Sunday, December 30, 2007

Feel Good Factor

Every once in a while, you get a chance to make a small difference to the lives of others, and do something that really makes you feel good from within.....

Travelling in a Mumbai local is an experience like no other. Mumbai's local trains and their stations, are places that defy Newtonian Laws; where displacement can take place without application of force, and every push can result in two equal and opposite shoves. Local trains are not meant for the faint hearted, the slow and old, and the physically challenged.

I had just disembarked from one such jam packed local train at Kanjur Marg station, and landed on a platform bustling with a sea of people jostling to take the next arriving local. One does not usually pay attention to people around, in the middle of such a crowd. But for some odd reason, my eyes fell on a middle aged couple trying to make sense out of the madness at the station. After a fraction fo a second, I realised that both of them were blind, and were struggling to find their way around. Just as I was wondering how the visually challenged couple would be able to make their way into a train overflowing with people, things got worse for them. As the blind man extended his wooden stick forward to check the boundry of the platform, it hit the corner of the platform and fell onto the railway tracks.

How would the man get his stick back, I thought. With a local train arriving every 5 minutes or so, there was no way he would himself be able to jump into the tracks and pick his stick up within the short time, specially since he would also not able to see a fast approaching train. Without his stick, he would not be able to navigate his way to any other place either, specially since his female companion was also blind.

When I got down onto the tracks at the end of the platform to cross over to the other side, I jogged upto the place where the man's stick had fallen, picked it up, and handed it over to him. Even as the blind man and woman thanking me, I rushed to the other side of the tracks.

While I walked away from the scene, I began wondering what would have happened had I not helped the blind man. Perhaps some other commuter would have picked the stick up for him. Perhaps someone else would have helped him get into the train.
The man I helped could not even see me. He did not hear my voice. He did not know my name either. He will probably even forget that someone picked his stick from the railway tracks very soon.
But I still felt happy to have helped him.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

Having a Blast !!

Overheard on a Hyderabad-Mumbai flight....

A:- How long have you been in Hyderabad?

B:- 2 years. I work for an IT company here. What about you?

A:- I live in Mumbai. Just came here for a week.

B:- So how did you like Hyderabad?

A:- Nice place, but I was kind of scared by the recent bomb blasts here.

B:- Oh, the one in Lumbini Park? In fact, I was around that place on the fateful day.

A:- Really!!

B:- I was travelling in an auto-rickshaw when I noticed a lot of commotion. On enquiring, I came to know that a major bomb blast had taken place in nearby Lumbini Park. The auto-rickshaw wallah, who appeared to be quite disturbed to hear this, asked me if he could take a diversion and pass in front of the park, so that he could see the scene of the mishap. I agreed.

A:- Then what?

B:- We went near the blast site. As expected, it has not a pleasent scene. The injured were being rushed to ambulences, the police were trying to control the crowd and the media had arrived in full force to cover the tragedy. After a couple of minutes, I asked the auto-wallah to take me to my destination. When I received, I checked the meter, and handed over the fare to him. To my surprise, he asked me for 30 extra bucks. When I asked him why, he replied in his Hyderabadi accent "क्या साब, मैंने आप्कू इतना बढ़िया बोम्ब ब्लास्ट दिखलाया.. कुछ तो ज्यादा पैसे दो.. ऐसा सीन आप्कू रोज़ थोड़ी देखनेकू मिलेगा !! (I showed you such a wonderful bomb blast. Please pay me something extra. After all, you wont get to witness such a scene everyday!!)

My Cell Phones

My Cell Phones

November 2001 - August 2004 (2 Years 9 Months)
Motorola Talkabout T2282

August 2004 - November 2007 (3 Years 3 Months)

Motorola c350e

November 2007 - September 2011 (3 Years 10 Months)
Nokia N73 Music Edition

Update September 2011 -

September 2011 - September 2014 (3 Years)



Samsung Galaxy S2

Update September 2014 -


September 2014 - April 2016 (1 Year 7 Months)

Samsung Galaxy S5

Update April 2016 -

April 2016 - October 2018 (2 Years 6 Months)
(April 2016 to September 2017 - Primary, October 2017 - October 2018 - Secondary) 


Moto X Play 32 GB


Update November 2017 -

December 2016 - October 2018 (1 Year 10 Months)
(December 2016 to June 2017 - Secondary, October 2017 - October 2018 - Primary) 


iPhone 6

Update November 2018 -

November 2018 - October 2022 (4 years)
One Plus 6 (8 GB, 128 GB, Mirror Black)


Update November 2022 -

November 2022 to June 2024 (1 Year 8 Months)

Samsung Galaxy S21 FE (8 GB, 128 GB, Graphite)


Update June 2024 -

June 2024 to present 




My Mom's Cell Phones

2004(?) - 2007(?) (3 Years)



Nokia 3315

2007(?) - Feb 2015 (8 Years)



Motorola Flip Phone (Cannot remember model)


November 2014 - November 2017 (3 Years)



Moto G (2nd Gen XT1063) - non 4G 


December 2017 - May 2021 (3 Years 6 Months)
Xiomi Mi A1 - 4GB RAM, 64 GB Storage


May 2021 - October 2023 (2 Years 6 Months)
Motorola G60 - 6GB RAM, 128 GB Storage


October 2023 - Present 


iPhone 13 - Product Red, 128 GB Storage



 My Wife's Cell Phones

2010 - October 2012 (3 Years)
Samsung GT-E1252 (Duos)


October 2012 - October 2015 (3 Years)
Samsung Galaxy Ace GT-S5830i


November 2015 - April 2016 (6 Months)



Samsung Galaxy S2

April 2016 - May 2019 (3 Years 1 Month)

Samsung Galaxy S5


May 2019 - October 2023 (4 Years 6 Months)

Xiomi Note 7 Pro - 4 GB RAM, 64 GB Storage


October 2023 - Present


Samsung S21 FE - with Snapdragon 888 (8 GB, 128 GB)