Friday 21 September, 2007
Monday 10 September, 2007
The Above Average
I am reading this book currently, wella, its been a while now. It is well written, simple and enjoyable. I am not used to dissecting a book more than this except for "Wuthering Heights" and "Great Expectations" which were part of School curriculum :)
Well, I got hold of this book from the book reading by the author in Crosswords, and the author gave me an autographed copy and one of the special moments when the moment gets onto me and I come up with seemingly Dumb questions ;) not that bad ....
Well, this book talks about the life and aspirations of an average educated middle class family based out of Delhi. The characters and the events and the emotions are ones which can an average or educated or middle class or delhite can connect to. You can draw parallels too when you try and recollect old buddies from school and the like. the best part being it does not tickle your grey cells much nor does it give your brain much work. :D
Another Review
Well, I got hold of this book from the book reading by the author in Crosswords, and the author gave me an autographed copy and one of the special moments when the moment gets onto me and I come up with seemingly Dumb questions ;) not that bad ....
Well, this book talks about the life and aspirations of an average educated middle class family based out of Delhi. The characters and the events and the emotions are ones which can an average or educated or middle class or delhite can connect to. You can draw parallels too when you try and recollect old buddies from school and the like. the best part being it does not tickle your grey cells much nor does it give your brain much work. :D
Another Review
Rofl :D
Well, I am involved with the Dramatics and Creativity Club ( a funky name for the old mime club or rather -SKIT ;) ) of my organization and had been brainstorming for a while for some jokes.
Recycling old jokes, fitting it in a new perspective, new fundas are called for in these sessions and I must say it is fun. And of late, unlike college days, i have been short of an audience to try these jokes or rather pester.
Some jokes,
Q: Spell BLIND BIRD
A: B-L-N-D B-R-D
Q: what ? what happened to the two eyes, i say ...
A: Sir, BLIND BIRD no EYEs( 'ii's )
Beat that.....
More n more.....
Recycling old jokes, fitting it in a new perspective, new fundas are called for in these sessions and I must say it is fun. And of late, unlike college days, i have been short of an audience to try these jokes or rather pester.
Some jokes,
Q: Spell BLIND BIRD
A: B-L-N-D B-R-D
Q: what ? what happened to the two eyes, i say ...
A: Sir, BLIND BIRD no EYEs( 'ii's )
Beat that.....
More n more.....
Friday 13 July, 2007
Heidelberg!!!
This is my base of location in germany for the next couple of days. Last time around I was put up in Manheimm, which is more of a commercial place with many a mall and cars and activity. Heidelberg is more of the old scottish or german town with a schloss..Oops..castle and many an old houses and mueseums, universtiy and old houses, tourists flock to this place and is definitely not an affordable place to live. I was told that a lot of Americans and Mediterraninans stay in some parts. Its got fields and schools and a lot of students and pubs, yet to visit any of them though.
Well on the lighter side.. I shall update this space with closer to life snap shots of the city.
The US soldiers having a shot at their Fu-Fu amongst all the usual army banter, the kid with the diabolo, Falafel - the arabic special dish, Morocoan mint tea, watching Indian Tourists being escorted to closed churches and mueseums..courtesy a packaged tour group from India (Thomas Cook ;) Jayanth and me decided, this is what we might get to see when taken on a European tour on one of them. rofl ).
At the moment, I am off to the Holiday Park for the summer summit or rather family day of my organisation.
More to on Heidelberg ....I promise....
Well on the lighter side.. I shall update this space with closer to life snap shots of the city.
The US soldiers having a shot at their Fu-Fu amongst all the usual army banter, the kid with the diabolo, Falafel - the arabic special dish, Morocoan mint tea, watching Indian Tourists being escorted to closed churches and mueseums..courtesy a packaged tour group from India (Thomas Cook ;) Jayanth and me decided, this is what we might get to see when taken on a European tour on one of them. rofl ).
At the moment, I am off to the Holiday Park for the summer summit or rather family day of my organisation.
More to on Heidelberg ....I promise....
Manfried - The Cop
I would like to pen a few words about this person whom I got to know on my trip to Germany. Manfried, the cabie who picked me up from the Frankfurt Airport.
When I bump across someone new especially in a new setting, I cannot control my strong urge to
refrain from having an engaging conversation.
Well, Manfried is German. He is 60. He is a retired cop. He is working as a Cab Driver to keep him busy during his retired years. He has a son who is also a cop and a daughter who is an 'underground' cop.
I had notes written on him....
Will fill this space....
When I bump across someone new especially in a new setting, I cannot control my strong urge to
refrain from having an engaging conversation.
Well, Manfried is German. He is 60. He is a retired cop. He is working as a Cab Driver to keep him busy during his retired years. He has a son who is also a cop and a daughter who is an 'underground' cop.
I had notes written on him....
Will fill this space....
Thursday 12 July, 2007
Presentation to the German Colleagues...
So, the day finaaly arrived when the presentation had to be made to the German counterparts. The topic could not be more technical and boring than E-SOA.
Well on the eve of the talk, I sat with my mentor, Thomas Pike, to note down tips to make it appealing to a German audience, who were mostly above 40, had been in the IT industry for over 10 years.
Thomas is British but brought up in Germany as his father was a teacher in a German Highschool. He moved out of Germany soon after his schooling in Germany to UK and spent a few years there where he went to Universtiy and later to Yemen and Middle East and back to UK for working in a financial firm and then later found that attraction to the land where he spent his younger days quite compelling and thus moved to Germany.
Some interesting tips Thomas gave me:
1. An interesting presentation according to him was one where the speaker could speak without looking at the slides, the slides having less text.
2. In India, its the job of the speaker to make sure that the audience has captured his idea but out here the speaker just goes on with what he wants to say not necessarily checking whether he has been understood or not. If somebody has a doubt or rather does not understand he is expected to ask. If the speaker repeats himself over a couple of times the audience might find it rude and offensive and might think that the speaker considers them to be dumb and this turns them off.
3. English has to be slow.
4. If there are questions asked, its a sign that they are understanding it.
5. The crowd is emotionless, so gauging as to how the presentation is being percieved is not so similar to how it is done in India.
6. The crowd does not have a good sense of humour. To crack up the crowd I tried a joke which was reciprocatted by cold, blank and puzzled looks which gave way to chuckles, which were far away from being effortless, when I gave my bit of canned laughter to my own joke. Phew!!! I had never done that before.(The term "pressured to laugh" might be more appropriate here).
7. Whatever is spoken, its the tone and the rythm that captivates the audience.
8, Its not easy to get the crowd in splits or to initiate them to join in on a conversation as simple and "irrelevant" as, How many of You have been to McDonalds ? during an official presentation.
The Topping on the Pizza (I more close to Italy, so I would quote Pizza rather than the cake ... :) ) was when couple of the members said it was interesting and gave some suggestions while I was on my not so keen for feedback but still fishing for compliments mode.
:)
Well on the eve of the talk, I sat with my mentor, Thomas Pike, to note down tips to make it appealing to a German audience, who were mostly above 40, had been in the IT industry for over 10 years.
Thomas is British but brought up in Germany as his father was a teacher in a German Highschool. He moved out of Germany soon after his schooling in Germany to UK and spent a few years there where he went to Universtiy and later to Yemen and Middle East and back to UK for working in a financial firm and then later found that attraction to the land where he spent his younger days quite compelling and thus moved to Germany.
Some interesting tips Thomas gave me:
1. An interesting presentation according to him was one where the speaker could speak without looking at the slides, the slides having less text.
2. In India, its the job of the speaker to make sure that the audience has captured his idea but out here the speaker just goes on with what he wants to say not necessarily checking whether he has been understood or not. If somebody has a doubt or rather does not understand he is expected to ask. If the speaker repeats himself over a couple of times the audience might find it rude and offensive and might think that the speaker considers them to be dumb and this turns them off.
3. English has to be slow.
4. If there are questions asked, its a sign that they are understanding it.
5. The crowd is emotionless, so gauging as to how the presentation is being percieved is not so similar to how it is done in India.
6. The crowd does not have a good sense of humour. To crack up the crowd I tried a joke which was reciprocatted by cold, blank and puzzled looks which gave way to chuckles, which were far away from being effortless, when I gave my bit of canned laughter to my own joke. Phew!!! I had never done that before.(The term "pressured to laugh" might be more appropriate here).
7. Whatever is spoken, its the tone and the rythm that captivates the audience.
8, Its not easy to get the crowd in splits or to initiate them to join in on a conversation as simple and "irrelevant" as, How many of You have been to McDonalds ? during an official presentation.
The Topping on the Pizza (I more close to Italy, so I would quote Pizza rather than the cake ... :) ) was when couple of the members said it was interesting and gave some suggestions while I was on my not so keen for feedback but still fishing for compliments mode.
:)
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