Monday, March 18, 2013

mail



Hi All,
We are conducting drive for SEED trained testers (0-2 years) in Pune GLC on coming Tuesday 19th March for MS Requirement. Manual test paper will be done first followed by aptitude test. Request you all to conduct L1 and L2 rounds with the selected candidates. Exact Timing will be confirmed today evening by 5:00pm.
Request you to please be prepared and spare 2+ hours to make this drive successful.


Evaluation Points:

1)      Testing concepts must be very clear
2)      Extra stress on communication as it’s a Morgan requirement.
3)      Tool and techniques
4)      Attitude & Aptitude
5)      Learning ability

Many Thanks in Advance for your cooperation,

Rahul

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

TechCrunch reporting more stories of Iphone apps rather than serious startups

I've always liked TechCrunch. However, over the years they've become like IndiaTV and IBN7, rather than TimesNOW or CNN-IBN. And that's so unfortunate.

TechCrunch is now-a-days inundated with news about iPhone application specific content. I do completely agree that iPhone is a phenomenon and iPhone apps are integrating the web and our own lives in a new way. There's also a lot of market for iPhone apps and huge investments too.

As long as iPhone specific startups, their funding statuses, the news about their user base comes in, I'm ok. However, every smalltime app that surfaces, TechCrunch reports it. I just want them to return to their original aim of reporting new startups more efficiently rather than just chasing new iPhone apps.

I even don't mind if they start a TechCrunch for iPhone and divert all the iPhone related content to that site and let the main site still deal with startup related stuff.

Monday, December 8, 2008

3 commandments for writing a shell script

When you are writing shell scripts which are going to be deployed in alien and possibly hostile environments, here are some commandments to be followed so avoid most common pitfalls which later make us feel stupid :

  1. Absolutely assume nothing. Even if the OS which your script is getting deployed is the exact same as the OS you tested the script on, absolutely assume nothing. For e.g. If you are using grep or ps, don't assume that they will be on $PATH and your script will automagically find them. Just fully qualify the exact path of the binary you are trying to use.
  2. Don't assume that $HOSTNAME will be available to the shell. Don't trust the sysadmin of the target Unix box. For all you know he would be a fathead.
  3. Never never use $0 to identify the script which is running. If the script is being run with full path and you are checking something against $0, the check is bound to fail.
  4. Tatoo it on your brain that in ksh '-eq' is for comparing numbers and '=' is for comparing strings. As soon as you forget this, all hell could break loose depending upon how critical is your application.

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Lucene doesn't provide details as to which field the match was on?

I've now spent around 4 hours trying to figure out if there is a way for Lucene to give me information as to on which fields was the match exactly found.

The IndexReader.explain() method gives this information, however the documentation specifically mentions that this method should not be used in production level code as its gonna be slow.

At the moment as a workaround I am going to explicitly extract the value of the field from the Document and string compare it with the given search string to check whether there is a match.

Let me know if anyone has any other findings.

Dropped the idea for OTA synching with SymcML

Past few days I have been mulling with the idea of a start-up geared towards syncing the contacts from mobile phones to the web.

Surprisingly, there are more than 6-7 services which provide these facilities. The most recent of them, Syncy has got a good funding from VC's. The idea struck me because I recently bought an iphone and had to type in all the contacts I had on my earlier phone. It was such a pain that I thought I could solve this for other people by developing a good product.

However, there are already a lot of people on this one and they are doing a pretty good job. There is no point pursuing this further.

Friday, January 11, 2008

ApnaCircle - Sabeer Bhatia's yet another startup

Adding to the list of his attempts to create an ongoing business Sabeer Bhatia has gone for yet another attempt. This time its called ApnaCircle.

Social networking is hot. In fact with Facebook on the block from last 3 years its gone red hot. Everybody wants to start a Social Networking site. We at here in India have got a lot of them.

However, till recently the market for professional Social Networking was un-addressed. Across the seas Linked-In is the biggest site for professional networking. ApnaCircle aims at tapping this market in India. The competitors to ApnaCircle are InfoEdge's Brijj.com and SiliconIndia.com. As far as I can see its a good move by Bhatia. But as we all know the difference always lies in execution,marketing and adding value for the user.

Unfortunately, initial look says, ApnaCircle is a disappointment. The site design is average. At least with the $400 million deal on hotmail I would expect that Bhatia wasn't low on money to pay it to a good web-design company. The site which started with professional networking at first now displays "Social & Professional Networking" as its aim. So, it seems to me that it has changed (or should I say lost? ) its focus.

The News Feed section contains feeds where users are advertising their products. For e.g. as of writing this, my News Feed section is showing "Your Horoscope of the Day" and " New Products available on apnacircle.com". Did they get into shopping as well? I didn't know that. There is no clear distinction between Social circle and Professional circle. What if folks at my office are also in my social circle?

Also from the time I've joined I've got several mails from some Russian girls who would like to date me. Although I'm excited about this proposition I can't help to note that its spam and am surprised that ApnaCircle's folks are not doing anything about it. These Russian girls are also notoriously famous for spamming your email boxes too. Now they seem to have found a new ground as well.

To attract users they also have a point system which adds more points as you invite more friends and send more scraps, etc. The points can then be redeemed for some gift which will be delivered right to your doorstep.

Conclusion: I think ApnaCircle folks tried to get greedy with grabbing the wholesome pie of Social as well as Professional networking. And as far as I can see they are not getting anywhere. With confused focus, bad design and no value add to the user I don't think this venture is going anywhere. Social NW is already crowded and Orkut currently reigns there. If they change their policy to only stick to Professional NW I think they can still resurrect and make a difference.

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

The Begining

Starting a blog profiling technology startups in India was a plan on my mind from a long time. I had canceled this plans because there were already a bunch of bloggers at this and some of them were and are still doing a good job. Its one of my passions to read and keep up-to-date with the Tech Scene all over the world, let alone just India.

I currently read StartupSquad, StartupDuniya, Watblog and Startups.in. Earlier I also used to read Amit Ranjan's blog. I've been following these blogs for quite a while (around 6 months now).

The best among the breed right now is StartupDuniya. These folks are the most committed to delivering news and statistics of the latest that might be happening in India.

Even better than that was StartupSquad. However, its more focused on Startups in general rather than just Indian ones. Also, its not regularly updated as well. Apart from that, the content out there was fantastic. I always made it a point to check its latest feeds every morning.

WATBlog is a joke. They are a bunch of fools who have no idea of anything. Not Web, not technology nor advertising. The WATShow feature is absolutely loathsome. This one is definitely worst of the breed.

Startupduniya is the only one which is regularly updated, cares about statistics and also brings in interesting folks for an interview once in a while. Also the thing I like about them is the focus is mostly on the Indian technology scene.

If there are other blogs out there let me know. I would like to follow them as well.

This blog is another attempt to profile, showcase and statistically (as far as possible) analyze the Indian startup scene. To start with I will commit myself to profile one startup every week. I know one a week is too slow. There are probably 100 launching every week out there! However, I don't want to over commit and fail at it. Moreover, I've never been a avid writer nor do I consider myself really good at English. I can speak very well but can't put down those thoughts on paper. So its all going to be trial and error. I'm sure I will get better with time but till then the readers will have to bear with me and my English.

Regarding the name of the blog, I've chosen 'TechEgg' for the lack of a better name and for the lack of all the better names being already taken on Blogspot. If this blog ever gets big I will shift it off to a hosted solution and change its name for a better one.

My philosophy behing TechEgg is this. New life springs up from an egg to a living being. Just like that I would like to profile Tech Starups from their birth to their success. Sorry, I couldn't get a better idea. If you have one let me know.