Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Dynamic design



This Is A Cool Computer Program - Celebrity bloopers here

Friday, July 27, 2007

American Physicist in the body of a poor Indian village boy




This Indian village boy is from a rural village of India. His father [seen in the video] is a paranoid. This boy was beaten by his father one night and he locked himself in a room. He stayed in that room for three months and when he came out, He was talking fluent British-American English. Since then he has been writing several papers in Physics and has been constantly looking forward to meet the former President APJ Abdul Kalam , who happened to be a missile technology scientist. In the video one can see how the Stupid Indian television media is trying to make money out of it. They have been asking most foolish questions and a lot of astrology tantrums. The boy is clearly seen possessed by some thing supernatural..

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

The Great Indian IT Slowdown


Information technology has come a long way in India. The great slowdown of 2000 was a meteorite hit for Indian IT sending ripples to entire economy. IT has stablised a lot since then. A Boom in the BPO sector pushed it to a higher level but with a shaky factor of dependency on western outsourcing laws and thinking. According to the Centre for Monitoring Indian Economy, the offshore IT and BPO industries accounted for nearly 95 per cent of the absolute growth in foreign exchange inflows associated with services industries between 2000 and 2004. While total services exports grew by 60 per cent from US$16 billion in 2000 to US$25 billion in 2004, offshore IT and BPO exports tripled in the same period. This indicates somehow an exponential growth after 2005. In 2007 we are in a good position and can sense a stability.

The million dollar question is " Are we stable enough to sustain this growth for another 5 years?". I tried to put some facts in front and then answer the question above.

Fact 1 : India's software exports is heavily dependent on the support of STPI [Software technology parks of India] . The IT goods like Desktop PC's and servers are exempted from import duty. The only requirement is that the goods imported have to be in a restricted boundary and has to have a account which is verified by customs in every quarter or even monthly. Another advantage of operating in STPI controlled domain is that the income tax is exempted on overall income of the company.These all facilities were given to the IT industry in order to bring in a stablized and supported growth. These benefits given by the government accounts for a big share in the mammoth growth of IT in India.

At the closing of Financial year 2008-2009, The benefits given by STPI will be stopped. It means that the duty on software exports shall be levied. The import duty on IT goods will be levied. The Income tax exemption on IT export profits shall be removed. It all means a drastic drop in the IT profit margins.

With every problem there comes a solution. Government in order to nullify the effects has come out with a transition plan . It says in order to operate as earlier , companies need to operate out of an SEZ [Special economic zones..remember Nandigram]
so move your infrastructure to and SEZ or die, merge..blah blah. The one who can afford need to shell out 1 million dollar an acre of land and minimum land required for an SEZ is 25 Acres. On top of it you need to rebuild your infrastructure on that land. How many will sustain this zolt....Nevermind.

Fact 2: The rising Rupee may be giving a sense of achievement to we the Indians but at the same time a shiver in the spine as an IT worker. Imagine your current billing for IT services [in Dollars] drops drastically in 4 months because Indian rupee just got stronger. It would have been the case that rupee is getting stronger at a stable rate for past 10 years, IT companies could have managed to bring in some solution to handle it but what if it gets stronger by 7 rupees in just 4 months. Nowhere to go... nowhere to run...except face the losses.

Fact 3: The average attrition rate in Indian BPO is 30-40% where the peak of attrition in a single company going as high as 80 %. and how does it affect the business ....if a company has 100 people doing a certain job paid 25,000 and that turnover or attrition is running at 10%, the cost of attrition is:

(Total staff x attrition rate %) x (annual salary x 80%)

* 100 staff at 10% attrition means 10 people leave and are replaced each year.
* A replacement cost of 80% of a salary of 25,000 means the cost of each replacement is 20,000.
* The cost of turnover is therefore 10 x 20,000 or 200,000 a year.
* The oncost to the overall salary bill is 8%.


Now the above mentioned three facts are clear and fair enough to bring in temporary slowdown in IT till government wakes up and reconsider its decisions.


Monday, June 04, 2007

Tools for Bloggers


Online blogging is taking a new turn now. The online blog writing is quite a fad but writing blogs offline only to be published later is also has its own charm. I found two tools that are latest and one of the best for offline blogging.


1. Qumana is an easy-to-use desktop blog editor, enabling you to write, edit and post to one or more blogs.


2. Windows Live Writer is offline blog writing tool from Microsoft. Released as Beta , good for Microsoft follower.


My personal favourite is Qumana. got everything which a regular blogger requires..


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Document Management Paradigm


I recently found an article by one of my good friend about Document management and a easy way to handle it. I realized its not end of the road for SME's if they want to maintain their document archives. I thought its a good idea to expose some of the best tools available today which to a great extent match the requirements posed by SME's.


I still remember a project at V.V Giri National labour Institute which was I think one of the biggest attempt in India to digitize old labour documents and records . The library is now in a very good shape and found here


The key software behind it was GreenStone Digital Library , An open source suite of softwares for building and distributing digital library collections. It is open-source, multilingual software, issued under the terms of the GNU General Public License.


Greenstone runs on all versions of Windows, and Unix/Linux, and Mac OS-X. It is very easy to install. For the default Windows installation absolutely no configuration is necessary, and end users routinely install Greenstone on their personal laptops or workstations. Institutional users run it on their main web server, where it interoperates with standard web server software (e.g. Apache).


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