Sunday, August 19, 2012

Capturing the 'Camera'


Diclaimer :- This is a satirical piece, but excludes those bona-fide photographers who have truly re-defined this art with their un-ending passion, love and dedication. In fact, the piece is an indirect mark of respect for these connoisseurs.
In today’s fast paced world the role of a camera has become indispensable. In a world where time flies past so swiftly, camera is a tool to permanent this fastness, to record the transient and the volatile and immortalize those into pages of history.

The camera can rightly claim to bear the distinction of bringing back lots of nostalgia at any given point of time. It rewinds memories, freshness, time and engenders a river of emotions, primarily happiness. Often it becomes a mode of bamboozlement – as an example, you suddenly discover your oblivious childhood through it, thinking how time has changed and ripened you ever since.

More often than not, the camera is used as a modern medium of advertisements. The competitive nature of survival has given birth to the need of an array of advertisements. If one has to succeed, he has to sell himself/herself. And to sell, he/she has to advertise incessantly. By merely being good or versatile at one subject does no good until the goodness is being advertised. And therefore the ‘incessant’ business of advertisements becomes even more important, in fact a necessity.

Advertisements often turn out to be a signature of authenticity. For example, a person galvanised in a western business outfit with a phone on the ear signifies his/her accomplished campus-placement. So will a face laden with pun-cakes can claim to be the most ravishing given the ever-growing sales and profits of the pan-cake industry and its inexorably tied users.

In fact the modern world has on its menu a lot of forums to be served as advertising fields. For social-networking sites like Facebook, advertisments become its oxygen of operation. It is the variety of flavors of advertisements, often of the same brand, that supports its survival away from a monotonous and mundane world. Here the camera too plays the role of linking the wannabe advertisers with its advertising-forum.

Having said all these, I am still to discuss the most important aspect for a camera. I wish the camera was an artificially intelligent device – which knew to identify the hot-sellable cakes. Alas, it still doesn't. Therefore, today, the camera-person becomes even more important than the camera itself. After all this person decides the subjects, the domain, the art-form, the nuances, the mood, the story and the background through his camera. The paparazzi thus acquires an un-questionable licence to invade every territory through the omnipotence action of his camera. For the camera, in its final advertisement, reserves the power to make or break you, glow or dim you, idolize or hate you, create or destroy you, focus or ignore you, venerate or vanquish you. But remember, the camera-person (paparazzi) is always a default hero!

At the end of it, if you ever wished to capture the nature of nature, to shoot to the default-instant heroism, to become invincible agents of ‘dream’ advertisements, or to get an un-questionable ticket to every event – be it a pompous and high-profile ‘Cynosure’ or a devotional and tranquil ‘Saraswati Puja’; you got to take to one camera - yes just one camera. Don’t be too perturbed about photography; merely owning a camera, which flashes a 21st century brand name with a reasonable professional look, is enough !

Friday, July 27, 2012

A sigh of relief !


It was indeed a relief - more relief than happiness infact to be picked up by Capillary Technologies from my campus early in this placement season.

Thus on July 14,2012 I am kicked out officially from all placement activities after being greeted with the result of being selected into Capillary.

Besides the package, in fact the kind of work being done at the firm also intrigued me. Let me not elucidate details out here, but you may visit CAPILLARY for more stuffs.

Relieved but nonetheless happy.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Raag Desh




A very beautiful and different bandish of Raag Desh on flute by Pandit Ronu Majumdar. I can't stop listening to it over and over again. :)

Click here to watch the video.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Me with my flute





Finally accomplished a 3rd prize at the instrumental event of Rhapsody during DA-IICT's Synapse-2012 by dint of my guru, my practice and last but not the least my love for the instrument.

I got to play a beautiful bandish on raaga Jaijaiwanti. I need to confess that though very less went into practicing with my tabla-mate, but whenever Malhar could take out time, it was sheer fun practising together. I think these two great tabla players of DA-IICT - Malhar and Rutvij give me a lot of confidence in classical playing. They deserve a lot of thanks.

Made out of only a single piece of wood, bansuri is one of the most divine as well as tough instruments to play. If you ever wish to play it, just drop by anytime.

Friday, January 13, 2012

FDI in retail - Against the motion



The crypto class of DA-IICT met with an unexpected guest the other day. The guest, who belongs to a global IT firm, brought with him the company's brand new technology on games. Now games are often a gamble. They leave you with the art of addiction. But the technology has the potential of encroaching many enthusiastic consumers. And that's why it sells and will sell.

The main driver of all innovations and inventions is capital. Every big or small firm relies on exploiting its consumer base with the sole intention of profit-making. Going by this simple law of management, it would be imprudent to invite foreign retailers and expose the present indigenous business paradigm into jeopardy.

India's market follow a chain – right from the farmers to the consumers via traders, retailers, kiranas, small shopkeepers and the like. There are multitudes who depend primarily in the flow above to make a living. In some states like West Bengal, existence of small-shops are rampant. Thousands of families survive on this form of indigenous trade.

Bringing retail giants like Walmart and Tesco may seemingly improve the situation for the end-consumers vis-a-vis competitive prices, large employment of locals, professional business dealings, transparency, less hoarding, tax evasion etc.
But one must understand there is no free lunch. At the cost of such luxuries, the 51% occupation of these giants can contain and bring down the entire flow of indigenous retail business. They may dominate over farmers and producers, gear for monopolies of both kinds, subdue all local indigenous shopkeepers, outsource goods of foreign countries heavily and forcibly sell it here and eventually control production, market and economy. After all what is the guarantee that all such capital inflow from outside will stabilize our slipping economical condition.

India's essence lies its pluralism. There is a very different bond that pluralistic market offers to the retailer-consumer community. There plays an unmatched faith between a local vegetable vendor and his madame. Each party wishfully is bound in an obligational transaction – that of bargain, quality, profit, loss and discount. There flows a river of emotional dependency, not any professionalism. Thus while you invite FDI, you throw away all such pristine, pious indigenous retail trade heritage.

(This piece appeared in the point-counterpoint section of January edition of Entelechy - DA-IICT's pressclub site.)