Friday, May 22, 2020

Retiring this majestic bird ..

Watch this majestic video of the 4 engined Airbus A380 taking off, in flight and landing.. 


Coronavirus pandemic saw major global airlines like Air France, Emirates pulling off A380 from their fleet for ever, though Airbus stopped production of the 880 seater large A380 in Feb '19 itself ...

Ending of another saga .. 😢


Thursday, May 21, 2020

Kumari and her heroics ..

Some heroic stories coming out of Bihar .. 🙏👏👏🙏

This is of the best stories of the lockdown.. 

Nari shakthi and being shakthi ..


What more can a daughter offer her ailing father ?? Bow our heads..

Saturday, May 9, 2020

How Covid brought relatives and friends together ..

Covid time has given us many shocks, it has also given us many surprises.

I have many relatives and friends in the western hemisphere. It was difficult tying to talk to them and even difficult to meet them as they were busy with their rich, successful, material, busy lives and we with ours.

But with the onset of the Covid virus, I got the golden opportunity to renew friendships, meet so many of my old classmates and relatives, who were earlier too busy to talk to us but now had the time and willingness to talk to us mortal beings on this past of the globe.
Covid virus, courtesy Harvard Medical School.

The massive spread of the Corona virus in the western world and its ensuing deaths and grief in the western world shocked everyone around the world. While the virus was spreading like wildfire in the west, its spread was less in Asia and Europe. Is it a delayed contagion or reduced impact contagion, only time can tell.

How did Asian countries (other than China, who was excessively greedy and was looking at dominating the world) manage the successful containment through social preventive measures like a strictly deployed lockdown and social distancing in society help them to contain the spread of the virus. The politicians managed to convince the population of the urgency much better than in the west. In the west we could see people openly challenging the dictats of the government on roads and through the media. They were conveniently forgetting the fact that these strict containment measures were for the well being of the people.

The western world was taken aghast at how successfully we in India were able to comply with the strict social measures much more successully than in the west, to contain the spread of this virus and turned around to find out what we did right and what we did correctly. As of the time of writing this article, India has just 2100 deaths for a population of 1300 million compared to 80,000 plus in US with a population one fourth of India at 320 million. It clearly demonstrates the failure and lack of competitiveness and concern for the common man in the western society. Everything is based and measured on economic terms.

During the covid time, old friends started calling up and old friendships were renewed, which was a good thing. Now I feel for lasting peace in the world, we need to have more such viruses attacking the world more often, so that people do not forget their original humble backgrounds, friends and relatives. But I should say there were some true friends and relatives who were sincere in their relationships from beginning itself.

We need to understand that in this world, we are all together, no man is an island, we all live and die together.

With the threat of society taking more time to develop herd immunity and delay in coming out was a successful vaccine to contain the virus, the future picture does not look promising. With no successful cure in sight, the news of medical practitioners succumbing to the virus is another issue of concern. The complete surrender of humanity , irrespective of class, colour, creed and race, being rich or poor, healthy or unhealthy, educated or illiterate, the kneeling down in front of the virus has been apalling, shocking, nauseating and sickening.  

Humans behaving strangely an boastfully, forgetful of their helplessness in front of nature and God, has been there from time immemorial. How culture, education, knowledge and wisdom will take us forward as humans is what matters most.

George

Friday, May 8, 2020

Lubuntu 19.04 Linux for my 8 year old HP 430 laptop ..

My 8 year old HP 430 laptop had started of late giving problems of slow performance. I had only 2 GB RAM and a dual core Core 3 setup.

Tried working on Linux Mint for about 2 years, worked fine, and recently shifted to Ubuntu 20.04. The whole system got slow. During this Covid time, a slow computer flows down your work. Also the computer was getting heated up.. After loading MS Teams  it was super slow.

I found that 1 GB Lubuntu 19.04 was light on an old computer of 2 GB RAM. After installing Lubuntu, I find the computer has become fast. Thanks Lubuntu ..

Should see how MS Teams works on it ..

George 

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

Why is US the cause of so much ridicule and derision ?

Would Americans have been so much ridiculed, mocked at, derided, scoffed at, shamed and jeered globally had their President acted with restraint and humility when the initial news of Covid virus deaths in US broke out ? 

US citizens led by their highly respectful President were haughty and foolishly over-confident of their advances in science, technology, medical R&D  and healthcare advances that they rubbished all news of a health crisis, considered themselves to be above any such crisis and initially violated, worse still, ignored all norms of social distancing. 

They never thought a 120 nm virus could cause so much damage, death and bring much grief to US nation and it's proud people. They totally forgot healthcare was not a service, it was a business in US.

A great humbling lesson for other nations to understand ground reality, beware false pride .. The cries of agony, despair and grief of millions of Afghani and Iraqi innocents children orphaned, adults killed or maimed reverberate in the thick air over NY WTC and Washington DC ..

Let's be humble and caring of others ..

Friday, May 1, 2020

Tata's value system - living story ..

Came across this inspiring and moving anecdotal account about Tata group’s value system. You may like to read this : (explains why Tata still continues to be the most respected Global brand post second World war.)
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It was the year 1946. Germany stood devastated by the Second World War. The Allies had won the war, and many German cities, including Munich, had been severely damaged by the British Royal Air Force. Munich, the picturesque capital of the Bavarian region of Germany, and centre of the country’s diesel engine production, had suffered as many as 74 air-raids. More than half the entire city had been damaged or destroyed.

On one gloomy morning that year, at the Munich Railway station, stood the Directors of Krauss Maffei, the reputed German engineering Company. They were waiting for the arrival of their guests from India. Founded in 1838, Krauss Maffei was a leading maker of locomotives of various types, and an engineering company with a formidable reputation. Unfortunately, the Company now stood devastated by the World War, since their factories had been destroyed by the Allied Forces.

The guests from India got down from their train. They were Directors from the Tata Group in India. If you had been there, you would have seen JRD Tata, the young, tall, lanky Chairman of the Group, get off the train. And accompanying him was a forty-year old engineer, Sumant Moolgaonkar, representing TELCO (now Tata Motors). They had come to Munich for discussions with Krauss Maffei, regarding the manufacture of locomotives in India. What they found, instead, were scenes of destruction and ruin.

The Germans requested the Indians to take some of their unemployed engineers to India, alongwith their families, and provide them jobs and shelter. The Directors of Krauss Maffei are reported to have told the Tata Directors – "They are very skilled people. They will do whatever you ask them if you take care of them. They can also teach your people."  

This would have to be done without a formal contract, because the British, who were still ruling India, had forbidden Indian Companies from having any contracts with German Corporations, during those times of the World War. But this request was urgent, and compelling. Because in that year, with factories lying destroyed, unemployment in Germany was rampant, and the then German currency, the Reichsmark, had become almost worthless.  

The Tata Directors agreed to this request, and assured the Germans that their people would be well looked after. The German engineers from Krauss Maffei then came to India, and they were provided good jobs and housing by the Tata Group. They were well taken care of, and they also rendered great service to Tata Motors. 

In 1945, Tata Motors had signed an agreement with the Indian Railways for manufacture of steam locomotives, and this is where the German engineers provided valuable technical expertise. They helped the Company manufacture locomotives, which were amongst the Company’s very first products.

In 1947, India became independent. In the 1950s, Tata Motors moved on to manufacture trucks in collaboration with Daimler Benz. 

Many years had now passed since that fateful meeting at the Munich Railway Station. Germany had substantially recovered from the ravages of the war, and the reconstruction effort had borne great fruit. In one of these happier years, the Board of Directors of Krauss Maffei was surprised to suddenly receive a letter from India. 

This letter was from the Tata Group. It offered grateful thanks for the services of the German engineers, and it contained an offer of compensation to Krauss Maffei for the skills which had been transferred by the Germans to Tata Motors. 

Krauss Maffei was surprised, even taken aback at this offer. There was no legal contract, and therefore no obligation for the Tata Group to pay any compensation. In fact, I think, neither did this expectation exist, because the Tata Group had helped by providing jobs and shelter to the otherwise unemployed German engineers, during those dark days. So, the Germans were astonished, as they read the Tata letter.

This story was narrated many, many years later, in the 1970s, by Directors of Krauss Maffei, to Arun Maira, then a senior Director of Tata Motors. Arun Maira is one of India’s most respected and distinguished business thinkers today. In a thoughtful article that he wrote for the Economic Times in 2005 (thank you, Mr. Maira, for this wonderful piece), he recollects how two elderly German gentlemen met him as part of a business transaction in Malaysia, jumped up, shook his hands, and wanted to express their deepest gratitude to him. They then narrated to him this fascinating story, which, they said, is now part of their Company’s folklore.

One interesting and unexpected sidelight of this story occurred when Tata Motors was asked to provide a legally binding financial guarantee in the 1970s, but this was rendered very difficult because of the Indian Government’s regulations at that time. This matter was taken up to German bankers, who said that a guarantee on a Tata letterhead, signed by the Chairman, was more valuable than any banker’s guarantee.

I do not know what exact thoughts ran through the minds of Tata Directors in the 1950s before they sent that letter to Krauss Maffei, offering compensation where none was agreed upon or expected. But I think the Tata Group did this because it was the right thing to do. 

The right thing to do is never defined by formal agreements or legal contracts alone. Neither is it defined by the expectations that others have of us. 

What is right is defined by our own high expectations of ourselves, by the culture of fairness and trust that we wish to establish. Are we being truly fair to the people and the Companies we work with? 

We always know, if we listen deeply enough to our inner voice, whether we are being totally fair and right. The Krauss Maffei story holds such a beautiful lesson for all of us.  

Written by Harish Bhat

What steps should we focus post-Covid for a better world ?

What global changes should we look forward to, post Covid, to make planet earth more sustainable,  economically,  environmentally and socially ?

1. Can we have a new, resurgent, hygienic, healthy India and a just world  post Covid ?

2. Can we sensitise our people to less exploit nature and non-renewable natural resources?

3. Can we motivate our people to use to the most our ingenuity and innovative thinking to save resources and preserve nature? 

4. Can we get the people of the world to use more renewable resources in our industrial and daily energy mix ?

5. Can we be more tolerant,  considerate and care for our co-habitants on planet earth, all flora and fauna ?

6. Can the economically advanced countries of the world be less selfish and  more considerate to their less fortunate neighbors?

7. Can we take to a more vegan diet to help save other living beings and our co-habitants on planet earth ?

8. Can we take a joint promise to less pollute the air, water and land around us  ?

The rich developed western world has come to realise that we are all in it together, no people is exclusive, our futures are inter-dependent. We all leave this planet simple  and plain, without any glory.

Let's take this as a once only, golden opportunity to give a richer planet to our children .. 🙏🙏🙏

George Easaw, Bangalore. 2020.