Friday, December 8, 2023

Moving goods from the Arabian Sea to the Bay of Bengal

 


Let us assume that a new Dedicated Freight Corridor was created by Indian Railways, connecting the Kochi port with Madurai and then Thondi on the east coast of India. It should skirt thickly populated areas. The distance is approximately 378 km. It should be at least a double line with a few stops en route, including one near Madurai. The line may require some tunneling. Some parts of it might have to be elevated above the ground. While Kochi has significant infrastructure, Thondi would need an entirely new port built with a large container handling capability. Thoothukudi has some infrastructure but expanding that port will pose problems because ships there need to navigate the relatively shallow Gulf of Mannar. 

This project would serve many countries including ASEAN and African countries. It will speed up traffic between the west and the east and reduce costs and energy consumption. China would benefit from this project too because of faster transportation of goods to the Middle East, EU, and Africa.

The domestic significance of this project should not be underestimated as we will plan to connect Thondi with all major ports on the East Coast by ships carrying containerized freight. Cargo from the west going to cities on the east coast would then be significantly speeded up. Cargo from the east going to cities on the west coast would be similarly speeded up. Some loads on the existing inter-city freight corridors would be reduced. By creating new routes for freight movement, the corridor would ruggedize India’s transport infrastructure.

Given state-of-the-art technology, the corridor could be all-electric and primarily carry containerized freight. It will use high-speed trains and will be highly automated. If the corridor has a capacity of about 100 million tons/year in each direction, it will find no shortage of demand. Multilateral and bilateral funding would be easily available for investing. Job creation would be a major contribution. Another significant contribution would be in reducing fossil fuel usage, thereby contributing to climate change control efforts.

Hopefully, the corridor’s freight-carrying capacity can be increased in the future, through incremental investment. 200 million tons each way would be an ideal goal.

Srinivasan Ramani

Monday, November 20, 2023

Show solidarity with the trapped tunnel workers

 


Forty-one workers are trapped in the collapsed Char Dham Tunnel. A week has passed, and they are subsisting on limited food and air sent through small pipes. How does a nation send them a message that we are with them and will spare nothing to ensure their rescue? Authorities seem to feel that the rescue will come within a week. A few thousands of us should undertake a fast ourselves, till the rescue is over. A few concerned leaders should join in the fast to show they are leaders who will be with us even when the going gets tough!

Srinivasan Ramani

Saturday, November 18, 2023

Cut your credit card into pieces and then bury it!

 


Does your credit card company not know how to run a simple customer care operation?  Get rid of that card!

Recently a credit card company (CCC) sent me a new card as replacement for the one that was expiring. I have to run pillar to post to activate it! My app stopped working probably as the old card expired. I tried to log in on their website, but it said my login has been suspended due to inactivity. I tried to call their published customer care number. It cut me off saying that it is a chargeable number and that I should visit the Airtel website to find the right number. I tried that but could not find out how to get a working customer care number.

Then I realized it! Every CCC does not have managers who understand customer care. I will cut their new card into pies and bury it!  I can find another CCC which understands customer care!

Srinivasan Ramani

Wednesday, November 15, 2023

Finding uses for rice and wheat stubble



We should consider using stubble to make paper or cardboard. Or we can set up thermal power plants where we can use stubble as a fuel in way that reduces pollution. Tall chimneys would promote a higher level of combustion and reduce particle emission.

We should also study how to make bioplastics out of stubble.
(Visit
https://thisisplastics.com/innovation/bioplastics-turning-plants-into-plastics/   
         
https://bioplasticsnews.com/2019/07/31/turning-agro-waste-into-bioplastics/ ).

Finding uses for agricultural waste is essential to reduce stubble burning and resulting air pollution.  

Leading educational and research institutes should study this issue. It is of national importance.

A Drastic Alternative

If we fail to solve the air pollution problem, we should consider other alternatives. One alternative is to shift the capital to another location such as Dr Ambedkar Nagar, (Mhow).  I believe that it has a lot of Government land. It is more central than New Delhi. It is only 23 KM away from Indore and is well connected by rail and road.  Creating a new and modern city would contribute to our economic growth. Perhaps, we can plan to hold the first Olympics in India in Mhow!

We do not have to move everything out of New Delhi. A judicious move of selected Government entities is all that is necessary. 

Srinivasan Ramani

Tuesday, September 19, 2023

Women’s Representation in the Lok Sabha and State legislative Assemblies

 

Statue of Kittur Rani Channamma on the grounds of the Parliament

Photo Credit: https://loksabha.nic.in/PhotoGal/ViewAllPhotoCategory.aspx

Bill to ensure a significant representation for women in the Lok Sabha and State Assemblies: This Bill heralds a big step forward for Indian Society. Public commitments so far make success of the bill very likely.

Do we really need to wait till 2029 because a new delimitation of constituencies would have to be done? No. You cannot go suddenly from a much lower level of representation to 33%. Leaders need to be identified and groomed. The nation would be watching the candidates put up by each party for the 2024 election. The parties that really deserve credit for the Bill should go to work right away to implement the spirit of the Bill. They should give women candidates at least 25% of the tickets. One third of these women candidates should be from SC/ST. If major parties commit to doing this, we can say that India, that is Bharat, has truly taken a step forward.

Srinivasan Ramani

Friday, August 18, 2023

The Reformer who changed Indian Software, Telecom and Banking, Mr N Vittal

 

                                        Photo Credit:  https://aic-empi.org/team/Mr-N-Vittal/#

Nagarajan Vittal (31 January 1938 – 4 August 2023) was an IAS officer of the 1960 batch, Gujarat Cadre. His reputation earned him very important postings in the Central Government.

His strength was based on a disciplined, principled life. When junior officers and politicians ask “autonomous” bodies and companies they oversee to book them five-star hotel rooms, Mr Vittal would stay in modest guest houses. Seshan had articulated the view explicitly, saying something like “I and my wife need only curd rice and pickles for our existence. My pension would take care of that. Why do we need anything else?”

Mr Vittal’s life was one of achievements during a critical phase of India’s development. The example he has left us of a principled, disciplined life, and the willingness to stand up for justice and fairness, are equally important. If it inspires a few IAS officers in every batch, it will continue to contribute to make India better in future.

As Director of the National Centre for Software technology in those years, I reported to a Governing Council headed by the Secretary Dept of Electronics, which had been headed by a scientist like MGK Menon and an engineer like PP Gupta. So, when we saw an IAS officer being posted to be Secretary, Electronics, many of us wondered what type of leadership he would give us. What was in common to Gujarat Narmada Valley Fertilisers & Chemicals that Mr Vittal had managed and the Dept of Electronics? Then I started hearing and reading Mr Vittal’s speeches, and saw him at work, and I found the answer to my question. The common thing was managing people! Two thirds of a company’s expense, or more, is the payment to employees. They produce the bulk of the wealth of the company. The leader does not have to do their work but has to ensure that they succeed in their work.

The next issue is of vision and policy. No one has a monopoly of vision and the ability of implementing visions. Good IAS officers have an edge in this dimension because of their broader education and training. The selection process picks out able candidates. The good ones the system picks up more than makes up for the bad eggs who become toadies of bad politicians.

We have to take a broad view of the state of the world and India to understand the tremendous changes that took place in the eighties and nineties; the decades during which Mr Vittal made very important contributions to India’s development. Gorbachev’s taking over the Soviet Union in 1985 speeded up the economic and political changes taking place in the world. The assassination of Indira Gandhi in 1984 and the prime ministership of Rajiv Gandhi during 1984 and 1989 had major impacts. Sam Pitroda provided a bold vision for the telecommunications sector and economy, in addition to several other ideas. India’s foreign exchange reserves were running down rapidly, coming to almost nil in 1990-91. Negotiations with the World Bank and IMF were necessary to acquire a loan of 7 billion US dollars. In return, India agreed to an economic reform to ensure that the Indian economy would surely get out of its crisis.

The team that handled the momentous changes in the economy included political leaders like Narasimha Rao and Manmohan Singh, along with IAS officers like Naresh Chandra, Venkitaramanan, and Rengarajan. Younger IAS officers, handpicked for their ability and integrity were assigned critical departments to be transformed. Mr Vittal took over as Secretary to Govt., Dept of Electronics, in 1990. Much of the freedom the Software Sector was given was obviously due to the mandate given to Mr Vittal. I quote from the book Netchakra [Netchakra] to which I had contributed a chapter in 2011:

Quote

The rise of the Internet in India was more or less in the same period during which the Indian software industry pioneers were making their mark. The government saw the potential of the software industry. N. Vittal, then Secretary to Govt at the DOE, and a few other administrators were very highly supportive of both developments. A piquant situation arose when the fledgling software industry badly needed email and there were no Internet Service Providers (ISPs), public or private! The Education and Research Network (ERNET) of the DOE informally started giving email facilities to the software companies. A wrong person above us could have put a stop to this very quickly saying we had no right to do so as we were only an academic network. Instead, Vittal was supportive. DOE was funding the ERNET, and was at the same time carrying the responsibility of making the software industry grow. So, when we briefed him with some timidity about ERNET giving support to software companies, he made it clear that it was the right thing to do. We were afraid of trouble with telecom department. These were very tough days; if multiple landlines were to be terminated at an institution, that institution could not create a network out of them! They were to be used only as point to point lines! At the beginning, when the hub served only as an email hub, we had a fig leaf – there was no level 2 or level 3 connectivity between the connected institutions! Instead, there was only a store-forward message system named an email relay computer connecting them! This was dangerous – the whim and fancy of one officer could have pulled the carpet from under us. Vittal re-assured us; the government had decided to give priority to the growth of the software industry, and this industry was vociferously in need of the Internet. He told us something like “Don’t worry; I will raise this with the Cabinet Secretary when necessary!”

Unquote

The remarkable success Mr Vittal had in DOE prepared the ground for the Government to give him the plum responsibility of the Economic Reform period: to reform the Telecommunications Sector, enabling the flow of private investment, adoption of new technologies, and a vast reduction of Govt. Control. This reform in telecom was central to the success of economic reform.

Everyone in Govt. in those days was not a hero. There were cases that showed rapid economic developments were opportunities for some elements to make a fast buck:

https://www.ndtv.com/india-news/former-telecom-minister-sukhram-gets-five-years-in-jail-assaulted-outside-court-566368

Mr Vittal had enough ideas and energy to play yet another very important role to build modern India. He was appointed CVC in 1998. How he rose to this task is best described by himself in a record of his talk [CVC’s talk]. I will mention one example. In those days, Bank Accounts Reconciliation used to take six months. Many bank employees committed insider fraud, knowing that they had time to do their looting and scooting before they were discovered. With his knowledge of technology, Mr Vittal came to an unusual solution. If lack of computerization permits fraud, hit at the root! Computerize Bank Accounts! This decision has had an amazing effect: Indian software now takes care of banking not only in India but in many places in the world. A branch manager told me that his branch now handles 400 times more business than it did 20 years ago! I hardly go to that branch. I can access my account there using my cell phone, irrespective of where I am.

A few personal memories: Mr Vittal would get up at 5 AM and prepare for his work of the day. If he had a talk to give, he would have a handwritten version ready before breakfast. If a journalist talked to him after the meeting, he would be ready to give away his handwritten version of the talk. He kept copies of some talks which were very important, such as [CVC’s talk]. These selected talks helped him create books which are valuable for us. Wikipedia provides a list of his books and mentions his 400 articles:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N._Vittal

His knowledge of Sanskrit was impressive, giving him quotations appropriate to any occasion. His jokes made his talks memorable. I should quote one of his jokes. A journalist had asked him if he was an electronics engineer when he had taken over the Dept of Electronics as Secretary. His dead-pan answer was something like, “Mein electronics engineer nahi hoon! Balki electronics engineer ka baap hoon!”. His son is an electronics engineer! 

References

[Netchakra] Srinivasan Ramani, "Bringing the Internet to India," 
in the book “Netch@kra: Fifteen Years of the Internet in India:

Retrospective and Roadmap”,

Eds: Madanmohan Rao and Osama Manzoor, 

Digital Empowerment Foundation, New Delhi. Nov. 2011.

http://netchakra.net/     ISBN: 9788191013962

 

[CVC’s talk] Applying zero tolerance to corruption
https://www.cvc.gov.in/sites/default/files/CVC_99_.pdf

[Work as CVC] Anand Parthasarathy:
https://swarajyamag.com/tech/n-vittals-work-as-central-vigilance-commissioner-overshadowed-his-real-legacy-unshackling-the-nascent-electronics-industry-in-the-1990s

 

Srinivasan Ramani

17-Aug-2023

 

Wednesday, July 5, 2023

ATMs and Swindling


I had posted this message on social networks.

 

I had acquired a prepaid multi-currency card before a trip abroad. I loaded it with some Euros and some US $s. In Greece, I used the card at an ATM to get Euros in cash. The ATM charged me nearly four Euros as commission, but more importantly it ignored my Euro balance and converted my USDs   at a cost of 13 to 14% conversion cost. 

 

It seems good to avoid multi-currency cards and carry one card per currency. Also, we should buy Euros before we leave India and avoid foreign ATMs.

 

Srinivasan Ramani

 

Here is a valuable reply:

Warren Greving

Key issue is control. With my debit and credit cards at the time of sale they usually ask what currency to pay in. Choosing the local currency means your bank will do the conversion. Which in my case is usually optimal. Allowing the local agent to do the conversions usually gets a unfavorable rate. Shop around for a card which will waive the atm fee. Multi-currency cards are probably ok if they still give you control. I lived off a debit card from a credit union for almost 20 years in India and China. Getting foreign currency in a country is usually expensive whether that is your own country or somewhere else.

In Conclusion 

Most bank branches do not have knowledgeable people who can answer your questions about prepaid foreign currency cards. Forgive them for they know not what they do! 

Choose a bank to sell you a foreign currency card after consulting knowledgeable people. 


Saturday, July 1, 2023

Deadline for CSI membership verification: Further extended to 15-July-2023

A message from Agrawal MD dated 30-June-2023 says:

Date for verification of membership details has been extended to 15-July-2023

Members should utilize this opportunity to ensure that they can vote and put the Society on a sound footing. Life membership of CSI costs a lot today, and timely action can protect your rights and investment.

The email and mobile number verification process is as follows:

1. As per the Bombay High court order CSI members are requested to verify their email Id and mobile numbers by clicking the link www.evotingindia.com/Vrify.jsp

2. The members will be redirected to the verification page.

3. Enter your Member ID: (The members to enter his member id registered with CSI)

4. Enter the Characters Displayed (Enter the characters from captcha image)

5. Verify Phone No OTP: (Click on “Send OTP” to receive OTP on your registered mobile & “Verify OTP “ by entering the same) OTP will be valid for 15 minutes only.

6. Verify Email ID OTP: (Click on “Send OTP” to receive OTP on your registered email id & “Verify OTP “ by entering the same) OTP will be valid for 15 minutes only.

7. After OTP verification, a message will be displayed “Mobile number/ Email id successfully verified!”

For those whose mail id and/or mobile number are incorrect, please get in touch with Ms. Sonali Naik at CSI headquarters and furnish her the change to be made in mail id and/or mobile number. Her e-mail id is sonali@csi-india.org

Srinivasan Ramani

Saturday, June 24, 2023

Deadline for Membership Verification of the Computer Society of India Moved to 29-Jun-2023

 

Message from MD Agrawal dated 27-Jun-2023

The deadline for verifying your registered email address with Computer Society of India has been moved to 29-Jun-2023. CSI Membership Number in some cases may start with a letter of the alphabet which looks like I or like the number 1. Please take it as Capital i.

Earlier Message from MD Agrawal, Former President, CSI dated 15-Jun-2023

Dear CSI Member,

Kindly ignore the mail if you have already verified Email Id and Mobile number.

We are contacting you again to verify your email id and mobile number as recorded in the Membership Register maintained by CSI HQ. This is needed for preparing the Voters List for the election to various posts in the Executive Committee of the Computer Society of India (CSI). Please complete the verification process by the 20th of June 2023.

Bombay High Court (BHC) has appointed a Three-member Committee (TMC) to hold elections. BHC appointed a retired Judge of the Bombay High Court- Justice R. M. Savant - to prepare a Voters List. As directed by Hon'ble Justice Savant (Retd), Membership Register maintained by CSI Headquarters with a cut-off date of 28th February 2023 will be taken for verification, TMC has appointed CDSL to carry out the task of verification.

The email and mobile number verification process is as follows:

1. As per the Bombay High court order CSI members are requested to verify their email Id and mobile numbers by clicking the link www.evotingindia.com/Vrify.jsp

2. The members will be redirected to verification page.

3. Enter your Member ID: (The members to enter his member id registered with CSI)

4. Enter the Characters Displayed (Enter the characters from captcha image)

5. Verify Phone No OTP: (Click on “Send OTP” to receive OTP on your registered mobile & “Verify OTP “ by entering the same) OTP will be valid for 15 minutes only.

6. Verify Email ID OTP: (Click on “Send OTP” to receive OTP on your registered email id & “Verify OTP “ by entering the same) OTP will be valid for 15 minutes only.

7. After OTP verification, a message will be displayed “Mobile number/ Email id successfully verified!”

For those whose mail id and/or mobile number are incorrect, please get in touch with Ms. Sonali Naik at CSI headquarters and furnish her the change to be made in mail id and/or mobile number. Her e-mail id is sonali@csi-india.org

Note: CSI members may note that verification of Email Id and Mobile number process has to be done using the OTP route only for being termed as a valid voter."

Please act on this communication immediately by following the above steps.

Saturday, June 10, 2023

A Big Step Forward for the Computer Society of India (CSI)

 

Photo Credit: DTR - Own work, Public Domain, Through Wikimedia Commons

Thanks to a decision of the Honorable High Court of Bombay, a major verification of the membership list of CSI is underway. CSI’s membership is being updated by verifying email addresses and phone numbers by sending one-time passwords. If you do not have the right communication details, you can request CSI HQ to update them by sending them an email.

This has put a tremendous load on the CSI HQ, but progress doesn’t come easy.

The mammoth task has had its glitches, but improvements made in the last few days has resulted in a lot of us getting verification completed in one try.

I request all CSI members to try to get the verification completed by the deadline, which is 20-Jun-2023. The next step is to vote without fail after the ballot reaches us. This is a rare opportunity to save this national institution and a great professional network.

We must have a higher percentage of members voting this year as compared to the historical record. It is the low voting percentage that caused problems to CSI in the past.

Srinivasan Ramani

Monday, June 5, 2023

Problems with Voice Response Systems

I had to call the call center of a credit card company today. They wanted me to enter a 16 digit credit card number. OK. The press 1 for this and press 1 for that. Then enter 1 to submit the otp that has been sent to your registed phone number! I got lost! 

What is all this palaver for? Can't their system recognize my phone number using Caller ID? 

Let my nation awake and hire IT people who know what they are doing!

Srinivasan Ramani 

Sunday, June 4, 2023

 

Problems with Automated Transactions

Darkness Under the Lamp

Photo Credit: Siddharth Varanasi - FlickrDSC_0455
CC BY 2.0, File:Diya, an oil lamp.jpg, Created: 26 October 2011

There is darkness under the lamp! The Computer Society of India is going through the process of verifying its list of members and the process has been proving to be difficult. I am not an outsider. I am a life member of CSI and am proud to be one. That does not mean that I should not discuss technical problems.

The trouble begins with your ID number. It reads something like 100045XX. When you type it into the verification system, it is likely to say something like “enter a valid number”. After trying three or four times you go around asking people and find that the ID is actually something like I00045XX, beginning with I not 1.

Then you have to verify your email address and mobile number. This seems to be about as challenging as climbing Makalu! After many complaints, the professionals concerned increased the time limit for the OTP to expire. That has not completely solved the problem. Members are continuing to warn each other that we have only days to go before we complete the process; otherwise, no vote for you!

I think it is poetic justice for computer professionals to face this type of problem. Every day, millions of users of automated systems suffer because of bad design and implementation.  

Another example of this: today I looked up to see what I had to pay for a credit card. There had been no email or message on this from the company concerned for two months. I then used the app on the cell phone. It showed me the current statement, but not the last statement, which should give me the amount due. Once upon a time when they used to send a printed bill every month, it made some sense to save money by not sending it when the amount due was Nil. It makes no sense now to deny me an email saying I owe nothing this month.

Of course, I could see from the app the amount due by going to the payment page, but that page has no date and hence has no evidentiary value. If I make a small mistake and fail to pay a month’s dues on time, I could be charged a hefty interest and penalty, but if they run a lousy system, there is no one to pull them up.

I don’t see how India is going to become a superpower when its plumbing leaks, its electricity is stolen, and its automated systems waste your time. 

Srinivasan Ramani

Monday, April 10, 2023

Productivity and the Effective Use of the Internet

 

Recently, I wanted a credit card company to stop sending me hard copies of my monthly statement, and instead send me email statements. I located an email address for their customer care and sent my request. There was an automatic acknowledgment followed later by an email saying I could request the change through digital channels and giving me a link and a call center number. I clicked on the link which gave miscellaneous information but did not say how to stop the paper statements. So, I called the call center and went through an elaborate process at the end of which the operator said that my request has been noted and they would act on it soon. Then the operator asked me to speak to his supervisor to give my feedback rating his performance. The supervisor had a chat with me and said that an email request would soon come to me on which I could give my feedback. I must have spent over an hour on this wild-goose-chase. 

The whole thing reminded me of a newspaper report a decade ago which said that a certain airline had 18 employees standing by at various places on the side all along the route, as a passenger walked his way from the security check to his seat. This airline, after bleeding the country of several billion dollars year after year, was finally sold for peanuts.

When are we going to realize that this country’s productivity is the most important index to watch and to improve? Otherwise, we may become a five-billion-dollar economy rather than a five-trillion-dollar economy!

Srinivasan Ramani


Thursday, January 19, 2023

MINOO MEHERWANJI DOSABHAI (MM DOSABHAI), 1930-2023


Photo: Courtesy of Minooji's Family

Minoo Dosabhai headed the Software Promotion Centre (SPC) and Hardware Division during the formative years of NCST. He also worked as the chief engineer, managing all engineering responsibilities of NCST including campus development and maintenance. Because of his work, we had a very well-designed campus in Juhu when we started out there in 1986.

Consultants who had supported users of NCST computers were from the Software Promotion Centre. They helped thousands of students and hundreds of advanced course participants do their work on computers.

I gratefully remember the work done by Minooji’s Division in setting up and maintaining the computer systems and software used by the ERNET. NCST’s Networks Division played a key role in this nation-wide project. ERNET, with the support of SPC, had set up an email link between NCST and IIT Bombay, in 1986. The project connected India to the Internet in 1988; this was a full seven years before VSNL entered the field in 1995. The cooperation between staff of the ERNET project and the SPC is one of my happiest memories of that era!

Minooji had helped me learn using the CDC-3600 in 1964-5 at TIFR. I was then working at TIFR as an intern, doing my M Tech project. The Institute was expecting a big computer at that time, the CD-3600. Dr PVS Rao and Minooji were creating the massive infrastructure required by the machine. I was happy to lend a helping hand occasionally.

Minooji was a soft-spoken gentleman, always cheerful, and helpful. They don’t make them like him anymore!

Minooji passed away on 19th January 2023. He leaves behind his wife and two daughters. 

Srinivasan Ramani


Sunday, January 8, 2023

Promoting the use of UPI to make donations safer

 As we all know very well, thousands of temples, churches, mosques, gurudwaras and other places of worship in India play a vital role in people’s lives. The quality of cleanliness in these places and their immediate environment matters a lot to our self-esteem and to national pride. Some places are exceptionally good and some need attention.

These institutions collect thousands of crores per year through their hundis and collection boxes. A part of these donations helps maintain these places of worship. Ensuring that the donations are transparent, legal, safe, and efficient is a valuable goal. Eliminating fraud, misuse, and corruption is equally essential. We must promote the use of the Universal Payment Interface (UPI) to provide for a safe way to donate.

UPI need not be the only route for donations, but it should carry a significant part of the load. The recent safeguarding of bank URIs on the Internet by introducing the domain name “.bank” is a brilliant move. Now banks can be asked to identify accounts eligible to receive charitable or religious donations by ensuring suitable labels are part of the account name - such as temple, church, masjid, gurudwara. They can also verify if the account holder has a PAN number and is authorized to receive donations from abroad or not.

Places of worship can then publicise the UPI IDs for receiving donations and publish QR codes for the purpose through various channels.

This will facilitate legal donations from all corners of the nation to all places of worship, big or small. It will also increase legal donations from NRIs and OCIs.

This need not involve any big effort by the Govt. Suitable guidance to the National Payments Corporation which implements URI, and to banks will achieve a lot. However, publicising the effort and making the nation aware of the issues involved are important.

There are many low hanging fruits we can easily pluck to improve India’s image in the world. This is one of them.

Srinivasan Ramani