Saturday, January 31, 2015

How Tech at IITM shaped me

When I entered IITM in 2008, I was awe-struck by the variety of activities that happened. Like a fresher, I tried my hand at many activities –such as playing hockey in quadrangle, participating in quizzes and building catapults in Project X competition. It was confusing at first because there was a vast expanse to choose from, but slowly I understood that tech was my calling. When I had joined Insti in 2008, I was amazed by the talk Sayan Ganguly (CoCAS) had given while introducing Shaastra and CFI. It instilled in me the hunger to learn and nudged my acumen to innovate. From there, started my tech-journey at IITM.
I have observed, participated, conducted and managed various tech events and activities at IIT Madras from a very grass-root level. What I have personally learnt from CFI, Shaastra and Tech-Soc are real-life lessons that continues to help me even after couple of years after passing out. I have listed down a few qualities or lessons that I have learnt in my Insti-tech stint. For example, something I have learnt on my tech-journey is that “Always, invest in people.” Tech at IITM has evolved because people every year for the last 7-8 years have invested in their juniors and have taught them the tricks of the trade.
There are 3 entities of Tech, which has shaped my capabilities: TechSoc, Shaastra and CFI. Each one is unique in its own sense and has provided me different avenues of learning. Getting involved in tech activities will obviously expand your horizon of building things, innovating and trouble-shooting. But, apart from that, there are more treasurable proficiencies that you will gain out of taking up a project at CFI or coordinating a competition in Shaastra or participating in an event on behalf of your beloved hostel in Tech-Soc.  Here’s a snippet of what broad life-skills does one learn from tech-activities and events at IITM:

1)     Teamwork:
This is a quality that you need most in life. There will be rough times in a project, when having a strong, dependable and knitted team will make all the difference. During Techsoc 2008-09, there were times when bots were not working properly and electronic modules were responding haywire. During Shaastra, sometimes, the events were not coming up as planned; at every step, I could vouch that the teamwork never ever faltered. The opposite is also true. In Robocon 2010, we had very hard-working and smart individuals. But, the team as a cohesive unit did not click. The team work faltered and that was the main reason we bowed out in quarters.
The lesson – “Never ever leave a fellow colleague hanging in a team

2)     Jugaad or Out-of box thinking:
This is something that my hostel had instilled in me from the 1st year of Techsoc. The kind of shoddy bots we made could have made a Product Design guy cringe. But, the main selling point was that they worked. Sometimes, in life, you will get unrealistic deadlines from clients, from managers and you will have to turn it around! Jugaad will help you in giving ugly but working solutions in a time-crunched environment.
The lesson – “The best thing about Jugaad is that in tough situations, you get a license to just care about getting things to work and you don’t have to think about the presentation of the solution

3)     Managing people:
This is a skill-set which B-schools teach you, but I have learnt the most about it at IIT-M. Every person needs to be good at managing people to succeed in life. Since success is a not a single-person centric and is driven by people, managing people is an utmost required skill.   Completing a work yourself is always easier than getting it done by someone else. And, that’s what you learn when you become a co-ord/core at Shaastra / Hostel TAS / a team leader in any CFI project. The main thing I have learnt from all of my managerial stints at Insti is spend time with your juniors, talk to them and build solidarity. This is what people forget the most. You can’t just give orders and expect that everything will be taken care of. You have to build trust, bonding and camaraderie with your juniors and that can happen only while discussing and solving problems together.
The lesson – “Build companionship with your sub-ordinates. It is the best way to motivate people

4)     Brainstorm and Think Crazy:
Sometimes, when we used to get stuck at something, especially at Shaastra meetings, we used to take a small break and randomly brainstorm. We used to discuss some really crazy and improbable ideas, but the idea was to think as bat-shit crazy as possible. During one of these crazy brain-storming sessions, we decided to get few projects from CFI and few events from Shaastra and display them in front of Himalaya! And, the idea did wonders. People noticed it and we got a huge surge of Insti publicity, which we had lacked before! In life too, sometimes it is important to do crazy things to get noticed.
The lesson – “Brainstorm together and build upon crazy ideas, you don’t know what might tick

5)     Upward Management:
Unless you become the CEO of your company, there will be managers and directors above you whom you would have to report to. If you are the CEO, imagine that your client is above you. All the time spent interacting with Dean (Students) and Co-curricular Advisor had helped me in realizing the importance of making a person understand a month’s toil in a time slot of fifteen minutes. Here, I learnt the importance of being short, succinct and to-the-point. People higher up cannot go into details, you need to help them in understanding the crux of your story in a very limited time.
The lesson – “While interacting to someone higher-up, it is essential to convey your thoughts in a concise and crisp manner

6)     You Can Win (however bad the odds are stacked against you)
During the end-leg of Techsoc 2011, Narmad was at second position. We needed nothing short of a miracle to win, because only two major events were left: Autonomous Robotics and S-Net. I remember people telling me that Narmad couldn’t win the Tech-Soc, it was practically out of our reach. But, I – being the TAS – told my hostel juniors only one thing: “We had to win this event by a big margin.” Because we wanted to get a lead so big that even if we didn’t place in the last S-Net, we should win. We had slogged all the year round for this and it was the hostel’s dream to get the Tech-Soc back.
We decided that there is only 1 way to win the Tech-Soc trophy – we went with two hostel teams in Autonomous Robotics competition! It was a big risk because historically it had been an event where only a couple of teams had successfully completed the problem statement, but we took the risk. We started preparing very early and we sweated it out; I remember the first and second years literally toiling days and nights to get both of the bots working! It was an event laced with drama. On the D-day, in the first round, one of our bots didn’t work. Though the second bot worked great, we wanted to get the other bot working as soon as possible and win both the 1st and 2nd positions. We quickly went into trouble-shoot mode and got the first bot working (it was a minor glitch). The rest as people remember was history (sic!) and we cruised to victory. We won both the 1st and 2nd positions and we beat Tambi comprehensively to win the TechSoc 2010-11.
The lesson – “Do not believe the non-believers. If you think you can do it, charge ahead

So, anyone who is confused that how will building a bot/RC car/contraption for Shaastra or TechSoc help him in a finance job or how will participating in FSAE, Robocon, IARC will help you in consulting, the technical skill might not. But, let me tell you that the life-skill will surely help you whatever path you take up.
These life-lessons are the most precious takeaways of my tech journey. The prizes, the certificates and the accolades might wither away, but these experiences will stay with me forever.

Cheers!

This article was written by me for Chennai 36 (IITM's student and alumni website). Here is the link -  http://chennai36.iitm.ac.in/how-tech-at-iit-m-shaped-me/

Saturday, January 24, 2015

The Helicopter Man Retires!

Much has been spoken on Dhoni's retirement from tests and there is something which both the fanboys and the haters have to understand!
MS Dhoni was "one of the best" captains and "the best" wicketkeeper batsman India has ever produced. And as a cricket fan who has closely followed his career, there are a few things which need to be highlighted!
Firstly and most importantly, after Dhoni, we go back to that age when if the Sahas and Karthiks make an odd 30 or 40, we will be more than happy! But, with Dhoni at crease, we always expected more. We expected him to score a 50, score a 100, bat with tailenders, save the test match after the trademark Indian top order collapse. All that has been so ingrained in our minds that it will take some time and grit on Kohli's part to groom another Dhoni (the wicket keeper batsman). He has saved us enough tests and he has taken us out of many sticky situations in the past to prove his mettle in this field. He was not able to contribute to this part for quite some time as he was going through a long, dry spell and hence, retiring was the logical step.
Now, coming to the MS Dhoni- the captain. There are 2 sub-parts here. Dhoni the home skipper and the away skipper. The home skipper was like a lion in his den. He knew the grounds, the conditions, his team's strengths and weaknesses and stuck to the basics - make turning tracks, post big totals, bombard opposition with spin!" which worked for the team! But, the away skipper was sometimes like a deer caught in front of headlights. India's bowling never had or even has till now the tooth to take 20 wickets in Australia, South Africa and England. We haven't got a genuine away wicket taking bowler after Zaheer and that is not completely Dhoni's fault -the Ishants and Sreesanths did not click always. They had those sporadic moments of glory, but consistency eluded them! Since Dhoni understood that it will be really difficult to take 20 wickets, he changed his strategy and became very defensive. He understood that a 2-0 loss is better than 4-0 loss! But, in doing that, more often than not, he still lost away tests. His team selections were biased - keeping Rohit Sharma and Jadeja in for god knows how long!
Coming to his retirement, yes, it was odd, and a surprise/shock to all cricket fans. On one hand, fanboys will say that he did the right decision. He understood that he could not contribute more and giving Kohli the baton made perfect sense. On other hand, critics will say Dhoni abandoned his team, he was self-centric and he could have waited till the end of the series. But, one thing we are missing is a simple point - Dhoni is human, he is 33 and his body had started breaking up after the huge number of matches he has played. The logical decision is always to quit the form of cricket you are least natural into. Everyone would agree that Dhoni is a natural ODI cricketer and not a natural Test cricketer! So, quitting Tests makes sense. It is a highly impulsive, personal decision, one may or may not have been thought through by him completely.
In a nutshell, like Dada, Dhoni was a person who brought out conflicting emotions in people. He was not like Dravid and Kumble whom no body hated! Yes, like Dada, he too believed in getting his team right, even if senior team members got hurt to the point that people brandished him as an arrogant, biased captain. But, it also had another side - he was okay with failures, he kept his head cool and understood that he has Indian sport's toughest job! That was Dhoni, the test cricketer, a person who brought the tribal eastern state on cricket's national map, understood how difficult it is for small town players to make it big in Tests, changed his natural game to fit into Tests, who kept wickets for 1 and half days and then carried people's expectations of making a 100 with tailenders after a batting collapse and finally a good test captain with a knack of going defensive away with debatable actions!
Cheers to Dhoni and hope he gets us the World Cup again!

P.S. - I wrote this as a Facebook status on my timeline on New Year's Eve.