Blah, Blah and Blah

I am known to many as a man of few words. But my thoughts go blah, blah, blah! Here, in this blog, you will come across a wide array of not just my thoughts and impressions, but of a virtual collage of the sights and sounds experienced during my trips around the state of Karnataka...

Friday, March 17, 2006

Motoring Milestone

A momentous milestone meterialized this Monday when the odometer of my ever-faithful Matiz ticked over the 50000 mark. Its been one month shy of 5 years now since I possessed her, and its been an endearing journey ever since. Production may have ceased, the company may be defunct, but my love for it know no bounds. Its sexy, its faithful, its frugal(havent given me many tantrums, except for some minor snags recently) and its easy to drive around in Bangalore.

Many a time, I've been tempted by all and sundry to "upgrade". The incumbents may be many, but it will take a Matiz-beater to break my resolve of not parting with my cutie, and I dont see even a scent of anything like that coming...

On her 5th birthday (falling on April 14th), I plan to give her the perfect gift - a new dress (paint job) and a bright pair of footwear (alloys and tubeless). Thats the least I could give in return for all the demands I have made to her and the travails she had been put through.

While the nostalgia still lingers, my initial impressions and feelings about the car which I have documented at http://www.mouthshut.com/review/Matiz-28894-1.html comes rushing to mind...

GM India has been tantalizingly tardy in bringing the new Matiz to India. That would be an uncompromising upgrade!

Friday, March 10, 2006

T G I F

At long last, the weekend is here. . . Was thinking of a weekend getaway with my significant other, but dad's visiting tomorrow, which means the trip will have to wait for another sunny day. So to make amends, we decided to hit the cinemas - been eons since we went to the movies.

These days, ticket queues are passe. Get online, choose movie, book tickets and forget it all, except about getting there in time (an ordeal in itself, given Bangalore's traffic). I had another more important reason for booking the ticket online. The other day I got a surprise parcel from ICICI Bank. It turned out to be an "Online Credit Card" which they had "offered me absolutely free of cost" since I was "one among their top 5% valued customers". I had half a mind to ask them what was my "valuation"! But the curiosity to know what this online credit card was, overshadowded other questions, remarks and ripostes.

Finally, it turned out to be just another piece of plastic, but this time without that ubiquitous magnetic strip attached to the back side. Apparently, this is by design rather than accident - the key differentiator between a normal credit card and this online one. This credit card cannot be used in your roadside grocery store or at Shoppers Stop, simply because it cannot be swiped, and that feature makes it "safe and secure", so I am told.

With all the excitement of a kid with a brand new toy in hand, I got online to try it out. What better chance can I get than to use it to buy cinema tickets online - escape standing in those long queues hoping to get to the other end with still tickets left to sell.

Everything goes fine, I book the ticket, got the confirmation code which I promptly and carefully wrote down. And so I surprised my better half when I turned up in front of her office with the ticket, errr..., confirmation code in hand, beaming and telling her that we can be just in time for the film to start and not worry about tickets, set numbers etc.

So we reach the theatre and when I walked past the long queue of impatient, fidgetting people, I had the most satisfied, almost self-effacing smile on my face. My new online card had made me Privileged! No more queues, no wasted time and no uncertainty. I was still looking at the woeful faces of the people in the queue when I reached the person at the counter issuing tickets. "Excuse me, I have two tickets booked online, and this is the code. Can I get the tickets here?" I could sense piercing stares and frowning faces, from right behind me till eternity.

"No Sir. You can go to the kiosk by that side to get the ticket yourself." "Oh, technology is all-permeating", I thought. I went over to the kiosk with a touchscreen to enter details. I was thoroughly impressed and bowled over by the whole thing. I'd seen kiosks in some of the cinema complexes in California but hardly did I dream that in such a short time, we'd get these gizmos right here in namma Bangaluru.

I breezed through the instructions given on the screen and when, for verification, I was instructed to swipe the credit card. Now what? The technological advancement of my piece of plastic seems to have left the ticket kiosk far behind. I looked around for help. The people in the queue were still staring at me - enviously earlier, but now with more curiosity than anything else.

I went back to the ticket counter. "Exuse me, but there is a problem." And I spent about 5 minutes explaining my plight. I glanced behind and knew for sure that I would have been dead meat, if looks could have killed!

"Just give me some time, Sir. Ramesh, illi banni." Waiting, waiting, waiting. The gleam on my face, the inflated chest that I had earlier were all gone! One by one, people in the queue got their tickets and left, giving me a final, but this time sympathetic look. "Bechara, film nahin dekh payega...".

After waiting for what seemed eons, I finally saw "Ramesh" approaching. After explaining the technicalities a second time, he took my online credit card and the confirmation code into his counter. I couldnt help feeling a bit concerned, with the "safe and secure" plastic in the hands of a rank stranger, and my eyes were rooted at this man. To my relief, he soon issued me a couple of normal, good-old, over-the-counter tickets.

By this time, I was doubtful if I'd be able to get to see the film at all, and hence I was quite relieved that the tickets were in my hands and along my short run to the auditorium entrance, a quick glance to my watch revealed that I'd already missed 30 minutes of the movie....

Moral of the story: Technology creates more tantrums than what it solves!

Epilogue: The movie mentioned here is "Rang De Basanti". My takeways from the movie should be the subject of another blog another day! :-)

Thursday, March 09, 2006

Visa Woes

Height of frustration or height of patience? I forget which hurdle I passed first, but its been an infuriating few weeks with me checking monotonically at the US Visa application website if I can get a better date for my B1 Visa. I need to travel within a month and the Visa interview date is on a leisurely July 9th.

I fail to understand why the Consulate insists on a face-to-face meeting for getting a business Visa, of all things! And its the third time I am applying for one - my previous Visa's have long expired, they being valid for just 1 year.

Its not as if I am trying to surrupciously enter their country and seek asylum there! I am supposed to go there for doing business for an American company, for heaven's sake! How ironic can it get!

I have had to apply for other visa's - UK, Schenghen and hardly faced a problem.

I guess its something to do with the paranoid Americans. I dont mean to demean them in any way, but most of their rules and regulations defy simple reasoning and plain common sense.

If not for the presentation I am slated to give, I wouldnt have cared to go! Aakhir Dil Hai 100% Hisdustani! :-)