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Arun
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So following the tradition of NITW, we have a mass bunk this year as well for Durga Puja or/and Dushera or/and Vijaydashmi or/and Saraswati Puja – the list goes on and on.
However, it's only Saraswati Puja that takes the centerstage in my home – which incidentally falls on navami, the day before Vijaydashmi. Everyone turns into a busybody early in the day – and it's really hectic cleaning each and every article. However, it's just another occasion for the whole family to be together, doing household chores and stuff – quite fun at times.
Now Goddess Saraswati possesses the powers of speech, wisdom and learning. And we students are the ones who should be worshipping her. Yet we bunk college (where we are supposed to study, though most of us don't) to come home to worship Goddess Saraswati to bestow her blessings upon us. Moreover, this year, we are bunking a midlab exam as well – all coz of one stubborn teacher. Maybe its right on our part, maybe its wrong – no one really bothered to think about all that. We had walked 99 steps forward – and forcing 1 step forward is easier than going 99 steps backward.
And that lab exam is scheduled to start in another 30 min or so – bless us and knock some sense into that teacher. At least make him realise he can't conduct an exam with zero attendance.
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Miscellaneous
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Arun
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So here's my vijaydashmi gift to my classmates - for their unity in deciding to bunk the OS mid-lab. The third question in the list - process scheduler using signals and context switching. This is not for the studs of the class who can or plan to do it on their own. This is for the rest - those who can't do it or don't wanna do it. I won't say it's perfect - but it worked fine for me. If ya find any faults, please leave a comment. And if ya like this post, a thanks would do.

Download here
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College (NITW)
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Arun
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So now once again, our internet is being monitored (well, it has always been, but now, even more so). The situation is not as bad as the catastrophic day last week. Yet it’s appalling.
In order to look more professional, they have created an error page this time with two major error messages :
• Weighted phrase limit exceeded.
• Banned extension: .exe
Now I really don’t know what the first one means – I suppose they are banning sites which many people visit and which they feel do not fall into the category they call educational sites. The second one is obvious – so now we are prohibited from even downloading new softwares, updating our antivirus et al.
If it was some service they are offering free of cost. No would’ve really bothered. But they take thousands of bucks from us in the name of internet fees and now this. When colleges like IITs don’t bother regulating the internet connections given to their students, I wonder why NITW is trying so badly to establish its authority over its students. If some regulation was really needed, they can register the mac addresses of each computer so that they can monitor each student personally and take specific actions in case someone acts unethically. But no – instead they block the net given to all students just coz of one odd nutter in the college.
I hope someone can knock some sense into this orthodox sect of people. They need to understand that the more they try to stop someone from doing something, the more they’re instigating them to do that very thing. I think Harry Potter fans might remember Hermione’s words from the Order of the Phoenix when Umbridge banned Quibbler in Hogwarts, “If she could have done one thing to make absolutely sure that every single person in this school will read your interview, it was banning it!”
The human brain acts funnily – they better understand that before they start to overdo things, which they feel are long overdue (I like the combination of overdo and overdue – sounds nice nay)! What they’re trying to do is not wrong, but how they’re trying to do is. I guess they better do a viability check before implementing their plans of action – or else it would be a repeat of last week’s fiasco.
If it happens I guess might quote Bernard M. Baruch, “Whatever failures I have known, whatever errors I have committed, whatever follies I have witnessed in private and public life have been the consequence of action without thought.”
Or even Mary Beard, “Study without action is futile. Action without study is fatal.”
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College (NITW)
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Arun
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So today, we were to have our Operating Systems (OS in short) Mid-lab exam. And our teacher for one, normally doesn’t cancel or postpone exams so easily. So we reached there at 10 in the morning and waited for him to come.
Meanwhile, we were reminded of the problem at hand – none of the computers had a mouse. And the Graphical User Interface (GUI) won’t load without a mouse. The lab attendant (should I call him so) told us to talk to our teacher. So we continue waiting for him.
Tick tock tick tock….an hour passes – he doesn’t come. Loads of speculations flying around, “Maybe the lab exam is only for 2 hrs – he’ll come now.” “Maybe he’ll keep it next week.” And the sorts… Another hour passes…still no sign of him. Now the probability of the exam happening was below 0%. So we breathe a sigh of relief. But then, he finally makes his entry in the lab.
And he says very little and to the point, “Only two questions. (1)What did you do in the last 4 days!? (2) What did you do in the lab today!? Come according to your roll number, answer these and go.” Well, for the second one, everyone had only one answer – nothing!!! Most of the people didn’t even bother to log in. That was expected – he kept us on tenterhooks for two hours and now this.
All it did was add a collection of zeros in his register. Nothing else. But then – was it a lucky break or a start to a catastrophe!?
• Anyways, very few will get output no matter when the exam is.
• On top of that, we screwed our lab credits for a week.
• And we don’t know when he’ll keep the exam.
Too much to speculate – maybe he’ll surprise us later.
But as Jane Austen says (she happens to be my favourite author), “Surprises are foolish things. The pleasure is not enhanced, and the inconvenience is often considerable.”
Keep your fingers crossed buddies...
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College (NITW)
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Arun
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So NIT Warangal – supposedly among the elite in the country, yet filled with guys trying to outsmart others. And we saw a live example yesterday – when literally everything except the search sites and the e-mail sites were blocked.
• All the image files blocked (so if you use images.google.com to search for images, you get nothing)
• Orkut blocked
• Facebook login blocked (and even if you are already logged in, what can you do without images!?)
• Blogger blocked (it is still blocked)
• All the web proxies sites blocked
• All the software proxies blocked
• All the video formats (AVI,MP4,etc) blocked
• All the audio formats (MP3…) blocked
So all we could do was e-mail and chat – quite a life nay! But I guess it’s better not to have an internet connection than having one like this.
But turning the chessboard around and looking at the other side of all this, we had no access to sites required to do our Operating Systems assignment. So at least the CSians were in two minds – whether to curse the authorities or celebrate the occasion. I personally felt it was better that this scenario continued a few more days so that we’ll have an excuse for not doing assignments and then we can run off to our homes next week.
But alas! Our college seems to have got it’s senses back and the internet is back. As a result, we are doomed to do the assignments/projects.
Faced with the prospect of doing assignments and studying for mid-labs immediately after a week full of theory exams, I feel we are living a dog’s life – you can even call it worse than a dog’s life. All thanks to some really “peculiar” faculty in our college. Gimme a break!
In the words of Oscar Wilde, “Disobedience, in the eyes of anyone who has read history, is man's original virtue. It is through disobedience that progress has been made, through disobedience and through rebellion.” I wonder if they are trying to force us to disobey and rebel in order to make some real progress ;-). Well, if they are, their wishes would be fulfilled soon enough. A few more weeks like this and everyone will be at wit’s end.
Anyways… As of now… Start experimenting…. “exploring”….researching…
Later we can quote Werner von Braun, "Research is what I'm doing when I don't know what I'm doing."
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College (NITW)
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Arun
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So our college is supposedly going stringent on the net usage in our hostels. Orkut has always been blocked, but now they have blocked facebook – I really don’t care about all of them. But they blocked blogger – now they’re getting on my nerves…
I really am short on time, coz I’ve an exam and I haven’t even started studying. But I guess I’ll just post this to show that blogger can be unblocked. After all…
Where there is a will, there is a way. Where there is a lock, there exists a key as well..
Cheers nitwitians. Good luck finding the key to the lock.
I really am short on time, coz I’ve an exam and I haven’t even started studying. But I guess I’ll just post this to show that blogger can be unblocked. After all…
Where there is a will, there is a way. Where there is a lock, there exists a key as well..
Cheers nitwitians. Good luck finding the key to the lock.
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College (NITW)
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Arun
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So it’s here – the day most of the class has been hoping never came – the day to put the Theory of Computation into practice.

As one of our teachers is gracious enough to quote in class every now and then, "In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is." Which makes it all the more confusing – does it imply that even if I study theory, I won’t be able to implement it in practice as both are different in practice!?
Another quote to substantiate this by Falk Bruegmann, “In theory, that's science. But in reality, science is sometimes practiced differently.”
I think our teacher would agree with Robert Grossblatt's variation, “Theory and reality are only theoretically related.” Which implies we need to study theory to pass the exam.
But in the words of Trygve Reenskaug from the University of Oslo, "In theory, practice is simple." So cheers buddies, the exam paper would be easy tomorrow… But then again, Alexandre Boily says, "But, is it simple to practice theory?" No need to ask us..
Loads of confusion but I guess we can follow Jan van de Snepscheut, a Dutch Mathematician, who says, "It may come out all right in practice, but it'll never work in theory!" This quote sounds highly relevant in our context – things never work out in theory for us (at least for me), but it should work out in practice when we sit in the exam hall tomorrow. So what’s the need to study theory, wasting hours of precious time?
And last but not the least, I think our quote (at least mine) would go something like this, “All I care about is passing this exam. I've lost the ability to discern theory from practice.”

As one of our teachers is gracious enough to quote in class every now and then, "In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is." Which makes it all the more confusing – does it imply that even if I study theory, I won’t be able to implement it in practice as both are different in practice!?
Another quote to substantiate this by Falk Bruegmann, “In theory, that's science. But in reality, science is sometimes practiced differently.”
I think our teacher would agree with Robert Grossblatt's variation, “Theory and reality are only theoretically related.” Which implies we need to study theory to pass the exam.
But in the words of Trygve Reenskaug from the University of Oslo, "In theory, practice is simple." So cheers buddies, the exam paper would be easy tomorrow… But then again, Alexandre Boily says, "But, is it simple to practice theory?" No need to ask us..
Loads of confusion but I guess we can follow Jan van de Snepscheut, a Dutch Mathematician, who says, "It may come out all right in practice, but it'll never work in theory!" This quote sounds highly relevant in our context – things never work out in theory for us (at least for me), but it should work out in practice when we sit in the exam hall tomorrow. So what’s the need to study theory, wasting hours of precious time?
And last but not the least, I think our quote (at least mine) would go something like this, “All I care about is passing this exam. I've lost the ability to discern theory from practice.”
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College (NITW)
