Friday, July 31, 2009

C++ class for S/W proffesional



class
Indian_Bachelor_female_professional
{
double styles;
short skirts;
long time_to_understand_problems;
float mind;
void knowledge();
char non_co_operative;
};
class Married_female_Software_Professional
{
double weight;
short tempered;
long gossips;
float hopes;
void work();
char unstable;
};
class Female_Engaged_software_professional
{
double time_on_phone;
short attention_on_work;
long boast;
float on_cloud_nine;
void understanding();
char edgy;
};
class Indian_Newly_Married_software_professional
{
double dinner_invitations;
short time_at_work;
long lunch_breaks;
float talks;
void bank_balance();
char hen_pecked;
};
class Indian_husband_wife_software_professional
{
double income;
short temper;
long time_no_see;
float new_software_company;
void lov
};
Class Guy_who_wrote_this
{
Long time_on_bench;
Void work();
}

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Life Balance



Mary and Susan were friends for years. They grew up together and attended the same schools. They were now both in their 40’s, and both had great careers. They both had a similar upbringing - same education, same family values, similar support and financial position. But there was one main difference. Mary never seemed to have enough time. She watched her life long friend Susan. She had similar responsibilities and interests. Susan had a career, she had three children, she had her hobbies, one of which included golf. Over lunch, Susan was telling Mary about the golf game that she played last weekend.

“Susan, where do you find the time to play golf?” asked Mary. “I never seem to have the time, now with the children older and doing their own thing I thought I would have time to play golf like we did when we were in college.” Susan looked at Mary and laughed, “Mary, we both have the same hours in a day. You do have the time to play golf!” With a sigh Mary replied, “That’s easy for you to say. I never seem to have time. My work takes so much of my time. I am in the office at 7:30 AM, I leave at 6:30 in the evening. By the time I get home and have dinner, it is 8:00! And, then I usually have a briefcase full of work. The weekends are full of more work. Just to keep up, I have to put in the hours. You know what it is like!” “Of course, I know what it is like,” Mary said. “But what would happen tomorrow if you got sick? Who would do the work?” “Sick. Who has time to get sick! exclaimed Mary. “But if I did get sick, someone else would do the work, I suppose.” “You know something, Mary, I used to be like you. I worked night and day and of course on weekends. When I got home I was exhausted but I would push myself and read my children a bedtime story. By the time I went to bed, I would be more than exhausted. The boss I had was very demanding. She was there early in the morning, late at night, and she always worked weekends. I felt I had to do the same - I needed the job to help support my family - just as you did. But then I had a change of bosses. The man I worked for was older and much wiser, I might add! Of course, I continued to work the hours I had been working. One day he came to my desk and passed me a card that had a quote on it which said, ‘What I do today is important, because I will never have today again’ - then he left. I sat there stunned. I suddenly thought of what was important to me. While my work was important, I realized my children were more important. I also realized that time for me was important. It was 4:30, the official closing time of the office. I straightened my desk, felt a twinge of guilt about leaving, but I forced myself to leave. I was home by 5:00. My children and husband were surprised. I had a wonderful evening. It was not a chore to read that bedtime story that evening.” Mary was looking at her friend thoughtfully and then questioned Susan about the work she had left on her desk.

Susan replied, “I never thought this possible, but I actually accomplished more the next day than I had in weeks. As I was leaving the next day I stopped at my new boss’s office and thanked him for the quote. He told me a story about advice his dad had given him many years ago when he was working night and day. He referred to it as ‘Balance of Life’. His dad told him to keep balance in his work, in his family life and in time for himself. He explained to me, while all aspects of our life are important, without a balance, you become addicted and like all addictions you lose - - no balance with your family - you lose them - no balance with your work - you lose your perspective and you actually lose focus on the important aspects of your job. - no balance with yourself - you forget who you are and when you retire you have nothing! Or worse than that, if you lose your job through a company sale or downsizing you lose your identity. He went on to tell me that who we are is NOT what we do to make a living. Who we are is a balance of our family, our work, ourselves! It truly was the best advice I ever received.” Mary took a drink of her tea and tearfully looked at her friend, “But I would never get my work done if I left at 4:30!” Susan looked thoughtfully at her, “When you go to work on Monday, look at what you have on your desk. Make a list of everything you have to get done and beside that list write the impact of not doing it. Then focus only on the top three items that have the most impact. Do that everyday for a week. At first, you will find it difficult to leave. But, after awhile, you will find that you will have more energy, and you will be more focused in your work because you have BALANCE! There are times when we have to lose balance - a special project at work, or a family matter at home - but consciously focusing on balance keeps everything in check.” Mary smiled at her friend, “Thanks for talking with me. We have been friends for so long. Thank heavens I have balance with your friendship! You have convinced me. I will leave the work in my briefcase this weekend. On Monday, I will make the list first thing. Perhaps next weekend, I will have the time to go golfing with you!”

Celebrate Reading…..

Yahoo Home Page


Now we can customize yahoo page
it is looking good.
just i have given my try..... ;)

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Telugu poetry

Actually it is not appropriate to call it as telugu kavitha.
just for fun i have written it when i was in IIT to publish in hostel magazine.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Folder Lock without any S/W

This is a way to lock folders without the use of any alternative software. So, here you go. Open Notepad and copy the below code and save as locker.bat. Don't forget to change your password in the code it's shown the place where to type your password. Now double click on locker ..bat First time start it will create folder with Locker automatically for u. After creation of the Locker folder, place the contents u want to lock inside the Locker Folder and run locker.bat again. For unlocking run the locker.bat again and give the password…..

I hope this comes in handy
**********************************************************
cls
@ECHO OFF
title Folder Locker
if EXIST "Control Panel.{21EC2020-3AEA-1069-A2DD-08002B30309D}" goto UNLOCK
if NOT EXIST Locker goto MDLOCKER
:CONFIRM
echo Are you sure u want to Lock the folder(Y/N)
set/p "cho=>"
if %cho%==Y goto LOCK
if %cho%==y goto LOCK
if %cho%==n goto END
if %cho%==N goto END
echo Invalid choice.
goto CONFIRM
:LOCK
ren Locker "Control Panel.{21EC2020-3AEA-1069-A2DD-08002B30309D}"
attrib +h +s "Control Panel.{21EC2020-3AEA-1069-A2DD-08002B30309D}"
echo Folder locked
goto End
:UNLOCK
echo Enter password to Unlock folder
set/p "pass=>"
if NOT %pass%==type your password here goto FAIL
attrib -h -s "Control Panel.{21EC2020-3AEA-1069-A2DD-08002B30309D}"
ren "Control Panel.{21EC2020-3AEA-1069-A2DD-08002B30309D}" Locker
echo Folder Unlocked successfully
goto End
:FAIL
echo Invalid password
goto end
:MDLOCKER
md Locker
echo Locker created successfully
goto End
:End

How to make meetings Work


This is a article in Business today
How to make meetings work
Saumya Bhattacharya
July 3, 2009
How often have you chaired a meeting that has gone on for a painfully long time and completely
lost focus? Across countless organisations, meetings start late, erupt in conflict, lose focus and
accomplish little. Are there any golden rules to make them more effective? “Have a plan. It may be
a bad plan, but it’s better than having no plan.” This was the advice to young Asim Handa from his
athletics coach in college. While his days as an athlete are long over, the advice has stuck, more
so while conducting meetings, says Handa, Country Manager, Futurestep, a Korn/Ferry
Company.
A successful meeting takes thought and planning, says
communication expert and author of Working the Room, Nick
Morgan. So, plan all that you wish to cover in the meeting in
advance so that there is far less chance of getting
sidetracked. Plus, preparation will give you clarity on what the
meeting is all about.
Be absolutely clear on what the agenda is and what you want
to achieve (see What Goes Into an Agenda?). If
communication experts are to be believed, that’s half your
task accomplished. According to Morgan, every group
meeting goes through three phases—a warm-up, a work
phase, during which tasks are accomplished, and a closing
phase, when the matter of the meeting is summarised and
next steps are determined.
Begin the meeting on time even if a few participants are
missing. When they arrive and discover that they have missed
some important points, they will know not to be late the next
time around.
The prime objective is to follow the agenda. Says Morgan:
“For a small meeting, your agenda can be relatively loose, but
for a larger group, the more structure you provide, the more
effective the meeting will be.”
While you are in the midst of discussion, make sure that
everyone gets a chance to speak and ask for feedback
regularly. “Most of the Indian business leaders are
task-focussed and less interactive. It inhibits people from
opening up in meetings,” says Handa. But, what about a good
meeting that goes astray because of interruptions? If some
participants disturb the meeting, try asking a question.
“Besure to include the transgressors among


Five tips for efficient
meetings
1. Don’t meet if the same
information could be covered in
an e-mail or a brief report.
2.Begin the meeting on time
even if a few participants are
missing.
3. Be absolutely clear on what
the agenda is and follow it.
4.Make it interactive. Don’t
dominate the discussion.
5. Bring the meeting to a clear,
constructive close.
What goes into an agenda
The purpose and the
desired outcome of the
meeting.
Who the participants are.
The date, time and place.
The length of the
meeting.
A list of the topics to be
covered.
A list stating who will
address each topic and
for how long.
Any background
information participants
will need to know.

Monday, July 27, 2009

Amazing technology from Japan . . . . but can you guess what it is ?


Look closely and guess what they could be...



Are they pens with cameras?



Any wild guesses? No clue yet?





Ladies and gentlemen... congratulations! You've just looked into the future... yep that's right!
You've just seen something that will replace your PC in the near future.
Here is how it works:






In the revolution of miniature computers, scientists have made great developments with bluetooth technology...


This is the forthcoming computers you can carry within your pockets .


This "pen sort of instrument" produces both the monitor as well as the keyboard on any flat surfaces from where you can carry out functions you would normally do on your desktop computer.







Can anyone say, "Good-bye laptops!"