Sunday, July 8, 2012

Moonlight Through the Woods on a Night

Moonlight through the woods on a night
Reading newspapers and watching news sometimes is a painful experience, because what we see and listen is not what we had wished for.

A doctor, engineer, public servant or any professional or businessperson is found involved in corruption, he  is caught and or jailed. Similarly, in some instances someone educated and experienced is found involved in crime of one or the other sort and have to face the consequences!

Had such people some vision at some stage to realise that what they had been doing, or involved in, and if had avoided such acts, would have been free from the consequences of those wrongdoings. Most educated people would probably know the difference between the right and wrong, and can avoid it. But compulsion of power and greed blind senses, and if such people lack strong  values and self respect, they lose the balance and become victims. A little advantage (a carrot?) is too motivating to them to follow anyone just for small or big  gains.

This above context is related to career. Did those people  adopt a career to meet such an end? No, they deserved better future because they were bright minds, they had secured high marks in qualifying and competitive examinations, were always first to raise hands in class, they were good presenters and managers, or what not. But they lacked one very fundamental need for a human being: sincerity to job, its requirements, that is, service to organisation, their nation, society, to their family and friends. And all this in true sense!


We tend to live in double standards: our religious and cultural ethos teach us values, sacrifice; our education teaches us to be great people by practicing the ethics of profession in letter and spirit. But in practice we side with people who breach rules, please the bosses, are on the side of powerful lobbies, make money and live in high standards. In this world we talk of high economy, high earnings, high living standards. In the same world we talk of sustainable development, equitable distribution, carbon audit, concern for wastage of food, high living  standards in few countries, and high living by few in poor and developing countries. Some loose balance of mind, and fall prey.

Development in any way, of science, technology, innovation, industrial growth, etc are good but can not be allowed if they affect environment, risk to human life, to our ecosystems, our biodiversity, ethics, and fundamentals of human freedom, dignity, life etc. Similarly individuals can progress in their career, make ,advancements in life if they follow the ethics of their profession, rules of land, and contribute to their organisations, country and the society.


For any one, especially for younger minds stepping into their career,  what should be the guidelines: always follow the basic rules, respect the laws of land, and never break them, be sincere to the requirements of a true citizen of the country and never ever flout them come what may, follow the requirements of the profession as per the required code of conduct.

When you plan a career money, power and position, lust for unhealthy competition (if competition is for better performance and effectiveness in your job it is ok, but if it is related to how you can get over it by any means like by following unhealthy practices, a group or coterie of powerful people, by bribing, by approaching power lobbies, it makes no sense; in the later case it is better to be a slow wormin than a jumping frog, for one will have to pay for this favour to the mentor today or tomorrow.

The above note is just to remind youngsters that education is to build you as useful, efficient, successful human beings in whatever profession you chose, and to be always fair and just in your life no matter what ever are the circumstances. So if you follow this principle in life you will be able to fight out geed and lust of power. But excuse me you may not become an empty rich man boasting his estate and gadgets.

If those powerful people had instead of taking the route of sycophancy, power, greed had sacrificed all this  for sincerity in service, performance, honesty, they would have not been where they are today. Many a time some professions require manipulating abilities, communication abilities to out smart competitors. It is better to say no to such careers where we have to lose our values as a good and humble human beings.

These  personal thoughts I believe are like 'moonlight through the woods on a night', but one can ignore them if not convinced!

India Prepares To Strengthen Capability In High Science

India discussed recently (4th July, 2012) the future road map for key initiatives in the frontier area of Science in critical sectors.  The high power meeting focused on key initiatives required in the frontier areas of Science & Technology to acquire a global leadership position in select areas and to harness the nation’s S&T capabilities in furtherance of the Xiith Five Year Plan objectives.

was held under the Chairmanship of Dr. Ashwani Kumar, Minister of State for Planning, Science & Technology and Earth Sciences in the Planning Commission.
 The purpose of the meeting was to explore and formulate an action plan to bridge scientific and technological gaps in the following  areas: 
  • Concrete action plan for upgrading our super-computer capabilities
  • Explore steps to give further impetus to Deep Sea Mining and acquisition of the requisite technological capabilities in this area
  • Address issues/gaps with respect to country's ability and capability to translate fundamental research into innovative products and services and commercialization/scaling of technology from Pilot Projects onwards
  • Big ideas for the future like – Super Microscope, Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), Ocean Acidification and Interstellar Chemistry
Supercomputer:
In this area, it was decided to create the necessary internal eco-system, human resource and demand to promote and develop high power computing/supercomputing in the country.  It has been decided:
  •  To identify 200 scientists and 2000 researchers dedicated to 4 paradigm i.e. date intensive discovery. To create an ecosystem where 25% of the ecosystem of the country would be connected  by supercomputer activity. A proposal has been received for establishing 200 centres across the country connected over the National Knowledge  Network
  • To develop advanced scientific systems and capabilities for storage of data, development of parallel processors and a programme of hardware acquisition and indigenous development thereof.  BARC will acquire by 2014 Peta flop capability through a cluster approach connected by a fibre optic switch. This will enable modelling and simulation of high speed nuclear process including radiation modelling coupled with atmospheric changes.
  • CSIR will acquire and operationalize by 2013 a 360 tera flop/16 terabytes shared memory processing system comparable to the best processors in the world. The acquisition would gradually build up a peta flop capabilities in the country.
  • Ministry of Earth Sciences will be inducting 500-600 tera flops in the systems which will make it more accurate in weather forecasting, climate change and ocean studies in pursuance of the government’s monsoon mission.
  • Structures and processors would be put in place to intensify indigenous research for creating domestic capability for production of high speed switch, thermal control and power control technologies.
  • These decisions will collectively contribute to the development of indigenous supercomputing capability at low power consumption which could have a direct bearing on space, atomic energy, missile development applications.
  • The other applications include: climate and atmospheric sciences, Monsoon Mission, Discovery of new life-saving drugs, Cancer Bioinformatics, Genome Sequencing, Discovery & Extraction of new energy sources like oil and natural gas, CFD simulations for design, Disaster Management, National Electronic Health Record Framework, Computational Structural Mechanics, Earthquake Engineering, Astronomy and astrophysics, Material Science, and Geological.
Deep Sea Mining:
 This was discussed as an area sub-serving critical and strategic needs of the country, particularly in the area of access to rare earth materials like Titanium an Platinum as well as Manganese, Copper, Cobalt and Nickel. The ocean bed is also a potential source of Ocean Thermal Energy as well as drugs and food.
Considering the importance of deep sea mining, the following initiatives were decided upon:
  • Rapid enhancement of Human Resource and skills in this area
  • Pooling of existing resources with NIOT, ISRO, DRDO, DAE, GSI, Ministry of Mines and NIO
  • The Ministry of Earth Sciences has established capabilities through vessels such as SagarNidhi to explore minerals at  a depth of 6000 mtrs from sea surface
  • A new vessel will be handed over to NIOT on July 31st 2012 for assisting exploration of minerals
  • CSIR is also getting a vessel manufactured at Surat at a cost of Rs. 200 crore
  • GSI  is acquiring a vessel at the cost of Rs. 550 crore from a Korean shipyard which is likely to be inducted for operations by September 2013 

Translational Research Capabilities:  
In this field following proposals were discussed:
  • It was decided to ensure a much more purposive, active and commercially viable interface between academia, industry and R&D institutions
  • New initiatives will be finalised to ensure that translational capabilities are embedded in every basic research and discovery institutions
  • Establish a technological platform for giving easy access to researches through connectivity and convergence of data and facilities of different organizations and institutions
  • To encourage creation of competencies in anticipation of future challenges
  • Create capabilities for scaling up products and processes through incremental innovation
  • Deepening of pockets of science.

This exercise has been undertaken with a view to obtain global leadership position which is critical for securing India’s Strategic interests and over arching national imperatives. 


The meeting was attended by country's leading personalities in science: Dr. R. Chaidambaram, Pr. Scientific Advisor to Government of India, Dr. Kasturirangan, Member, (S&T and E&F), Planning Commission, Dr. T. Ramasami, Secretary, Department of Science & Technology, Dr. S. K. Brahmchari, Department of Scientific & Industrial Research, Dr. M.K. Bhan, Secretary, Department of Bio-Technology, Shri J. Sathyanarayana, Secretary, Department of Electronic and Science & Technology, Prof. S.V. Raghavan, Scientific Secretary to PSA, Prof. Balakrishnan, Associate Director, IISc, and Prof. Rajat Moona, DG, CDAC.
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