Showing posts with label Article(S). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Article(S). Show all posts

May 18, 2011

A conversation between a Software Engineer and another person in Shatabdhi Train ....An interesting and a must read!


Vivek Pradhan was not a happy man. Even the plush comfort of the air-conditioned compartment of the Shatabdhi express could not cool his frayed nerves. He was the Project Manager and still not entitled to air travel. It was not the prestige he sought; he had tried to reason with the admin person, it was the savings in time. As PM, he had so many things to do!!


He opened his case and took out the laptop, determined to put the time to some good use.


"Are you from the software industry sir," the man beside him was staring appreciatively at the laptop. Vivek glanced briefly and mumbled in affirmation, handling the laptop now with exaggerated care and importance as if it were an expensive car.


"You people have brought so much advancement to the country, Sir. Today everything is getting computerized. "


"Thanks," smiled Vivek, turning around to give the man a look. He always found it difficult to resist appreciation. The man was young and stockily built like a sportsman. He looked simple and strangely out of place in that little lap of luxury like a small town boy in a prep school. He probably was a railway sportsman making the most of his free traveling pass.


"You people always amaze me," the man continued, "You sit in an office and write something on a computer and it does so many big things outside."


Vivek smiled deprecatingly. Naive ness demanded reasoning not anger. "It is not as simple as that my friend. It is not just a question of writing a few lines. There is a lot of process that goes behind it."


For a moment, he was tempted to explain the entire Software Development Lifecycle but restrained himself to a single statement. "It is complex, very complex."


"It has to be. No wonder you people are so highly paid," came the reply.


This was not turning out as Vivek had thought. A hint of belligerence crept into his so far affable, persuasive tone. "


Everyone just sees the money. No one sees the amount of hard work we have to put in. Indians have such a narrow concept of hard work. Just because we sit in an air-conditioned office, does not mean our brows do not sweat. You exercise the muscle; we exercise the mind and believe me that is no less taxing."


He could see, he had the man where he wanted, and it was time to drive home the point.


"Let me give you an example. Take this train. The entire railway reservation system is computerized. You can book a train ticket between any two stations from any of the hundreds of computerized booking centers across the country.


Thousands of transactions accessing a single database, at a time concurrently; data integrity, locking, data security. Do you understand the complexity in designing and coding such a system?"


The man was awestruck; quite like a child at a planetarium. This was something big and beyond his imagination.


"You design and code such things."


"I used to," Vivek paused for effect, "but now I am the Project Manager."


"Oh!" sighed the man, as if the storm had passed over,


"So your life is easy now."


This was like the last straw for Vivek. He retorted, "Oh come on, does life ever get easy as you go up the ladder. Responsibility only brings more work.


Design and coding! That is the easier part. Now I do not do it, but I am responsible for it and believe me, that is far more stressful. My job is to get the work done in time and with the highest quality.


To tell you about the pressures, there is the customer at one end, always changing his requirements, the user at the other, wanting something else, and your boss, always expecting you to have finished it yesterday."


Vivek paused in his diatribe, his belligerence fading with self-realization. What he had said, was not merely the outburst of a wronged man, it was the truth. And one need not get angry while defending the truth.


"My friend," he concluded triumphantly, "you don't know what it is to be in the Line of Fire"
.


The man sat back in his chair, his eyes closed as if in realization. When he spoke after sometime, it was with a calm certainty that surprised Vivek.


"I know sir.... I know what it is to be in the Line of Fire......."

He was staring blankly, as if no passenger, no train existed, just a vast expanse of time.


"There were 30 of us when we were ordered to capture Point 4875 in the cover of the night.


The enemy was firing from the top.


There was no knowing where the next bullet was going to come from and for whom.


In the morning when we finally hoisted the tricolour at the top only 4 of us were alive."


"You are a...?"


"I am Subedar Sushant from the 13 J&K Rifles on duty at Peak 4875 in Kargil. They tell me I have completed my term and can opt for a soft assignment.


But, tell me sir, can one give up duty just because it makes life easier.


On the dawn of that capture, one of my colleagues lay injured in the snow, open to enemy fire while we were hiding behind a bunker.


It was my job to go and fetch that soldier to safety. But my captain sahib refused me permission and went ahead himself.


He said that the first pledge he had taken as a Gentleman Cadet was to put the safety and welfare of the nation foremost followed by the safety and welfare of the men he commanded... ....his own personal safety came last, always and every time."


"He was killed as he shielded and brought that injured soldier into the bunker. Every morning thereafter, as we stood guard, I could see him taking all those bullets, which were actually meant for me. I know sir....I know, what it is to be in the Line of Fire."


Vivek looked at him in disbelief not sure of how to respond. Abruptly, he switched off the laptop.


It seemed trivial, even insulting to edit a Word document in the presence of a man for whom valor and duty was a daily part of life; valour and sense of duty which he had so far attributed only to epical heroes.


The train slowed down as it pulled into the station, and Subedar Sushant picked up his bags to alight.


"It was nice meeting you sir."


Vivek fumbled with the handshake.


This hand... had climbed mountains, pressed the trigger, and hoisted the tricolour. Suddenly, as if by impulse, he stood up at attention and his right hand went up in an impromptu salute.


It was the least he felt he could do for the country.


PS:- The incident he narrated during the capture of Peak 4875 is a true-life incident during the Kargil war. Capt. Batra sacrificed his life while trying to save one of the men he commanded, as victory was within sight. For this and various other acts of bravery, he was awarded the Param Vir Chakra, the nation's highest military award.

August 30, 2010

The Sense of Achievement



Probably another fifteen minutes for the train to arrive. Having to wait in an unknown railway station for your train is certainly not among the best of things that can happen to you. But that day, somehow the whole setting brought a curious pleasure. The station seemed to be blissfully detached from all that which makes the world irksome and tiring. There seemed to be an air of magical serenity to the whole place. And of course, there was this rare pleasure of being in a place where nobody noticed you, knew you, or cared about what you’re doing!
Just as I was glancing through my Reader’s Digest (with no particular interest), I heard a shuffle of two tiny feet. I looked up to see a little girl, around three years of age, with a small bottle in her hand. With a gait so typical of little children – small irregular steps, excited hops in between, arms flailing – she walked past me. In no time, she reached a water tap near the fence on the platform, and turned back. When I glanced towards where she came from, I could see that she had turned to look at her mother, who was seated several benches away from me. I saw the mother gesture to her child to open the tap and stick the bottle under it, to collect the water. The child, despite having had to stand on her tiptoes for it, was quick to turn the tap on a little and hold the bottle under the trickle of water that had just begun to pour from it.
The sight of the bottle getting filled up slowly caught her fancy, I think; for she immediately turned to look at her mother with a wide smile, as if seeking approval for what she was doing. Even though her mother was gesturing to her, almost mouthing the words, to open the tap further so that the bottle would get filled up sooner, the girl seemed contented with the pace at which she was doing the job. The smile intact, she looked back at the bottle getting filled up, eyes gleaming in amazement and curiosity. Though her mother was still trying to get her attention, she seemed to be lost in her own simple world, where nothing could beat the pleasure of watching water drip into a bottle, filling it up ever so slowly!
It didn’t take much for her to realize though, that once you really want to concentrate on something, everything else distracts you. Now, the group of pigeons on the roof of the station building, then the bleating of the goats standing on the other side of the fence, then the creak of a trolley wheel behind her – she found it hard to resist looking at them. And in doing so, a couple of times, the bottle she was holding got misplaced from underneath the tap, and she got her arms wet. Soon it became a silly game between her and the tap – she would pull off the bottle for a few seconds, get her arms wet, but put the bottle back under the tap again!
She had spent several minutes in such a manner, before she suddenly decided she had collected enough water. She closed the tap, with an appreciative pat on it, and started walking back to her mother. The brilliant flash of smile on her face gave off the sense of achievement that her pristine mind had derived from such a seemingly dull task.
That she had managed to fill up just about a quarter of her bottle, or that her animated hops would spill much of the bottle’s contents by the time she would reach her mother, didn’t seem to make any difference to her. She probably held the big grin on her face all day…

AUTHOR : Sachin Warrier ( S7 EC )