Saturday, October 16, 2004

Samsung Blue Platinum - DigitALL Competition 2004

Feel excited about the Samsung Blue Patinum (1st Prize) Award that we won in the SAMSUNG DIGITALL Competition.

Actually, the more exciting part is the trip to Samsung HQ in South Korea (Seoul) that we will get to go on sometime next year.

You can find some news about this at the following link - http://www2.bschool.nus.edu.sg/corpdev/bizleads/Oct04/schoolnotes.htm#sn2

Digitally yours ;-)
Satish

Wednesday, October 13, 2004


At a local Cafe (Good Colour!) Posted by Hello

A Room-locked day in Copenhagen!

Hi,

Well, contrary to what you might expect someone like me (wanderer) or yourself to do on a beautiful suny day in Copenhagen, I was in my nice big room all day.

Had taken an off from office because I wasn't feeling great and wanted to get some focused work done. Not that I can't focus in office, but well, I just had to have an excuse :)

Anyways, the day was lovely - what else can say! I slept a little in the day (although I never like to admit that I like it). But also participated in the world through this laptop screen. Really wonder how people lived without a computer. I frankly dont know how life would be without a computer. Feels like such a utopian concept!

Somethings that I revisited today. One - there is some amount of debate if the smile actually requires lesser muscles than a frown. Most popular numbers are 17 for the smile and 53 for a frown, through 26 and 62 also seem to be popular.

And I was again very fascinated with some Danish business acumen. Did a couple of transactions with my bank today. Guess what, I have a personal financial counsellor from the bank. I would have almost been up the gloating tree, was it not for the lack of knowledge that I encountered. But my counsellor is cute, so I guess I will just let it be.

Life goes on. But today marks 9204 days for me in this beautiful world. You can check your days at this link (http://www.timeanddate.com/date/duration.html)

Cheers,
Satish

Monday, October 11, 2004

Copenhagen - I have arrived!

Some of the thoughts here might be a little too direct, but they are just passing thoughts, so please don’t take them as my permanent impressions. As one generally relates good traveling with, just take the best on with you and leave the rest.

It has been a full four days since I landed here in Copenhagen after traveling 16 hours half way across the globe from Singapore. Stopped over at Bangkok airport for a couple of hours on the way, and that was an interesting time. Interesting because there was this multitude of people at the airport, with such different backgrounds, priorities, worries and thoughts. Some were running to catch the next flight, some were busy photographing everything new, some were just lounging, some were buying from the score of duty-free & Thailand souvenir shops and there were others like me who were trying to decide what to do.

Well I did manage to do what others did and what everyone does, but in the process also noted the eccentricities of people and how they could be really warm and courteous, if you were the same to them. And then walked into the lounge for the flight to Copenhagen, only to find scores of Danish people. And this was really interesting because it was a preview to me of the things to come. The one thing that you can attribute to Danish people is that they don’t come across as a bunch of common people. They are different, eccentric, romantic and plain silly sometimes. But they are very polite and definitely smile more than people in Singapore do.

Will skip the details about the flight, since there wasn’t anything interesting except that it was really long and there was little sweet girl opposite to me, who woke up precisely 4 times through her sleep through the flight. And she would wake up with a smile all the time. Now isn’t that amazing, something so simple we can just so easily skip to do in everyday life. I don’t even remember the last time I woke up thinking happy, forget smiling.

Landing in Copenhagen felt normal. Though I tried to tell myself that this was something like a dream come true. Landing into Europe for my exchange definitely was more difficult than just getting extra baggage through the airport. Got through the boring immigration thinking my buddy would be waiting for me. But when I got out she wasn’t there L Figured after I called her that I had told her the Singapore time of my flight arrival. The sweet person that she is, she came down to the airport in half an hour to pick me up.

I walked out of the airport and there was this cool (chilly actually) breeze that greeted me and I will not forget that moment and the walk out of the airport. Took a bus from the airport to the hotel I have been put up in by the school. It was a lovely ride. Just to see all those houses next to each other, with a flower bed outside each of them and the outlay of neo-classical European architecture in the centuries old buildings, it was sheer pleasure and satisfaction to my wonderstruck mind. Had always wanted to see these quiet streets and the laid-back but holistic approach to life that is so entrenched here.

Got into the hotel, had a quick change and my buddy took me out to show me around the place. The main town square and the shopping street (Stroget) were near to the hotel, and I just couldn’t stop being fascinated by the place. The weather was lovely, with a cool breeze and the sun shining bright. Realized that this place was really going to have me enchanted for some time to come. Also passed through Tivoli, one of the oldest, if not the oldest, amusement parks in the world. Went upto the harbour street and then got back to the hotel on the beautiful Sunday afternoon wishing I could just keep walking and seeing around the place. The place, the weather, the people, the life. ... they all just seemed converged into a seamless expanse of a wonderful experience.

This is just the first couple of hours of my arrival here. Have so much more to tell, but will keep it to so much for now. I do hope you liked reading it.

Life is Beautiful. So is Copenhagen

Satish

Saturday, October 09, 2004


On a sunny Berlin Day Posted by Hello


Berlin Fountain Posted by Hello

Friday, October 08, 2004

Travelogue: Work in Copenhagen & Berlin Trip

Hej! ("Hi" in Danish)Been already 7 weeks since I got to Copenhagen and I know I haven't kept my intent of writing my travel experiences more frequently. Can I hear you sigh? Cmon' - you surely like reading good expression in the beautiful English language. Well, just wish my sense of humour was as good as my ability to express. There I go again!

Have had a lot of new things happening around, some not so eye-popping and some feeling quite fascinating. One thing I am trying to figure out is why people in cold places eat cold food and people in hot places eat Hot (all meanings included) food. By now, I have got pretty much used to having cold salad and bread for my lunch at office, which is free of course. There is obviously the intermittent breaks of soup and hot boiled potatoes that gets me excited :)

For the uninvolved and uninitiated, I am interning here with a Danish software company called Maconomy. They treat me pretty well, as I realised from being introduced to every single employee (about 200 of them) across four floors of the company HQ office. Kind of a lil scary as well, because I came on exchange thinking I will take it easy and focus on travelling wonderful Europe. Well, that makes life exciting allright!

My project is interesting, since I didn't know what and how I was going to do it. But this is one of the best things the MBA teaches you. Go search the world for examples (The "google: is not enough), read 3-4 of them, see what went right and wrong and VOILA - you have found some kind of a solution. Frankly, you must be somewhat common sensical to figure out whats applicable and whats not. And if you are a little more interested, you just have to construct the value chain backwards and forward, and you should know what you have to do. Thats my MBA (Mouth Babbles Anything) for you.Anythings Possible!

Hmm. . something more interesting and worthwhile was the Berlin trip. I have, for some subconcious reason, been thoroughly cherishing going to Germany for about the last 5 years atleast. However, the Berlin trip wasn't exactly a 'Discover Germany' plan. It was more of an instantaneous weekend plan, which I struck up with Bora (a colleague from Singapore). And it pretty much stayed different from the "German" trip i had imagined. Berlin is a wonderful and exciting city. There are some cities in the world which just have a feel of vibrancy, and Berlin surely counts as on of them.

The first thing I realised after landing at 6 in the morning, was that it was cold. COlder than Copenhagen! I was wondering if I was gonna survive the trip without any repurcussions. But Berlin, for the connection that it struck with me, had a bright and sunny weather setup for me for the rest of the trip :) The second thing, and I will make this count the last, was that Berlin was a huge, really huge city. The city's geographical spread is more than 9 times that of Paris. Wondering if Paris is small or just that Berlin is humungus.We went looking for a budget hotel we had decided to stay in, and walked for an hour to reach it. We reached the street quick, but just that the hotel was just on the other end of the street, about 3 kms down. Dumped our stuff in the 8-bed dorm we got for our kind of money, and set out for the day.

I wanted to the Technical museum, so we decided to do that first and then take a city tour in the afternoon. I loved the technical museum, for among other things, they had displayed a brand new Bajaj autorickshaw (the classic Indian "anywhere anytime" transport) in their evolution depiction of scooters. One thing that set me thinking was the amazing technical expertise the Germans have always demonstrated, and the apparent lack of intellectual capacity to set up a good system of governance. This is not my idea, I must assert, it is something that I just read about in the museums and memorials. My overall impression about the museum wasn't great, perhaps because most of the descriptions were in German and I could not read much.

We got to the meeting point of a guided tour we decided to take by 3 in the afternoon. And I had one of the loveliest fruit-pie i have had accompanied with a good Latte from Hagen-Dazz. The guided tour was quite good and was worth the 10 Euros we paid for it. We sequentially were taken through the River Spree, Museum Island, Pergamon Museum, the Berlin Cathedral, Humboldt UNiversity (where Einstein taught before being forced to leave for Princeton),the palaces, WW2 memorial, Brandenburg Gate (symbolising the divide between the east and west Germany), the Concentration camp memorial, Checkpoint Charlie (well known for a few stories), the remaining Berlin wall and the Gendarmemarkt (where the Berlin Concert House is).

Will not describe all these places, but the feeling one gets while walking through all these is that, these are such an integral part of the city's life and I just kept thinking, how much history the place had seen. Even uptil as recently as the 15 years back. For those of you who havent seen this one German movie, please try and watch "Good Bye Lenin". Its a simple yet fantastic story of the fall of the Berlin wall. Saw this last year when I was taking German language lessons in Singapore.

We had planned a trip to the Sachanhausen concentration camp the next day and another trip to Potsdam, a place of many castles and gardens. Sachanhausen camp was the HQ of the concentration camp system in Nazi Germany. So it represents the full scale of the concentration camps in more ways than one. It was designed to be the model camp and theuse of geometry in the design is very fascinating. The camp is designed to be an equilateral triangle, with the one entry/exit point located in the middle of one of the sides. Guards on top of this entry/exit tower had a view of the entire camp, and had machine guns which could access any point on the vast area of a triangular hell. I wasn't very moved by the camp memorial, because the serenity of the grass (most of the camp has been razed to the ground) covered the horrifying actions of a few mortal men. But you should just watch one of the movies (my personal favourite is Schindler's list) based on this, and you shouldn't need any further evidence.

We chucked the plan to go to Potsdam for the lack of time, and instead took a boat tour of the city and then walked the central street, realizing that it was the German Unification day. There were people all over the place and one of the concerts we managed to get to had a great band playing. The music and the atmosphere was just something you could not possibly not like.

Obviously there are many details that I have skipped about the trip. But I would rather put in my thoughts about the city than make another tourist guide. More essential than having your best walking shoes on, is to be open to what the place has to offer you. And I think, on many occassions, we just miss the entire point in our haste to see places than feel and understand them. And feeling the present is as important as getting an idea about the past, if not more. I hope that I can keep this in mind as I go to newer places (for me), but the oldest places of recorded history and culture in the world.

Back in Copenhagen, trying to motivate myself to know this place a little more. There is much to learn from here, but its not going to come easy. The people are hard to get out talking, so you need to just need to keepp trying. Thankfully, and luckily for me, I got a bike today. An office colleague borrowed her old bike to me. Quite sweet of her! And very unilike Denmark. .Life is full of surprises. We just don't allow ourselves to be surprised.Hope this wasn't too long.

Hope you liked it!

Tschuss (Bye in German)
Wanderer