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Updates as of 23rd July, ’09

It’s been a long time since my long post and unsurpisingly, I’ve hardly had anyone enquire about my blogging status – barring a workmate who told me I should continue blogging. I was going to anyway. It’s just that the sweet pleasures of having a 1Gbps internet connection isn’t available anymore.

I landed in Bengaluru on 2nd June. For about a two weeks there was no internet. I looked into the various options that were available – the usual ADSL connections from BSNL, Airtel, TATA or the CDMA datacards from TATA, Reliance. I signed up for TATA’s ADSL and after getting a demo on TATA’s Photon+ (CDMA datacard), I decided to cancel the ADSL connection and go with Photon+. Pros: Good speeds for the price, cons: no scheme with unlimited downloads available.

Anyway. On 18th Jun Tirupam and I left Bengaluru for Thrissur. The occasion being Vishnu’s marriage! It was good to see familiar faces in a setting such as this. Lalit, Mitesh, Ankit: it was good to see you all again. Thrissur, as a place, wasn’t half as bad. Kerala as a state seems to be gifted with plenty of natural resources – the greenery, water, weather. Given such naturally endowed excesses, it probably makes the society somewhat mature and financially pretty well off compared to the neighbouring state – Tamil Nadu – which continues to be a large exporter of ground-level labourers (I realise that it’s not that simple, but, yes, Keralites are lucky).

Moving back to Bengaluru now, I’m still identity-less. My College’s I-card has expired, and more importantly is of no use here. I have no driving license yet. No PAN card or any of those fancy things yet. Recently, Nilekani has taken up a role in the Indian government to work on an nationwide ID card for all. I wish him all the luck and I hope I get one soon. I’ve even postponed buying that TATA DoCoMo SIM for that!

Oh, and, I’ve started working in a Free Software company now. I’ve still got a long way to go before I shed my lazy lifestyle that I had so gotten used to in college. Work needs to be done.

Lately, my blog posts have become less technical. Those Howtos and whinefests have seen a decline. I’m hoping to fix that soon as I can. I’ve been looking at how Kerberos, LDAP and ejabberd are expected to work together and since it’s taken me more than a week I think it deserves a blog post. Well, Kerberos is optional at the moment, but it’s something I’m hoping to understand why and where it’d be useful. Makes me miss Gentoo now – where I’d know exactly what’s changing. dpkg-reconfigure, although friendly, does things and assumes certain defaults which I have no idea if they’re sane or not. More on that later.

Work place is a really cool place. I had an image of cubicles and serious faces but this is kind of homely and somewhat relaxed. We even play some football on the rooftop once in a while. I miss some good folks whom I spent a lot of time with during the last few months at college – Settem, Basit, and co. and Shanks.

Last Saturday, I caught up with Tirupam and we went to visit UB City. It’s a fabulous, albeit affluent, supermall. We looked around, window shopping mostly and settled with having a close-to-authentic pizza at an Italian restaurant up there. As it turned dark, some live music lightened up the place. It’s good to see Bengaluru getting more and more musical.

A couple of days before that meet, I was looking for a music store that dealt with double bass. Lucky me. There was a place right behind my work place. Unlucky me. It costs quite a bit (he quoted 16K – which by international standards is very cheap and probably not even worth it; but I’m just a beginner – and I told him that I’d be back when I had the money). I’m having trouble deciding if I should go with a modern bass guitar or with a somewhat large and bulky double bass. Bengaluru is kind of crowded too, moving around with such a thing, in a bus, would be interesting, if not dangerous. Oh, and boo at all the affluent folk who travel alone in their cars on every-busy streets of the city.

Must get back to work.

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CC College Life Events LAN

Updates as of 25th Feb., ’09

Hello. I’ve got some fresh news here – http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/India/Bloggers-can-be-nailed-for-views/articleshow/4178823.cms

Getting back to the post, a lot of things, as usual, have happened in the past couple of months. FOSSKriti- IITK’s FOSS event during Techkriti was once again organised this year and turned out pretty well. Here‘s a longer account.

More interesting updates in the campus include the introduction of a modern internet service in the campus. I can now stop looking for alternatives to necessary applications with HTTP(connect) proxy support. Our campus can now boast of a 1GBps internet connection (the whole country’s bandwidth is apparently 33GBps). Back then (four years ago), we started off with a measly 2MBps connection which went higher and higher up with time – eventually leading us all to this pleasant surprise. Well, pleasant or not is another day’s debate… approx 4.5 crores p.a. for such bandwidth (turns out to about 1lac per day!).

OS update: Used Windows Vista for more than a semester, then Windows 7 Beta for about a couple of weeks or more. Now on Debian 5.

Music update: check my last.fm page.

Categories
CC College Life Entertainment Exams Gaming Gymkhana LAN Music Software

Sad state of affairs in IITK

This institute’s administration is as pathetic as it can be. Most people in the administration work without thinking even a little about what they’re doing. They give you the “I was told to do so by my superiors” line even when it is clearly visible that they don’t understand why they’re doing it. Let’s start with something as useless as the SiS. SiS is a private security organisation in the campus. They do some of the most stupidest things possible and whatever they do, the thefts continue to happen. A week ago, in a neighbouring wing, 3rd storey, a theft occured late in the night. Sunil was sleeping with his door open (the weather is very hot and humid these days) for the cool air to drive out the heat and humidity from his room. He didn’t expect a thief to go all the way up to his room in the 3rd storey and steal his whole wallet (maybe a cell-phone was lost too). His wallet not only had money, but his institute ID-card. Yet again, the SiS fails.

If you happen to have a laptop and use a typical long-strapped laptop-bag, you’re in bad luck. You’ll be asked to enter your name, time of entry and exit, and sign in a worn-out register every time you visit your lab or leave/enter your own hall. God only knows if those guards make any sense at all of what you’ve written with your hands which are more used to computers than a pen. The funny part is here: carry your laptop in a backpack kind of bag and they won’t ask you a thing. Carry even an empty laptop-bag and you’ll spend two minutes explaining to them that your bag is empty.

Hall 1 has three gates. One of them is open round the clock, the other was sealed off by the Director some years ago during a summer (no idea why it was done even though it’s the closest gate to the academic area) and the other one, that is closer to the CSE lab area, is closed after 22:30. Now why does this happen? I don’t really know. Many of us who leave the lab long after 22:30 are out of luck, we simply have to walk all the way to the gate on the other side of the Hall. Back in my old school, we had security cameras which could rotate in any angle and monitor movements. I wonder why a “high-tech” institute such as ours never considered that over the mostly useless SiS.

Let’s get to the UG office now. Nobody can be more annoying than these pricks here. They fail at even counting the number of backlogs you have. This particular “Programme Advisor” (yeah, right) of the Y4 batch who even signed my manual-registration form last summer for a science-elective now claims that SEs aren’t offered during the summers and therefore I’m considering this SE as an OE(!). I’ve tried explaining to him that I don’t have any OE backlogs and his stupid decision (which I think he made by himself) is shoving another OE down my throat. He refuses to talk anymore about it and asked me to get (yet another) letter from the DUGC.

I haven’t registered for any courses this summer, I didn’t want to go through this confusing, pointless exercise with these morons again. I decided to stay for another year and take it slow and easy, without having to deal with these monkeys. I really think Prof. Dheeraj Sanghi’s tenure as the SUGC was the best. He’s the kind of person who doesn’t mind thinking a bit, even if it breaks a little sweat. During his tenure, we could easily swap future courses from our template to-and-fro and do it the way convenient to us (very handy when your programme is a bit screwed and time-clashes or pre-requisite conditions doesn’t let you follow the prescribed course-structure). This time, the current SUGC (sorry, neither can I spell his name nor pronounce it, I just remember a “Ghost” in his name) refuses to think even a bit and let the students with backlogs do future courses from their templates that are offered during the summer. Roughly 40 students went empty handed because of this on the day of registration. Oh, and courses mysteriously pop out of nowhere at the last minute. One of my friends who spent the whole duration for which registrations were open running around never realised that a course he had a backlog in was offered in the last minute. By total chance he stumbles upon it from a junior whom we met when we were heading towards the CR for lunch the next day. More nonsense: instructors are supposed to evaluate the end-semester answerbooks and give out the grades in a time-frame of 72 hours after the end-semester exams. They do come up with grades and submit them to the UG Office and the Counseling Service. It’s been over a few weeks now and I still don’t know my grades. Only the ones I got an F in (I got one this time) were informed to me through my DUGC a few weeks after the end-sems. Thankfully, that was before the summer registration day, or people wouldn’t know if they could re-take those courses in the summer term. Couple of my juniors have a skewed programme ahead of them simply because they weren’t allowed to take a future course in the summer. The things that happen when the authority refuses to think and simply take the easy way out by following the rule-book or going by what their superiors say.

Talking about superiors, the Director is somewhat like a little Hitler here. There have been about 5 to 6 suicides (sense the apathy here?) in the campus during my stay here (4 years now). The Director has formed committees over committees and so has the Students’ Senate to come up with steps to take to curb these mishaps. The Director isn’t happy with any of them after the latest suicide (a few weeks ago, during the end-semester exams) and has taken decision making into his own hands and poof, no internet for you after 00:00 in the student dormitories. No internet – yes, no LAN – no. Although inter-hall LAN doesn’t work, intra-hall is still lively and dare I say, the gaming and late-night movie watching has increased! And, yes, most halls have their own direct-connect hubs now that function during the 00:00 to 06:00 internet curfew. People continue to watch movies, play games, whatever. It’s people like me who aren’t really into movies or games and use the internet for, again, dare I say, useful purposes that suffer. More on this at Arun’s post here. Sigh, all this makes me just as sick (or more) than it makes Arun. Even my friend from NIT-Suratkal who’s here for the summer doing a project says that his campus’s internet policies are way better. Heck, I don’t get it one bit, what is our adminstration thinking? They recently upgraded the internet bandwidth to 100MBps, removed the HTTP proxy accounting (you can download as much as you want! – it used to be 500MB per month, which was increased to 1GB and then 3GB and now -infinity-). Pirated movies, tv-serials, music, games, software continue to pour in in such quantities that there are two internal torrent trackers (and three main direct-connect hubs) in our LAN.

It’s a sad, boring, lazy life here. Most seem to have gotten over the internet-curfew already.