxpayers’ resources is voted in. This is one reason why we celebrate the rare achievers so highly: TN Seshan, who armed the Election Commission with real teeth, Vinod Rai, who made CAG a household name, and E Sreedharan, the former boss of the Delhi Metro. And yet, we find the political class carping about them and calling them dictators. This is also the reason why we prefer autocratic rulers rather than democratic ones: we know we talk more than we act. To get things done, we prefer an autocrat to rule over us rather than exercise self-discipline as democrats. All our successful political parties are one-person shows. The latest heading in that direction is BJP – which was all talk and no achievement for 10 years in opposition till Narendra Modi came along and was lauded for being a doer. If leaders emerge from our system, it’s due to a historical accident. As Ramchandra Guha points out in his book Patriots and Partisans, if Lal Bahadur Shastri had lived five more years, Indira Gandhi would not have been PM and Sonia Gandhi would still be a housewife. We are risk-avoiders rather than risk takers. This is why we prescribe endless paperwork and bureaucracy for simple things like opening a bank account or buying a mobile phone connection. A terrorist would have used an untraceable mobile number – after which every Indian buying a mobile will be put through hoops to prove he is a bonafide consumer. This does not catch any terrorist, but the idea is for officials to avoid the risk that fingers will be pointed at you saying you did nothing to prevent terrorism. So orders will be issued to tighten the system and make things worse for everybody. A scam will happen somewhere. Suddenly files stop moving in every ministry. Forest clearances will take ages – or never happen. The risk of being seen as doing something wrong is great. And so the buck is passed to someone else in the system. Sonia and Rahul want to be seen as do-gooders. So the dirty work of reform will be handed over to Manmohan Singh – who is another risk-avoider. He will do nothing and allow the A Rajas to loot the exchequer rather than do his job. Doing nothing is safer than asking tough questions of his babus or ministers. The BJP and other opposition leaders know that populist laws like the Food Security and Land Acquisition laws will damage the fiscal balance. But they too avoid risks by keeping quiet when wrong laws are passed. As a people, we are risk-avoiders as well. We know the IITs and IIMs are the way to big jobs. So when our kids want to become artists or cricketers, we tell them to forget it and study for IIT-JEE or CAT, never mind your own passion. Our engineers stop being engineers and start coding; they then opt for doing an MBA and become lousy man managers. Meanwhile, our engineering companies are starved of engineers. We are simply unable to tolerate success. If Modi talks about a Gujarat model, everybody has to bring it down. If Rahul claims his government’s biggest achievement is the RTI, everyone will belittle it. If Chidambaram claims high growth as UPA’s success, the Left will say this growth is not helping the poor. If we say poverty has reduced, others will say it hasn’t. If it has, our definition of poverty must be wrong. We celebrate mediocrity, rather than excellence. Our system kills initiative rather than engender it. We want pliable yes-men and non-achievers around us, not non-conformists and people with ideas of their own. Our successes are more the result of accident than real effort. The 1991 external bankruptcy forced us to reform and liberalise. Manmohan Singh’s reformism ended with that accident. Another accident made him PM in 2004, but he did little to use this chance to reform further. We are paying the price for his risk-aversion. A Satya Nadella, who is from Manipal , would never have made it big in India since he is not from the IITs. But even IITians don’t flower much in an Indian corporate or academic environment; they leave India and prefer working with foreign firms. If Satya Nadella had remained in India, he would probably be working as a coder in Infosys or TCS. Earning a high salary no doubt, but an unlikely candidate for CEO.

source::::www.firstpost.com

natarajan
Read more at: http://www.firstpost.com/india/nadella-as-microsoft-ceo-a-slap-in-the-face-for-indian-system-1374951.html?utm_source=ref_article

Message For the Day…” Must work Hard and give up your selfishness…”

In the Mahabharata, the Kauravas believed in ‘I first, World next and God last’. The Pandavas believed in ‘God first, World next and I last’. The Kauravas took shelter under wealth and prosperity and did not protect themselves properly. The ego of ‘I’ was minimum in the Pandavas and hence they reached an elevated state and took shelter in the Lord. The Pandavas firmly stood for the five qualities of Truth, Righteousness, Peace, Love and Nonviolence. Hence Lord Krishna Himself became the charioteer of Arjuna. Even during the present times, the Pandavas are held high as exalted examples. We also must conduct ourselves just like the Pandavas. We have many qualities like bad thoughts, bad acts and bad attachment. The battlefield of Kurukshetra occurs even today in our hearts – it is the battle between the good and the bad. To emerge as victorious like the Pandavas and attain Him, you must work hard and give up your selfishness   

Sathya Sai Baba

Satya Nadella…Tipped to be Microsoft”s Next CEO !!!

Satya Nadella is expected to become the third CEO in Microsoft history.

Satya Nadella

 

Satya Nadella is expected to become the third CEO in Microsoft history. Source: Supplied

HERE are 10 things you didn’t know about Satya Nadella, 47, the likely next CEO of Microsoft, where he would be only the third CEO in the company’s 39-year history. Bill Gates and current boss, Steve Ballmer, are the other two.

• Owns 113.666 shares of Microsoft stock – worth about $4.2 million. Current CEO Steve Ballmer owns 333,252,990 shares, or 4 per cent of the $300 billion company.

• Earned $7.7M in total compensation in 2013, the 2d highest amount in company.

• Played cricket in high school growing up in Hyderabad, in southern India.

• Advice to younger engineers: “Be passionate and bold.”

• Graduate of MIT – but not the one in Massachusetts. Got a 1988 degree in Electronics and Communication Engineering from Manipal Institute of Technology, one of the top engineering schools in India.

• First name is actually Satyanarayana. A real engineering geek, he started at Microsoft in 1992. • Worked on Windows, Bing, Servers and now is now Executive Vice President, Cloud and Enterprise at the software giant.

• Helped bring Microsoft’s Office 365 to the cloud. The company’s cloud business, under Nadella, grew to a $20.3 billion operation last year, up 22 per cent from when he took it over two years earlier.

• Microsoft’s commercial cloud service grew 107 per cent last year, under Nadella’s leadership.

• Nadella also has a Master of Science degree in Computer Science from the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, and a Master of Business Administration from the University of Chicago.

• Has just 3,549 followers on Twitter – no wonder, his last tweet was three and a half years ago. “HTML 5 – what fun!” he tweeted. but it is better than Ballmer, who has yet to join the Twitter-sphere.

source:::news.com.au

natarajan

This article originally appeared on the New York Post

Jokes for the Day…

Joe, a college student, was taking a course in ornithology, the study of birds. The night before the biggest test of the semester, Joe spent all night studying. He had the textbook nearly memorized. He knew his class notes backward and forward. Joe was ready.
The morning of the test, Joe entered the auditorium and took a seat in the front row. On the table in the front was a row of ten stuffed birds. Each bird had a sack covering its body, and only the legs were showing. When class started, the professor announced that the students were to identify each bird by looking at its legs and give its common name, species, habitat, mating habits, etc.
Joe looked at each of the birds’ legs. They all looked the same to him. He started to get angry. He had stayed up all night studying for this test and now he had to identify birds by their LEGS? The more he thought about the situation, the angrier he got.
Finally he reached his boiling point. He stood up, marched up to the professor’s desk, crumpled up his exam paper and threw it on the desk. “What a ridiculous test!” he told the prof. “How could anyone tell the difference between these birds by looking at their legs? This exam is the biggest rip-off I’ve ever seen!”
With that, Joe turned and stormed toward the exit. The professor was a bit shocked, and it took him a moment to regain his composure. Then, just as Joe was about to walk out the door, the prof shouted out, “Wait a minute, young man, what’s your name?”
Joe turned around, pulled up his pant legs and hollered, “You tell me, prof! You tell me!”
………………………
TEACHER: What is the chemical formula for water?
SARAH: “HIJKLMNO”!
TEACHER: What are you talking about?
SARAH: Yesterday you said its H to O!

source::::joke a day.com

natarajan

Message for the Day…” See the Divine in your Heart …”

Truth is that, which does not change with time. A policeman wears his uniform and performs his duty. When you see him, you think that is the truth. After his duty, he goes home and changes to a night-dress. Now too he is a policeman! Though the clothes he wore has changed, his body does not change. Similarly, ‘Dehi’ your indweller, does not undergo any change. Your body is associated with SatvikRajasik and Tamasikqualities. Remove them and you will see the divine ‘Brahman’. In a cold hill station, you wear vest, shirt and then a protective coat on top of it. If you want to see your heart (chest), you must remove your coat, shirt and vest; only then you can see your heart. Similarly, the body of a human being is covered with many qualities. When you go beyond these, you will be able to see the Divine in your heart.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message For the Day…An Advice To Students …

Many take tea and coffee in excessive quantities; this kill the body’s capacity to sleep. Drivers who drive vehicles during nights take excessive tea and students who are preparing for exams also do the same. Do not avoid sleep, this is a great mistake. A person can live without food, but not without sleep. Many students have the habit of studying through the night and sleeping during the day. Most living beings, including birds and beasts, sleep during the night. A person, who reads in the night as a habit, is cultivating Rajasic and Tamasic qualities. Change this habit slowly. If you read throughout the night and sleep through the day, your retention of what you studied will not be very strong. If you must put in hard work, get up early, say 3 or 4 a.m. and study. After early morning study, do not go and sleep again. This is the Sathwik way of life.

Sathya Sai Baba

 

Message For The Day…”Speak only The Truth and Follow Righteousness…”

When the Goddess of Wisdom, Mother Saraswathi enters our hearts, our faces glow. She is full of Divinity, radiance and knowledge. Hence every educated person who has received Her blessings should always be cheerful. Never put on a ‘castor-oil-face’. Be full of joy. You must also be an embodiment of obedience and humility, with no trace of anger, ego or jealousy. Speak only the Truth and follow righteousness. The castle of righteousness is built upon truth. We often get into trouble only due to our attachments to the body. Your body at some point of time degenerates into a house full of dirt, a basket full of diseases. The body and mind are impermanent. Until you live, firmly believe that body is the temple of God and keep it as clean and pure as possible. When you spend your life with such noble ideas, you will not have any bad thoughts, words or actions.

Sathya Sai Baba

Message For the Day…” Do Not Compromise Virtues Under any Circumstances…”

Every one of you must ask yourself, ‘What is the purpose I have come for?’ If it is to study, are you following the path and learning sincerely and thoroughly? Never forget the purpose of your existence. Humility is the very core of education, and its the most important aspect. Ishwar Chandra Vidyasagar, a renowned educationist in India grew up amidst many challenges. He lost his father, and his mother raised him with a lot of difficulties. She taught very important lessons to her son. She used to say, “Child, education is not as important as virtues. For the sake of education, do not make the mistake of giving up virtues. In a difficult situation, it is even okay to give up education if it entails compromising on virtues. Good qualities are the most important for any person. Humility is the true ornament of an educated person.”

Sathya Sai Baba

” பிரெஞ்சு பாஷைல ‘சீ ப்ரே ‘ என்றால் என்ன அர்த்தம் ! …”


ஏதோ ஓர் அறக்கட்டளையை கலைத்துவிட அதன் அறங்காவலர்கள்
முடிவு செய்திருப்பதாகவும், அவர்கள் யாவரும் பெரியவாளின்
பக்தர்களாகையால் அதன் சொத்துக்களை அவர் உயிரினும் பெரிதாக
மதித்த வேதரக்ஷண நிதி ட்ரஸ்டுக்கு மாற்றி விட விரும்புவதாகவும்
அவர்களில் ஒருவர் செய்தி கொண்டு வந்தார். அதற்கு ஸ்ரீ சரணருடைய
அநுமதியும் அநுக்ரஹமும் வேண்டினார்.

ஸ்ரீ சரணர் பளிச்செனப் பதிலிறுத்தார்: “நீங்க ட்ரஸ்டீகளெல்லாரும்
எங்கிட்ட பக்தியா இருக்கேன்னா போறுமா என்ன? ஒங்க பக்தியை,
அபிமானத்தை மனஸார அங்கீகரிச்சுக்கறேன். ஆனாலும் ஒங்க
ட்ரஸ்டோட ஆஸ்தி பாஸ்தியை வேதரக்ஷண நிதிக்கு ட்ரான்ஸ்ஃபர்
பண்றதுன்னா, அதுக்குச் சட்டம் எடம் குடுத்தாதானே முடியும்?
அந்த மாதிரிக் குடுக்கலியே! “ப்ரன்ஸிபள் அவ் ஸீப்ரே”ன்னு
‘லா’வுல இருக்கு. அதன்படி, ஒரு டிரஸ்டைக் கலைக்கும்படி
ஏற்பட்டா அதனோட சொத்துக்களை எந்த லக்ஷ்யத்துல அந்த ட்ரஸ்ட்
ஆரம்பிச்சு நடத்துதோ, அதுக்கு ரொம்பக் கிட்டினதான ஒரு
லக்ஷ்யத்தோட நடக்கற இ்ன்னொரு ட்ரஸ்டுக்குத்தான் மாத்த முடியும்.
ரொம்ப வித்யாஸமான லக்ஷ்யம் இருக்கிற ட்ரஸ்டுக்கு ட்ரான்ஸ்ஃபர்
பண்ண முடியாது. இப்ப ஒங்க ட்ரஸ்டோட லக்ஷ்யமும் வேதரக்ஷணமும்
வித்யாஸமானதுன்னுதான் எல்லாரும் அபிப்ராயப்படுவா.

ஒங்க ட்ரஸ்ட் ஸோஷல் ஸர்வீஸ் லக்ஷ்யத்துல ஏற்பட்டது. வேத
ரக்ஷணத்தைவிடப் பெரிய சோஷல் ஸர்வீஸ் இல்லேன்னு எங்க மாதிரி
சில பேர் வேணா சொல்லலாமே தவிர, அதைப் பொதுவா லோகம்,
கவர்மென்ட், கோர்ட் ஒத்துக்காது. ஆனதுனால், ஒங்க ஆசையைப்
பூர்த்தி பண்ண முடியலியேன்னு எனக்கும் கஷ்டமாத்தான்
இருக்குன்னாலும் அப்படித்தான் சட்டம் கட்டுப்படுத்தறது.
நீங்க இத்தனை அபிமானமா நெனச்சதே வேதரக்ஷண ட்ரஸ்டுக்குப்
பணத்தைக் கொண்டு வந்து கொட்டும்! ஒங்க பணமும் ஒரு நல்ல
சோஷல் சர்வீஸ் ஆர்கனைஸேஷனுக்குப் போய்ச் சேந்து நல்லபடியா
பிரயோஜனமாகணும்னு ப்ரார்த்திச்சுக்கறேன்”- அவருக்கே உரித்தான
ஆழ்ந்த அநுதாபத்துடன் கூறி, அகம் குவித்துச் சிறிது நேரம்
பிரார்த்திக்கிறார்.

அடுத்து அவரது மொழியியல் ஞானம், பன்மொழிப் புலமை
ஆகியவற்றுக்கும் சான்று படைக்கிறார்.

” ‘ஸீப்ரே’-ன்னு சட்டப் பாயின்ட் சொன்னேனே, அதுக்கு ஸ்பெல்லிங்படி
உச்சரி்ப்புப் பாத்தா ‘ஸைப்ரஸ்’னு வரும். ஆனா அது ஃப்ரெஞ்ச்
வார்த்தையானதால, அந்த பாஷையோட லக்ஷணப்படி ஸ்பெல்லிங்
ஒரு தினுஸாவும், உச்சரிப்பு வேறே தினுஸாவும் இருக்கும். இந்த
வார்த்தை ஸ்பெல்லிங்படி ‘ஸைப்ரஸ்’ன்னு ஆகும்.ஆனாலும்
ஸைப்ரஸ் தீவுக்குப் போடற ஸ்பெல்லிங் இல்லை. அந்தத் தீவுக்கு,
C,Y,P,R,U,S-னு ஸ்பெல்லிங் போடறோம். ‘ஸீப்ரே’க்கு C,Y, அப்புறம்
ரெண்டு வார்த்தையை ஒண்ணா சேக்கறப்ப ஸந்தியிலே போடற
ஹைஃபன், ஹைஃபனுக்கு அப்பறம் P,R,E..E, தான் U இல்லே:
U போட்டா ஸைப்ரஸ் தீவுன்னு ஆயிடும்…E க்கு அப்புறம்
கடைசி எழுத்தா S-(CY-PRES). அந்த ‘S’ உச்சரிப்புல வராது.
‘ஸைலன்ட்’ ஆயிடும்.

ஃப்ரெஞ்ச் பாஷைல ‘ஸீ-ப்ரே-ன்னா ‘ரொம்பக் கிட்டே”னு அர்த்தம்.
ஒரு ட்ரஸ்ட் சொத்தை அதனோட லக்ஷ்யத்துக்கு ரொம்பவும்
கிட்டினதான லக்ஷ்யமுள்ள இன்னொரு ட்ரஸ்டுக்குத்தான்
மாத்தணும்னு தெரிவிக்கிறதால அந்த விதிக்கு அப்படிப் பேர்.”   

source::::www.periva.proboards.com

natarajan

Read more: http://periva.proboards.com/thread/455/knowledge-on-laws#ixzz2rfJrmrmS

How Birds Fly in V Formation ….

A new study says birds precisely time when they flap their wings, and position themselves to capture upwash (“good air”) and avoid downwash or (“bad air”).

photo credit: Mark Unsöld

Birds flying in a distinctive V formation strategically position themselves in aerodynamically optimum positions, and experience positive aerodynamic interactions that maximize upwash (“good air”) capture, according to a study the journal Nature by researchers at Royal Veterinary College, University of London.

The data, captured from free-flying migrating birds using specially developed GPS technology, reveals the mechanisms by which birds flying in V formation can both use areas of beneficial upwash while avoiding regions of detrimental downwash (“bad air”).

These aerodynamic accomplishments were previously not thought possible for birds because of the complex flight dynamics and sensory feedback that would be required to perform such a feat.

Dr. Steven Portugal is lead researcher at the Royal Veterinary College. He said:

The intricate mechanisms involved in V formation flight indicate remarkable awareness and ability of birds to respond to the wingpath of nearby flock-mates. Birds in V formation seem to have developed complex phasing strategies to cope with the dynamic wakes produced by flapping wings.

Dr. Portugal and his team studied a free-flying flock of northern bald ibises (Geronticus eremita), a critically endangered species. They equipped 14 juvenile birds with back-mounted synchronised GPS and inertial measurement devices. The team recorded the position and every wing flap of all individuals within the V during 43 min of migratory flight. The precision of these measurements allowed the relative positioning of individuals in a V to be tracked, and the potential aerodynamic interactions to be investigated at a level and complexity not previously feasible.

Read more from the Royal Veterinary College

source::: earth sky news

natarajan