Friday, September 20, 2013

Sir Dr. M. VISVESVARAYA



Sir Dr.M.VISVESVARAYA   -  Bharata Ratna (The Gem of India)
Any state will be lucky to have a minister of Visvesvaraya’s ability. Would any salary be too high for such a genius? The Maharaja’s secretary suggested to the Maharaja that MV’s salary should be raised; he had not consulted MV. Visvesvaraya came to know about it. He wrote to the Maharaja saying that he did not want a rise.
For some time, when the Bhadravati Factory was in trouble, he worked as the Chairman. At that time, the Government had not decided the salary. It took some years to do so; the Government owed him more than a hundred thousand rupees. But he did not touch a rupee even. He told the Government, “Start an institute where boys can learn some profession.”
Sir Visvesvaraya
Sir Visvesvaraya
The Institute was about to start work. The Government wanted to name it after Visvesvaraya. But he said, “Name it after the Maharaja of Mysore.” This is the Sri Jayachamaraja Polytechnic Institute of Bangalore.
How many such selfless patriots’ do we have?
Free India honors great servants of the country every year by awarding titles. The highest of this award is ‘Bharata Ratna’. In 1955 Visvesvaraya was made a ‘Bharata Ratna’, the Gem of India. He was a gem of mankind itself.
Visvesvaraya was a genius. The Block System which he invented, the automatic doors which he devised to stop wasteful overflow of water, the water supply and drainage system which he planned for the city of Aden – these won high praise from engineers all over the world. The Krishnarajasagara Dam is a brilliant proof of his genius.
His memory was an amazing as his genius. We saw how in 1908 he tamed the Moosa. Fifty years later, one day, there was a discussion about the river, and he referred to some detail.
Then he called a servant and, pointing to a bookshelf, said, “Bring the three or four books in the middle of the third row.” Then he opened one of them and pointed to the detail under discussion on one page. He was 96 or 97 when this happened.
How did Visvesvaraya use his genius and his extraordinary memory? This is the important question. He was the embodiment of discipline and hard work. He was never late by a minute and he never wasted a minute. Once a minister was late by three minutes; MV advised him to be punctual. A man should do any work he undertakes methodically – that was his firm faith. Every man should understand his responsibility and do his best – which was the essence of his teaching. He practiced this very honestly, and there are hundreds of instances to show this. Until he was confined to his bed he was very particular about his clothes. Even when he was 95 people who went to see him were surprised – he was so carefully and neatly dressed.
Quite often he had to make speeches. Because of his genius, experience and mellow wisdom people wanted to hear him. But whenever he had to make a speech he would think about what he was going to say, write, the speech, get it typed and weigh every word and revise it. He would revise it four or five times and give it final shape. Then he would remember important points. Once he visited the Primary School in his native village, Muddenahalli; he gave the teacher ten rupees and asked him to distribute sweets to the children. The teacher said, “Please say a few words to the children, sir,” MV spoke for five minutes and went away. But later he was unhappy because he had spoken without preparation. Some days later he prepared a speech and went to the school again; once again he distributed sweets to the children.
Then he made his speech. In 1947 he was the President of the All India Manufacturers’ Association. He had to make a speech at a function. Some of his friends were staying with him. On the day of the function they woke up at half past four in the morning. What they saw astonished them; Sir MV, who was 87, was already up and faultlessly dressed; he was walking up and down; he had in his hands a copy of the speech he was to make and was carefully reading it!
In 195 he went to Patna. He was to study a plan for a bridge across the Ganga. The sun was cruel and the heat unbearable. MV was 92. There were parts of the site to which he could not go by car. The Government had arranged to have him carried in a chair. MV did not use the chair; he got off the car and walked briskly. The Government had also arranged for his stay in the GuestHouse. He would have been comfortable there. But he stayed in the railway coach and went on with the work.
A hundred such instances of his discipline and devotion to work can be listed. He once said, “The curse of our country is laziness. At first sight everyone seems to be working. But in fact, one man works and the others watch him. As someone said with contempt, ‘it looks as if five men are working. But really only one man works. One man will be doing nothing. One man will be resting. Another man will be watching them. Yet another man will be helping these three.”
Visvesvaraya was dedicated to work. He was also a man of spotless honesty. We saw how, as the Dewan, he refused to favor a relative. In 1918 he decided to give up the Dewanship. He had to give the Maharaja his letter. He went to the palace in the Government car. He returned in his own car. Those were days when people had to work by candlelight. MV used, for official work, the stationery and the candles supplied by the Government; for his private work he used stationery and candles which he had bought. Once, one of his friends was advised rest after some illness. He wanted to spend some days in Bangalore. MV was the Dewan. The friend wrote to him asking for a house for some days. He thought the Dewan would give him a Government Guest House, free of rent. The Dewan gave him a Government House; but as long as the friend stayed there, the Dewan himself paid a rent of Rs. 250 a month.
MV had the courage of his convictions. He did what he thought was right and was not afraid of opposition. We have already seen how much he did for Mysore State. At every step he had to face opposition. The British, who were then the masters here, opposed him. Many Mysoreans could not understand his greatness. He was far-sighted; he could see what the country would need fifty years later, a hundred years later. But the shortsighted and small-minded men made fun of him. Some of the officers under him thought he was not practical and laughed at him. He tried to give -the State a University. Colleges in Mysore State were then under Madras University. The Governor and high off icers of Madras were Englishmen., They did not want a University in an Indian state. Englishmen in Mysore State also opposed the Dewan. In fact, the principal of one college even said, “The Dewan is mad. He must be sent to a mental hospital.” Only because MV was firm, Mysore University was born.
MV also planned the KRS dam. The cost was estimated; it came to 25,300 thousand rupees. Officers of Mysore State were shocked and opposed the scheme. At last Visvesvaraya satisfied the Mysore Government with his arguments and it agreed. A new difficulty arose. MV wanted the height to be 130 feet. The Government of India approved a height of only 80 feet. MV went ahead with a foundation for a dam 130 feet high. Later, the Central Government agreed with him. Many people made fun of him when he started the Bhadravati Steel Factory and called it ‘a White Elephant’. Some officers did not manage it properly and the factory suffered heavy losses. Quite a few persons felt happy! But today it is an asset.
MV was the Maker of Modern Mysore. He wanted education to spread ‘ He wanted people to give up blind beliefs. He wanted the fullest use of science and technology. But he also knew that being modern did not mean giving up everything that was old and forgetting our culture.
Somebody once said to him, “You have done great service to the country. You are like Bhishmacharya.” MV said, “You make me remember what a small man I am. What am I before Bhishmacharya?” He was so modest. Even at the age of 95, he rose to receive a visitor; he got up again when the visitor was leaving. But he also knew modesty did not mean pocketing insults. In the old Bombay Province the rules did not permit an Indian to become the Chief Engineer. Only an Englishman could sit in the Chief Engineer’s chair. So MV gave up his post in Bombay. The Dewan was the highest officer in Mysore State. He himself gave up that very high office. He had self-respect without arrogance.
Sir MV was a fearless patriot. Those were days when the Englishman was the lord of India and wanted to be treated like a god. The Maharaja of Mysore used to hold a Durbar during the Dasara. On the day of the European Durbar, the Europeans were given comfortable chairs but Indians were required to sit on the floor. MV went to the Durbar for the first time in 1910. The arrangements pained him. The next year he did not attend the Durbar. When the officers of the palace made enquiries he f rankly gave the reason. Next year all – Europeans and Indians -were given chairs. A British officer wrote a letter to MV. He said that in the Maharaja’s Durbar, he wanted a cushion to rest his feet because the chair was too high. MV got the legs of the chair shortened and wrote to him that the height had been reduced. In 1944, an association arranged* a conference. Visvesvaraya was the Chairman of the association. The Governor of Berar, an Englishman, was to open the conference.
(In those days the Governors were very powerful.) The conference was to discuss a resolution that India should have a national government. The Governor said that the resolution should not be discussed. “Otherwise,” he said, “I will not come.” Sir MV said to his friends, “All right. Why wait for him? Let us go on with the conference.
MV gave thousands of families food, he gave thousands and thousands of students education. Tens of thousands of houses are bright with electricity because of him. And he led the country to the path of progress.
The Bhadravati Steel Factory, Mysore University, Krishnarajasagara, the Bank of Mysore – every one of his creations was mighty and magnificent. But far mightier and far more magnificent was the Bharata Ratna, who was at once a matchless Dreamer and Doer.
He once said:
“Remember, your work may be only to sweep a railway crossing, but it is your duty to keep it so clean that no other crossing in the world is as clean as yours.”

Source :http://lifeloveandlogic.wordpress.com/my-pages/dr-m-visvesvaraya/

Why is Android 4.4 KitKat important for Mobile developers/testers?


Before going to the actual topic, let us try to know what Android KitKat is and what its features are.



Android 4.4 KitKat is a newer version of Android which is a successor of popular Android JellyBean (4.1 to 4.3).  Google has named this version of android since it is a major update.


Here are the main features that are expected from Android 4.4 KitKat:
1.   Minimal Hardware requirement. (Android 4.4 KiKat is said to support older devices having RAM of at least 512MB).
2.  Completely revamped User Interface.
3.  Exclusive android cloud system.
4. Improved battery life.
5. Better security, smoother animations/graphics and bug fixes

Now, we know the capabilities of Android 4.4, but how is it going to help mobile testers and developers?

One of the major issues Android testers and developers are facing is android OS fragmentation. There are numerous devices out there in the market which run Android 2.2 to android 4.3. But as part of app development and testing, people normally consider the OS version which is used by large number of users. In case of Android the OS is fragmented in such a way that it’s tough to select any particular OS version for testing/developing. In many cases testing/development teams consider only Android 4.0 and later OS, which eliminates around 50% of the android users.





One of the major reasons for this Android OS fragmentation is increase in demand for better RAM with every Android Version release. Here is a list which helps us understanding this well:
a. Android GingerBread 2.3 à Minimum 384MB
b. Android IceCream Sandwich à Minimum 512MB
c. Android Jellybean 4.1 à Minimum 768MB

Before people started to assume that the next version of android would demand 1GB of RAM, Google has surprised everyone saying Android 4.4 requires only 512MB of RAM. So, what this does is, all the 512MB RAM devices which were not upgraded to JellyBean can now be updated to Android 4.4 KitKat. This significantly reduces Android OS fragmentation.

As we see in the second image, all the devices running OS JellyBean /Ice Cream Sandwich and fewer devices running Android 2.3 GingerBread can now be updated to Android 4.4 KitKat. Thus the OS Distribution of Android 4.4 KitKat can be around 60%. This indeed is a benefit not only for users, but also for developers and testers.


Google is expected to announce Android KitKat 4.4 officially in the second week of October.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Lethargic Media or WHAT? #Lucia Movie

  First of all hats off to Pawan Kumar for coming out with such a beautiful concept with LUCIA. I have been hearing and reading about this movie since it was premiered in LIFF. Trust me, this crowd funded movie deserves all the hype it created before its release! Everything is top notch from acting to camera work. But unfortunately local media (atleast most of them) underrated the movie though the movie received rave reviews from the audience.

Initially I was quite OK with this, since I knew that opinions may vary from person to person. But recently a reporter from KANNADA PRABHA (Hari) reported that Lucia is a movie which can be liked and appreciated only by those people who are 'interested or involved in theatre works'. He further went on to say that its an Art movie which won't interest people who go to theater for entertainment. Hari was clearly defending his media which was made fun in social networking websites, since the same media largely underrated the movie.

Hmmm first lets come the content and clarity of the movie. Lucia is easily one of the best movies in recent times. I have watched this movie with lots of people who are non-kannadigas! All those people had to depend upon subtitles to understand the movie. But to no ones surprise all of them understood the movie and few of them even wanted to watch the movie for the second time! Unfortunately, the same movie was reviewed to have a  'meaningless climax' by our media. So what can we conclude from this? Are the  audience fools to applaud after climax or is media just too lethargic to at least try to understand the concept which is quite simple?
OK lets consider Lucia was a tough pill to swallow for our reporters and they were clueless about the movie. In such case, why did they review the movie? Its understandable if the movie is underrated if theaters were filled with clueless audience. But in this case, everyone were quite convinced except the reporters! Is our media so dumb?

Now, lets think Lucia is not a commercial movie and is an Art movie. One of the reporters had rated the movie with 2 stars saying that the movie doesn't have any commercial elements. Is this the way to treat an Art movie? If at all Kannada Film Industry is surviving today, its because of these art movies which gives sandalwood a national level recognition.

Satish's acting in the movie is appreciated by one and all. But, One news reporter even went on to say Satish's acting is not at all an acting in few sequences. Reading this I concluded that the review was not all a review.
Why is the local media so against the movie which is gaining a national level recognition? Is it because our media is lethargic?  Is it because our reporters are less intelligent? Or is it because ours is a paid media?
Well, this can be answered only by our Media!

Whatever the answer is; the first audience movie in kannada is definitely a movie which changes the outlook of KFI.