Friday, 25 June 2021

Perks Of Mini Ratna


I work in a Mini-Ratna PSU for the last five years. Being a PSU, it has its own perks and limitations.

But the question is specifically asking regarding the perks pertaining to my job, so I would name a few:

  • Job Security
    • Nothing is more dear to anyone working professionally than is job security. I think I have that.
    • Job security becomes even more important during this extraordinary situation like pandemics.
    • So, I am glad I enjoy this perk.
  • Working in a core discipline
    • I am an electrical engineer by degree and I am working in a core discipline related to my field of study only.
    • Some people developed better skills of programming and some got management skills. But I am quite satisfied with a few years of experience in the discipline I invested four years of college.
    • Although I am not much enjoying the nature of the job itself. But it is one of the perks.
  • Decent Salary
    • My salary is decent. My in-hand salary is quite decent. It is not as much many well-earning friends but my take-home salary is quite comparable to a decent package.
    • Based on my qualifications and skills, the salary I am earning is good.
    • I have started investing in learning skills that can boost my income in the future.
  • 8–5 Job
    • Many people have started criticizing this 9–5 culture and think this is bad, but being an entrepreneur is a cool idea. (I don’t criticize anyone)
    • But I have 8–5 jobs, six days a week. It amounts to 54 hours a week.
    • But 8–5 job has its own perks— I get up at 6 ideal times, breakfast at 7:45, lunch at 1300 and dinner at 2100 everything according to the timetable.
    • I have an evening to spare which I try to make productive by reading books, exercising, and talking to friends.
  • Township
    • The one thing which I like the most about this job is the township.
    • Nothing can be better than a close community of colleagues staying together in the small township where everyone knows everyone else
    • The lush green township is filled with peacocks and you can always listen to the chirping of the birds in the background.
    • The township has a market complex, ATM, post office, three big playgrounds, a hospital, a marriage hall, two clubs, one gym, one swimming pool, two small libraries, etc.
  • Social Relevance
    • Sarkari Naukari is a sarkari naukari. No matter how bad it is.
    • People respect you once you tell them you work in a PSU, small or big.
    • Sometimes people judge you positively- Hosiyar Hoga tabi Sarkari Naukri Lagi hai.
  • Easy loans/ Credits
    • I can easily apply for loans or credit cards.
    • Perks of PSU extend to the facilities provided by the banks-loans, cards, etc.
    • I even got discounts when I bought my personal vehicle.
  • Medical Care
    • The company provides an excellent medical reimbursement policy in which the money gets reimbursed within a month.
    • Yearly medical checkups.
    • The company arranged for camps for vaccination in the colony itself. My mother got vaccinated without any trouble.

Township and Medical facilities are the two of the most important perks that I enjoy in this job.

I don’t like the job profile itself, and sometimes force myself in the morning to go to the office. These are the perks and this extraordinary circumstance has made me reconsider my decision of leaving this job.

Thanks for reading this answer.

PS. I have put some photos of my township.

My front gate door.

Road in the township.

My alley.

My small kitchen Garden

 
-Pankaj Prasad Working At National Fertilizers Limited, Btech

Wednesday, 23 June 2021


It's not about being good or bad in studying. It's about how focused you're in studying. For example, you're reading a thriller. You're so focused and interested in reading that book that you forget everything else. Studying for any competitive exam, including the IAS, demands the same sort of focus and concentration.

If you have studied subjects like history, geography and political science, either in school or college, it definitely helps. Now you may not all be interested in studying some subjects for the IAS. You may consider them dull and insipid. For example, the majority of students in my class were least interested in Biology and would barely pass. Those who were interested would invariably score excellent marks.

I started studying for a tough professional exam six years after graduation while in a full-time job. I was doing self study and did not find the subjects very interesting. I had studied most of the subjects in college but the six year gap after graduation and a full-time job were not conducive to studies. The only option to not studying was to remain in a clerical position all my life. This was not acceptable and I put heart and soul into studies. Since I refused to embrace mediocrity, I did well. Today after retirement, I lead a comfortable life thanks to those four years of hardship.

The only motivating factor in life is not only a comfortable future, but to lead a life where you do not have to scrounge for pennies and you have respect for yourself. If you do not have respect for yourself, you cannot expect respect from others.

Self-motivation is an important ingredient for success. You must have faith in yourself that you are capable of achieving your goals, whatever those might be.

Good luck 🍀

Balasubramanian Viswanathan,B.Com(Hons.), LL.B., FCS1977

Sunday, 20 June 2021

IFS Office


It differs from place to place.

In Bucharest, my office looks like this:

-Rahul Shrivastava, IFS, MCA, BSc-Chemistry

 Most civil service aspirants in India are from middle-class or lower middle class. This is true of IFS, too. Therefore, when you join the IFS, you’ll be like everyone else rather than being an exception. If you are from a lower middle class family, you should always remember the hardships that you have gone through when you join IFS or any civil service and use your position to make life better for those who are in difficulty.

  -Rahul Shrivastava

Thursday, 17 June 2021

 I come from a small town in Uttar Pradesh. I was born and brought up in a lower-middle-class family. But I studied hard and made my way to the two prestigious leagues of colleges in our country – IIT & IIM.

How has my life changed? A lot. During my school, I was in the company of friends who had no aspirations in their life. But IIT & IIM gave me access to one of the smartest & the most hard-working people who served as an inspiration for my life. I experienced severe knowledge transfer in their company, which imparted me skills I would have never thought.

I am not only financially better off now but also have learned how to look at life differently. With the adoption of newer habits, embracing health and fitness as a journey, and putting extra effort in whatever I do, my perspective on life has completely changed.

For me, studying is not just a gateway to knowledge but also a source of access to intelligent minds. I can appreciate the principles given in the best seller books because I have elevated my mind to synchronize with their thoughts.

Think again when you lose motivation to study. Do you want a normal life or you want to be among the leaders? By saying so, I am, in no way, telling, you can’t do anything without studying. But studying puts you on a better footing. And I am not restricting the concept of learning to academic books; you can learn about your passion and make your career in that direction.

Visualize the future you want to see, and if studying can help you reach there, don’t ever lose your motivation for studying.

-Krishna Khadelwal,IIM,IIT

I have several rules in my life, few of them specifically for studying. I am sharing them below, hoping you will benefit from the same:

 

# 1 Study while you study, play while you play

  • Don’t mix your studies with chatting with your friend, or listening to a song, or watching a viral video.
  • A study has confirmed that it takes an average of about 25 minutes (23 minutes and 15 seconds, to be exact) to return to the original task after an interruption.
  • Don’t let your focus break by the notification on your phone.

# 2 Take notes wherever possible

  • Your brain is not like a hard disk where data remains intact once you have stored it. Within an hour, you forget an average of 50% of the information you received, which increases to 90% by the end of the week.
  • During the exams, the notes you have taken during class are going to be your savior. And it is not just for the exams; it will remain with you forever.

# 3 Revise the concepts often

  • If you are studying for an exam, revision is the most important thing.
  • If you have revised the concepts in 5 repetitions (first repetition – Within a day, Second repetition – After a few days, Third repetition – After a week, Fourth Repetition – After a month, and Fifth Repetition – After a few months), you will permanently remember 95% of the information

# 4 Practice different types of questions

  • Your learning actually completes when you can apply a concept to a real-life problem.
  • Don’t just learn the formula; try to understand the logic behind it.
  • Practicing a variety of questions not only reinforces the learned concepts, but also you remember the concepts for a long-time.

# 5 Don’t just depend on coaching

  • Coaching institutes will help and guide you, but you will never learn until you study and practice on your own.
  • Don’t spend your entire day making trips to the school and coaching.
  • Keep a good chunk of time for your self-study, and you will realize you might be going ahead than coaching students.

I am not boasting when I am saying that I qualified IIT-JEE (AIR 2752), GATE (AIR 21), and CAT (99.19 percentile) based on self-study. I bought coaching materials and joined their All-India Test Series but never enrolled in their classroom programme.

It is not true that you can’t crack competitive exams without coaching. With a proper mindset and strategy, and self-study, it is definitely possible.

Be confident and apply these golden study rules, and you will succeed in every exam of your life.

  -Krishna Khandelwal,IIM,IIT

Saturday, 29 May 2021

Are computer scientists happy?

In short, computer scientists are people.


-Jeff Erickson CS Professor-University of Illinois

Friday, 28 May 2021

Clerk After 12 & Thinking about Entering IIM ?


I was a student at IIM Calcutta 2004–06. One of my classmates used to work as a clerk in Vijaya Bank. So, the simple answer to your question is YES.

There is more to his story.

He joined the Bank as a clerk with Class 12 as the qualification. His dad and the primary bread winner passed away and he had to take charge of the family. He finished his B.Com and ICWAI through private study while working in the bank. He even got promoted as an officer about 5 years after joining the bank.

He didn't consider MBA as a career option for quite some time. Then he saved enough money for his family to sustain for two years when he is away.

Finally, at the age of 26, he left the bank to join IIMC. He had spent 7.5 years in service by then. He had struggled with every single section in CAT and more than half the courses in IIMC. Every single time he had the perseverance to fight through.

Today he is an amazingly successful and highly respected corporate finance professional.

Leaving out his name to protect his privacy. A very dear friend of mine and someone who I regard highly.
 
-Adithya Lanka

Thursday, 27 May 2021

You’re complaining about a slow laptop?






Laptops didn’t exist when I learned to code. Or personal computers at all for that matter.


When I went to grad school for my MSCS degree, all of our assignments ran on a UNIVAC 1108 mainframe computer — which had a 1.33 MHz processor, and about 1 MB of main memory. Or about 1000 times slower and 8000 times smaller memory than a cheap laptop. And cost over two millions dollars (almost $14 million today).


But the speed and memory size weren’t directly relevant to me, because there weren’t any dial up terminals yet (those were added the year I graduated). When they did come along, the normal speed was 300 baud. That’s about two seconds per line displayed on a screen.


All of our programs were submitted on punch cards in boxes like this:




and we would get the results back in a few hours, or more often, the next day.


Compile error? Too bad. Wait another day.


Yet I learned FORTRAN IV, UNIVAC 1108 assembler, LISP, COBOL and ALGOL 68 this way. I got my Master’s degree in Computer Science and am still working full-time 50 years later as a programmer at the age of 74.


Over the years I’ve picked up another dozen or so high-level languages, and 15 additional variations of assembler.


Please don’t expect me to shed any tears over your slow laptop.

   -Tom Crosley,M.S. in Computer Science, Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago 

Wednesday, 26 May 2021

More Hardwork = More Money

The greatest secret of earning wealth is the ability of a person to suffer failure and learn the lessons from failures instead of quitting.

If you are not willing to fail, you don’t have chances to become rich by your own effort.

There are many jobs that are so easy to be done that no one fails. For example, if you choose to be a labourer, worker in a factory, maidservant, driver, there is hardly any chances of failure as everyone can master these jobs quite easily.

Yet you can never become rich doing these jobs even if you are working 18 hours a day.

However, there are other professions, where the chances of failures are very high. For example, when we attempt to learn any subject in our schools and colleges and try to solve a problem, we fail multiple times before we start finding the right answers to the questions.

We keep learning from every mistake, and soon we stop making mistakes in solving the problems which looked so difficult to us once.

When you pass your college and choose a profession, there are some jobs where the chances of failures are very high and there are somewhere the chances of failure are very low.

( It does not mean you don't have to work hard but you have to work  Hard Then Super Hard but in the Right Direction and on the Right Path ) 

Tuesday, 4 May 2021

Ignorance is Bliss ?

When I was a young child, I once asked my mother the reasons for the solar and lunar eclipse.

She narrated me the story of Puranas and explained that solar and lunar eclipse happens when Rahu-Ketu eats Sun and Moon by taking revenge for exposing them to Lord Vishnu who was in the form of a beautiful woman ‘Mohini’ .

Almost everyone in my village still believes in this story and considers eclipse as inauspecious and avoids doing many activities including eating food cooked before eclipse.

However, when I later studied science, I came to know the scientific reason for the solar and lunar eclipse due to planatory motions in which God has no role to play.

However, I could never explain my mother and most of my relatives that myths are false and that God has no role to play in eclipse as they deeply believe in the stories of Puranas and reject all the scientific principles that runs contrary to these stories.

Unfortunately, billions of people around the world still believe in the myths and fallacies of mythologies and religion rather than posing faith on scientific explanations of the realities.

If you are living in a society where almost everyone believes in myths, you are declared as outcaste and ridiculed rather than respected for your knowledge and wisdom.

I have been voracious reader for last couple of decades and I read almost fifty books every year.

Most of my friends and colleagues in civil services and relatives have stopped learning and only recycle their old knowledge. They rarely read books except those which deals with their job.

I am gradually realising that I now have little in common with my old friends, colleagues and relatives, as most of them are still stuck up in the mental state at which they were decades ago while I am getting transformed everyday due to learning new things in life.

I sometime marvel the power of book, which help us interact with the best of the best minds of the world that ever existed in any part of the world since the beginning of human civilisation.

And once you have enjoyed their company and understood the thoughts of such great minds, how can you think like ignorant men once again and enjoy the company of foolish and ignorance masses?

Ignorance is indeed a bliss for most people in the world because ignorant people are like blind men guiding each other and enjoying happiness since they can’t see the bad things in the world, while forgetting that they also can’t see the beauty of the world as well.

Even if I want, I can’t enjoy the bliss of ignorance just like a man with eyes can never enjoy the bliss of a blind man by closing his eyes forever.

I can never stop the search of knowledge because only the right knowledge can open our eyes to the reality and guide us to the right path of sustainable happiness and bliss.

Once you have enjoyed the bliss of knowledge, there is no way you can ever live with ignorance and enjoy its blessings.

 -Awdhesh Singh  Former IRS, IITian

My Life Story: 5000 rupees to 500 crores (Last Part)

Read the first part here before proceeding below :  First Part A fter running the coaching center in Guntur for one year, I had to shut it d...