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One night at the call centre

Posted by KING B On 7:32 PM 0 comments




Product Details

•Paperback: 320 pages
•Publisher: Ballantine Books (May 1, 2007)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0345498321
•ISBN-13: 978-0345498328
•Author: Chetan Bhagat

Chapter 1

8:31 p.m.

I was splashing my hands helplessly in the sea. I can’t even swim in a pond, let alone in the Indian Ocean. While I was in the water, my boss Bakshi was in a boat next to me. He was pushing my head down in the water. I saw Priyanka drifting away in a lifeboat. I screamed as Bakshi used both his hands to keep my head submerged. Salt water was filling my mouth and nostrils when I heard loud beeps in the distance.

My nightmare ended as my cellphone alarm rang hard in my left ear and I woke up to its “Last Christmas” ring tone. The ring tone was a gift from Shefali, my new semi-girlfriend. I squinted through a half-shut eye to see 8:32 p.m. surrounded by little bells flashing on the screen.

“Damn,” I said and jumped out of bed.

I would have loved to analyze my dream and its significance in my insignificant life, but I had to get dressed for work.

“Man, the Qualis will be here in twenty minutes,” I thought, digging matter out of my eye. Qualis was the make of car that picked us all up individually and drove us together to the center. I was still tired, but afraid of staying in bed any longer in case I was late. Besides, there was a serious risk of Bakshi making a comeback in my dreams.

By the way, I am Shyam Mehra, or Sam Marcy as they call me at my workplace, the Connections call center in Gurgaon. American tongues have trouble saying my real name and prefer Sam. If you want, you can give me another name, too. I really don’t care.

Anyway, I’m a call-center agent. There are hundreds of thousands, probably millions of agents like me. But this total pain-in-the neck author chose me, of all the agents in the country. He met me and told me to help him with his second book. In fact, he pretty much wanted me to write the book for him. I declined, saying I can’t even write my own CV, so there was no way I could write a whole book. I explained to him how my promotion to the position of team leader had been postponed for one year because my manager Bakshi had told me I don’t have the “required skills set” yet. In my review, Bakshi wrote that I was “not a go-getter.” I don’t even know what “go-getter” means, so I guess I’m definitely not one.

But this author said he didn’t care. He had promised someone he’d write this story so I’d better cooperate or he would keep on pestering me. I tried my best to wriggle out of it, but he wouldn’t let go. I finally relented and that’s why I’m stuck with this assignment, while you are stuck with me.

I also want to give you one more warning. My English is not that great—actually, nothing about me is great. So, if you’re looking for something sophisticated and highbrow, then I suggest you read another book with plenty of long words. I know only one big word: “management.” But we’ll get to that later. I told the author about my limited English. However, he said big emotions don’t come from big words, so I had no choice but to do the job. I hate authors.

Now let’s get back to the story. If you remember, I had just woken up.

There was a noise in the living room. Some relatives were in town to attend a family wedding. My neighbor was getting married to his cousin . . . er, sorry, I’m a bit groggy, my cousin was getting married to his neighbor. But I had to work, so I couldn’t go to the wedding. It didn’t matter, though, all marriages are the same, more or less.

I reached the bathroom still half-asleep. It was occupied.

The bathroom door was open. I saw five of my aunts scrambling to get a few square inches of the washbasin mirror. One aunt was cursing her daughter for leaving the matching bindis at home. Another aunt had lost the little screw of her gold earring and was flipping out.

“It’s pure gold, where is it?” she screamed into my face. “Has the maid stolen it?” Like the maid has nothing better to do than steal one tiny screw. Wouldn’t she steal the whole set? I thought.

“Auntie, can I use the bathroom for five minutes? I need to get ready for the office,” I said.

“Oh hello, Shyam. Woke up finally?” my mother’s sister said. “Office? Aren’t you coming to the wedding?”

“No, I have to work. Can I have the bath—”

“Look how big Shyam has become,” my maternal aunt said. “We need to find a girl for him soon.”

Everyone burst into giggles. It was their biggest joke of the day.

“Can I please—” I said.

“Shyam, leave the ladies alone,” one of my older cousins interrupted. “What are you doing here with the women? We are already late for the wedding.”

“But I have to go to work. I need to get dressed,” I protested, trying to elbow my way to the bathroom tap.

“You work in a call center, don’t you?” my cousin said.

“Yes.”

“Your work is all on the phone. Why do you need to dress up? Who’s going to see you?”

I didn’t answer.

“Use the kitchen sink,” an aunt suggested and handed me my toothbrush.

I gave them all a dirty look. Nobody noticed. I passed by the living room on my way to the kitchen. The uncles were outside, on their second whiskey and soda. One uncle said something about how it would be better if my father were still alive and around this evening.

I reached the kitchen. The floor was so cold I felt like I’d stepped on an ice tray. I realized I had forgotten the soap. I went back but the bathroom door was bolted. There was no hot water in the kitchen, so my face froze as I washed it with cold water. Winter in Delhi is a bitch. I brushed my teeth and used the steel plates as a mirror to comb my hair. Shyam had turned into Sam and Sam’s day had just begun.

I was hungry, but there was nothing to eat in the house. They’d be getting food at the wedding, so my mother had felt there was no need to cook at home.

The Qualis’s horn screamed at 8:55 p.m.

As I was about to leave, I realized I had forgotten my ID. I went to my room, but couldn’t find it. I tried to find my mother instead. She was in her bedroom, lost among aunties, saris, and jewelry sets. She and my aunts were comparing whose set was heaviest. Usually the heaviest aunt had the heaviest set.

“Mum, have you seen my ID?” I said. Everyone ignored me. I went back to my room as the Qualis honked for the fourth time.

“Damn, there it is,” I said reaching under my bed. I pulled it out by its strap and strung it around my neck.

I waved a good-bye to everyone, but no one acknowledged me. It wasn’t surprising. My cousins are all on their way to becoming doctors or engineers. You could say I am the black sheep of my family. In fact, the only reason people even talk to me is because I have a job and get a salary at the end of the month. You see, I used to work in the website department of an ad agency before this callcenter job. However, the ad agency paid really badly, and all the people there were pseudos, more interested in office politics than websites. I left and all hell broke loose at home. That’s when I became the black sheep. I saved myself by joining Connections. With money in your wallet the world gives you some respect and lets you breathe. Connections was also the natural choice for me as Priyanka worked there. Of course, that reason was no longer relevant.

My aunt finally found the gold screw trapped in her fake-hair bun.

The Qualis’s horn screamed again.

“I’m coming,” I shouted as I ran out of the house.




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The Three Mistakes of My Life

Posted by KING B On 7:29 PM 0 comments





eBook Info :

•Paperback: 258 pages
•Publisher: Rupa and Co. (2008)
•Language: English
•Author: Chetan Bhagat

Product Description

In late 2000, a young boy in Ahmedabad, Govind, dreamt of owning a business. To accommodate his friends Ish and Omi’s passion, they open a cricket shop. However, nothing comes easy in a turbulent city. To realise their goals, they will have to face it all — religious politics, calamities, unacceptable love and above all, their own mistakes. Will they make it? Can an individual’s dreams overcome the nightmares offered by real life? Can we succeed despite a few mistakes? Based on real events, from the bestselling author of Five Point Someone and one night @ the call center, comes another dark, witty tale about modern India, where Chetan Bhagat brings out the ethos and isolation of an entire generation to the fore.


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3 Idiots – story by Chetan Bhagat

Posted by KING B On 7:24 PM 0 comments




Product Details

•Paperback: 288 pages
•Publisher: Rupa & Co. (July 1, 2004)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 8129104601
•ISBN-13: 978-8129104601
•Author: Chetan Bhagat

A Hindi film titled 3 Idiots is based on the novel. [3] It is directed by Rajkumar Hirani, produced by Vidhu Vinod Chopra’s and stars Aamir Khan, Sharman Joshi, R. Madhavan, Kareena Kapoor, and Omi Vaidya.




The novel is set from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, in the period 1991 to 1995. It is about the adventures of three mechanical engineering students (and friends), Hari Kumar (the narrator), Ryan Oberoi, and Alok Gupta, who fail to cope with the grading system of the IITs. The three hostelmates – Alok, Hari and Ryan get off to a bad start in IIT – they screw up the first class quiz. And while they try to make amends, things only get worse. It takes them a while to realize: If you try and screw with the IIT system, it comes back to double screw you. Before they know it, they are at the lowest echelons of IIT society. They have a five-point-something GPA out of ten, ranking near the end of their class.

Hari He is the main character and narrator of the story for most of the chapters. After finding his names on the rolls of IIT-Delhi, everything in his life turns upside down. Traumatized by the draconian system at IIT, he finds solace in his friends and his relationship with a professor’s daughter, Neha. His own psychological insecurities and his wish to be like Ryan form an undertone in the story.

Alok He is one of the supporting characters of the story and is usually portrayed as a fat and cry baby sort of guy. He is usually worried about how he would get a good job in Delhi only so that he can support his family consisting of his half paralyzed father, always complaining mother and a sister, who’s of marriageable age. He is referred as ‘Fatso’ by Ryan. He loves eating food. He becomes the narrator of one of the chapters where we get to see things from a different perspective.

Ryan Ryan is another supporting character, and the most different of the lot. According to Hari, Ryan is perfect as he is handsome, tall, muscular, is fearless and is very creative, unlike Alok and Hari who are the total opposite. His parents are settled abroad and send him money regularly, although he does not seem to appreciate them much. He loves his friends more than anything else. He becomes the narrator of one of the chapters and we are made to see the emotional side of this complex personality.

Neha She is Prof. Cherian’s daughter. She and Hari have a relationship. She is a sweet and naive girl. She also has an important role in the novel as her character defines Hari in a different way. Also, her relationship with her father forms an important sub-plot in the story. A chapter is dedicated to her point of view as well.

Prof. Cherian He is the traditional and domineering head of the Mechanical Engineering Department, as well as the father of Hari’s girlfriend Neha.

Prof. Veera He is the fluid mechanics professor and helps them at several occasions. He is depicted as the professor who is ready to accept things in the non traditional way.

Dean Shastri The dean of the institution who marks his presence in the DisCo (Disciplinary Committee)




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Product Details

•Paperback: 269 pages
•Publisher: Rupa & Co (November 2009)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 8129115301
•ISBN-13: 978-8129115300
•Author: Chetan Bhagat

The story is about Krish and Ananya who hail from two different states of India, are deeply in love and want to get married against their parents’ wishes.

The story begins in the IIM Ahmedabad mess, where Krish, a Punjabi boy from Delhi sights Ananya, a Tamilian girl from Chennai, quarreling with the mess staff about the food. They become friends in a few days and decide to study together every night. In time, they become romantically involved. They both get good jobs, and have serious plans for their wedding. The story is based on how they struggle to convince their parents for the marriage, and eventually succeed in doing so. It is narrated in a first person point of view in a humorous tone, often taking digs at Tamilian and Punjabi culture. The plot is loosely based on the life story of Chetan Bhagat and his wife Anusha, who are from Delhi and Tamil Nadu, respectively. This is the first Chetan Bhagat book based largely on his life. He wrote this novel after quitting his job at an investment bank.


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C++ Plus Data Structures

Posted by KING B On 7:19 PM 0 comments





Product Details

•Textbook Binding: 773 pages
•Publisher: Jones & Bartlett Publishers; 1 edition (July 1998)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0763706213
•ISBN-13: 978-0763706210

I’ve been in college as teacher and student for almost 40 years, and this is one of the most soul-destroying textbooks in any field I have studied.

When introducing fundamentals, the authors often express themselves poorly and try to compensate through repetition and paraphrase. This confuses the student fresh to the material, since it is not clear whether the same point is being repeated, or developed, or a new one introduced. On the other hand, they simply skirt concepts–exception handling, for example–that need to be explained in detail. Instead of straightforwardly presenting new material, they tiptoe around it through constructs of their own design which are no more easy to learn and whose relation to the essential point is unclear. For example, something like myNode->next->back refers to the node pointed to by the back pointer of the node following myNode, i.e. to myNode itself. Not too mind-boggling. But first they have to lead us through a song and dance about a notation they invented which represents the preceding as back(next(myNode)), which is (a) unnecessary, (b) more complex, and (c) really confusing because (a) it is exactly backwards, and (b) the most deeply nested item is one that dominates the structure. The whole book is like this, a weird combination of aimlessness with a hidden agenda, expressed in patronizing, humorless, finger-wagging.

Other reviewers call it a good reference work; it is not. It is poorly indexed, partly because the explanation of a single concept may appear at intervals through several chapters of context which, though rambling, is a necessary to grasp the meaning.

Note that the enthusiastic reviews of this book come from a software reviewer, someone who finds this the clearest of the _three_ data structure books he’s used, and someone who recommends it to advanced programmers, granting that you have to understand C++ classes to follow the book–although the book’s task is to _introduce_ C++ classes. Another says that all previous courses just taught C++ coding–but this is a second-semester text! In other words, it’s a great book to own if you don’t need it.

I think teachers who like this book don’t actually read it, just flip through it, checking points, “Lists, yup, linked lists, yup, doubly-linked lists, with circles and arrows on the back, yup, yup, yup, it’s all there,” because THEY DON’T HAVE TO LEARN ANYTHING FROM IT. I can’t see how any teacher could adopt it who tried to read it from the point of view of someone new to the material presented.


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Product Details

•Hardcover: 779 pages
•Publisher: Jones & Bartlett Pub; 2 edition (February 27, 2006)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0763737461
•ISBN-13: 978-0763737467


Product Description


Data Structures in Java is a continuation of Nell Dale’s best-selling Introduction to Java and Software Design text. Data Structures, is designed for students who have already taken one semester of computer science and are able to take a problem of medium complexity, write an algorithm to solve the problem, code the algorithm in a programming language, and demonstrate the correctness of their solution. The focus is on teaching computer science principles with chapter concepts being reinforced by case studies. The object-oriented concepts of encapsulation, inheritance, and polymorphism are covered, while the book remains centered on abstract data types.
About the Author
Nell Dale, Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin

Chip Weems, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Sam Rebelsky, Grinnell College



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eBookInfo :

•Paperback: 656 pages
•Publisher: Morgan Kaufmann; 3 edition (August 16, 2004)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 1558606041
•ISBN-13: 978-1558606043
The choice of Real Stuff is judicious. The Computers in the Real World sections are interesting to read and should widen the horizons of the too often too tech-oriented Sophomores and Juniors. On the whole this is a very solid book and the success of the third edition is assured as has been the success of its two predecessors.
Jean-Loup Baer, University of Washington

I am very impressed with the new sections ‘Computers in the Real World.’ It is very interesting and speaks to the students who would like to feel a connection between classroom materials and real-world applications. I am very pleased with the manuscript for the third edition. This revision is well-updated and a comprehensive introduction to the hardware and software fundamentals.
David Brooks, Harvard University

The logical development and explanations and examples were always great to begin with. The Historical Perspectives have become even better –they are part of the book that I enjoy most.
David Harris, Harvey Mudd –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Review
“The choice of ‘Real Stuff’ is judicious. The ‘Computers in the Real World’ sections are interesting to read and should widen the horizons of the too often too tech-oriented Sophomores and Juniors. On the whole this is a very solid book and the success of the third edition is assured as has been the success of its two predecessors.”
-Jean-Loup Baer, University of Washington

“I am very impressed with the new sections ‘Computers in the Real World.’ It is very interesting and speaks to the students who would like to feel a connection between classroom materials and real-world applications. I am very pleased with the manuscript for the third edition. This revision is well-updated and a comprehensive introduction to the hardware and software fundamentals.”
-David Brooks, Harvard University

“The logical development and explanations and examples were always great to begin with. The ‘Historical Perspectives’ have become even better– they are part of the book that I enjoy most.”
-David Harris, Harvey Mudd

Book Description
A thourough update of the Morgan Kaufmann classic.
Product Description
A revised printing for this book will be available in June 2007!

What’s New in the Third Edition, Revised Printing

The same great book gets better! The revised printing features all of the original content along with these additional features:

. Appendix A (Assemblers, Linkers, and the SPIM Simulator) has been moved from the CD-ROM into the printed book

. Corrections and bug fixes

Click here to request a desk copy of the revised printing!



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eBook Info

•Hardcover: 288 pages
•Publisher: Wiley-Interscience; 1 edition (December 3, 2004)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0471467413
•ISBN-13: 978-0471467410
From the Back Cover
An invaluable and comprehensive resource on computer organization and architectureTypically, instructors of computer organization and architecture courses have had to resort to multiple textbooks as well as supplementary notes to provide students with adequate learning material. Fundamentals of Computer Organization and Architecture provides a more coherent approach by covering all the necessary topics in one single textbook, including:

•Instruction set architecture and design
•Assembly language programming
•Computer arithmetic
•Processing unit design
•Memory system design
•Input-output design and organization
•Pipeline design techniques
•Reduced Instruction Set Computers (RISCs)
•Introduction to multiprocessors
This comprehensive and didactic resource provides an introduction to computer systems, including historical background, to provide a context and framework for concepts and applications developed in subsequent chapters; case examples of real-world computer systems that illuminate key concepts and demonstrate practical applications; and exercises, summaries, references, and further reading recommendations at the end of each chapter.

Fundamentals of Computer Organization and Architecture simplifies course material development for instructors with its comprehensive coverage and helps the readers learn faster thanks to its logical organization, clear style, and practical examples. In addition to being an excellent teaching tool for students, this is a thorough and dependable reference for engineers and programmers.

About the Author
MOSTAFA ABD-EL-BARR, PhD, is currently a professor and chairman of the Department of Information Science at Kuwait University. He has co-authored two other books, published more than 120 papers, and served as chair for a number of international conferences and symposia.

HESHAM EL-REWINI, PhD, PE, is a full professor and chairman of the Department of Computer Sciences and Engineering at Southern Methodist University (SMU). He has co-authored several books, published numerous research papers in journals and conference proceedings, and chaired many international conferences.


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eBook Info :

•Hardcover: 1125 pages
•Publisher: Cambridge University Press; 2 edition (July 28, 1989)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0521370957
•ISBN-13: 978-0521370950
“A lovely book, it covers a wealth of electronic topics in a very readable style.”
Richard Morin, Sunexpert

“The second volume carries on une grande tradition as well as adding 400 new pages to the original (already massive) text. It is, without doubt, the book for the practical engineer. No cerebral theorizing here, no long sections of abstruse mathematical derivations; just page after page of solid empirical engineering. It is also light hearted and anecdotal, with some wonderful pages of bad ciruit ‘howlers’ that the authors have encountered.”
John V. Hatfield, IJEEE

“…an excellent general electronic textbook.”
Poptronics

“The best self-teaching book and reference book in electronics… The beauty and fun of electronics shows through.”
Radio Communication

“Another electronics textbook that became an international best-seller… the book is renowned for presenting the techniques that circuit designers actually use.”
IEEE Spectrum

Product Description
This is the thoroughly revised and updated Second Edition of the hugely successful The Art of Electronics. Widely accepted as the single, authoritative text and reference on electronic circuit design, both analog and digital, this book has sold over 120,000 copies, and has been translated into eight languages. This book revolutionized the teaching of electronics by emphasizing the methods actually used by circuit designers–a combination of some basic laws, rules of thumb, and a large bag of tricks. The result is a largely nonmathematical treatment that encourages circuit intuition, brain storming, and simplified calculations of circuit values and performance. This completely new edition responds to the breakneck pace of change in electronics with totally rewritten chapters on microcomputers and microprocessors, substantially revised chapters on digital electronics, on op-amps and precision design, and on construction techniques. Every table has been revised, and many new ones have been added. The new Art of Electronics retains the feeling of informality and easy access that made the first edition so successful and popular



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Electromagnetic Fields and Waves

Posted by KING B On 6:47 PM 0 comments





eBook Info :

•Hardcover: 706 pages
•Publisher: W.H.Freeman & Co Ltd; 2nd edition (August 24, 1970)
•Language: English
•ISBN-10: 0716703319
•ISBN-13: 978-0716703310
•Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.

CONTENTS
A chapter on vectors (Chapter 1), a discussion of Legendre’s differential equation (Section 4.5), an appendix on the technique that involves replacing cos wt by exp jwt,
and an appendix on wave propagation.

After the introductory chapter on vectors, Chapters 2, 3, and 4 describe electrostatic fields, both in a vacuum and in dielectrics. All of Chapter 4 is devoted to the
solution of Laplace’s and of Poisson’s equations.

Chapter 5 is a short exposition of the basic concepts of special relativity, with little reference to electric charges. It requires nothing more, in the way of mathematics,
than elementary differential calculus and the vector analysis of Chapter 1. Chapter 6 contains a demonstration of Maxwell’s equations that is based on Coulomb’s law
and on the Lorentz transformation and which is valid only for the case where the charges move at constant velocities.

Chapters 7 and 8 deal with the conventional approach to the magnetic fields associated with constant and with variable currents. Here, as elsewhere, references to
Chapter 6 may be disregarded.

Chapter 9 contains a discussion of magnetic materials that parallels, to a certain extent, that of Chapter 3 on dielectrics.

In Chapter 10, the Maxwell equation for the curl of B is rediscovered, without using relativity. This is followed by a discussion of the four Maxwell equations, as well
as of some of their more general implications. The point of view is different from that of Chapter 6, and there is essentially no repetition.

The last four chapters, 11 to 14, concern various applications of Maxwell’s equations: plane waves in infinite media in Chapter 11, reflection and refraction in Chapter
12, guided waves in Chapter 13, and radiation in Chapter 14. The only three media considered in Chapters 11 and 12 are perfect dielectrics, good conductors, and
low-pressure ionized gases. Similarly, Chapter 13 is limited to the two simplest types of guided wave, namely the TEM mode in coaxial lines and the TE1,0 mode in
rectangular guides. Chapter 14 discusses electric and magnetic dipoles and quadrupoles, as well as the essential ideas concerning the half-wave antenna, antenna arrays,
and the reciprocity theorem.
For a basic and relatively simple course on electromagnetism, one could study only Chapters 2, 3 (less Sections 3.3, 3.4, 3.8, 3.9, and 3.10), 4 (less Sections 4.4 and
4.5), 7, 8, 9 (less Section 9.3 but conserving the equation v – B = 0), and 10. For a rather advanced course, on the other hand, Chapters 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, and 9 could be
reviewed briefly using the summaries at the end of each chapter. One would then start with Chapter 6, and then go on to Chapter 10 and the following chapters. There
are, of course, many other possibilities.

In Chapter 12, Sections 12.3 and 12.7 could be dispensed with. They involve the application of Fresnel’s equations to particular cases and are not essential for the
remaining chapters. Chapter 13 is instructive, both because of the insight it provides into the propagation of electromagnetic waves and because of its engineering
applications, but it is not required for understanding Chapter 14. Finally, Chapter 14 is based on Chapter 10 and on the first two sections of Chapter 11.


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