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Monday, September 17, 2018

The Story Of My Engineering Life

8:07:00 PM 0
The Story Of My Engineering Life

The Story Of My Engineering Life


Every man has a story to tell but not everyone gets an opportunity to tell it early in their life.I, Amrit Ashu, final year student at RV College Of Engineering, my life between coming as an innocent kid from a small town in Jharkhand to leaving the college as a dynamic and intellectual leader going into the corporate world.


 
RV College of Engineering Entrance


I came to Bangalore as a 17 year old kid from Bokaro Steel City, a small town in Jharkhand.After searching for the list of best engineering colleges in India fir in-numerous times, my father decided upon RVCE. I entered the 63 acre campus with my father constantly asking me if I would be able to live alone and me constantly giving him a concerned look.There were students all around, some coming out from classes conversing with teachers, some mingling with their friends, some sitting alone fallen deep into their thoughts. As I saw them I wondered, which of the three categories would I fall into.

When I entered the hostel and saw my room, I was horrified, a room where 3 beds would fit with great difficulty. A hospital bed lookalike was allotted to me and there were two other roommates , one from Karnataka and the other from Andhra Pradesh.The first question that came to my mind was how would I mingle with two people from completely different cultures speaking different languages, but then as destiny is, that was the beginning of a never-ending friendship.


I had earlier heard a lot of negativity about mess food and was very worried about it as well, when I tasted Set Dosa for the first time, I felt that mess food is not that bad. It was a great day, got an opportunity to meet lot of new mates, many from North India and many from South.The next day was our first class, all excited I went to class, it didn’t take me long to understand that there was a diversity of students, in terms of culture, in terms of financial background, and definitely in terms of interest towards engineering.


We met few seniors, gave introductions, got to understand how to make fun of each other and how to defend ourselves, some of the important learnings of engineering came from these introductions. Exams were always a special part, completing a syllabus taught for 4 months in a single night was something we were proud of doing.Earlier everyone was worried about the marks and GPA, but later we understood that GPA was just an eligibility barrier for placements and nothing more.


 
My Entrepreneurship Cell Team


I took part in lot of extra curricular activities, be it street plays, case studies, playing cricket or making business plans.Entrepreneurship Cell played a big role in my personality development, it is the cell that taught me leadership skills, it changed me as a person, I who was shy to speak infront of a group of people to give motivational speeches in front of a houseful crowd, this is where I learnt that a major part of my life would be about the poeple in my life and how important networking with people would be.I was made the president of the entrepreneurship cell in my pre-final year and it gave me the best memories of my college, having a team that worked so hard that it was awarded the best E-cell in the country by IIT Bombay to organising South India’s largest E-summit, it was here that I learnt to strive for winning wherever and whenever possible.I started getting recognition in the college but never let it hit my head, as it would not allow me to work the same way as I had been working.Then came 8th Mile, our annual techno-cultural fest, I was privileged enough to be made the head of the festival, and we were told that the college management would not be supporting the fest financially.Owing to the responsibilities, we gave our 100% and did one of the best festivals ever.


 
8th Mile 2017, I am in the Light Blue denim, second to the right of Anushka

Cricket was a special bond, from seeing Sachin retire to watch Virat take on the world, college life gave it all.Our particular group of friends always had a team, on two particular occasions I was fortunate enough to win the game for the team, one on the last ball and the other with the last wicket,both of which are special moments that will go on with me.


The most important part of college was the friends you make,you won’t get to know when friends turn into family, you will meet different kinds of people, people who will use you for their benefit, people who would show lot of attitude in their behaviour, people who would always be humble and respectful to you, in the end what will matter will be the friends you make, your decisions in life will highly be affected by them, it is these friends who will make college a home away from home.


There are few things that I would like to tell people who would be joining college soon, choose the college wisely and the course even more wisely, use websites like Entranceplus to get a knowledge of college rankings and what are the courses they offer, do not take up any course just because your parents want you to, choose what interests you.Once you join college, try and explore every possible activity, as there are lot of things unexplored for you, which you consider that you are not good at as you have never tried it before, never be afraid of experimenting, you do not know what lies ahead, know your passion, and keep exploring until you don’t find it, and once you find it,dont leave it, because somehwere down in time life will give you an option between stability and greatness, choose the latter,people who have chosen stability have never left an impact on society, be kind, try to help others, everyone loves themselves but not everyone has the courage to love others,be remmebered for who you are and what you have done for others, don’t just be another brick in the wall. The most important thing would be finding yourself, if you have found that, then any course, any stream, any profession would be easy to choose because you will always have a clear set of factors while choosing them.






As I leave college, I understand a lot of things I wouldn’t as a fresher , I take with me a million moments filled with joy, sadness, happiness, nostalgia, I believe in myself now, I believe that one day I shall make a dent in the universe.

Concluding with Steve Jobs’s words “Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it.Stay Hungry,Stay Foolish”.

Monday, March 19, 2018

10 Things All Engineering Majors Understand

12:09:00 PM 0
10 Things All Engineering Majors Understand
10 Things All Engineering Majors Understand


Welcome to the hardest major in school. Engineers know that great software can mean the world of difference,

1. Hearing your friends complain about their study schedule while secretly wishing you had such a small workload.

Thursday, March 15, 2018

Male Engineering Student Writes a Letter Explaining Why Female Classmates Aren’t His Equals

3:50:00 AM 0
Male Engineering Student Writes a Letter Explaining Why Female Classmates Aren’t His Equals

Male Engineering Student Writes a Letter Explaining Why Female Classmates Aren’t His Equals

Jared Mauldin a senior in mechanical engineering at Eastern Washington University doesn’t think female students are his equals and he sent a letter to the editor of his school paper saying so. I know this sounds like the horrible beginning of a misogynist rant, but that couldn’t be further from the truth. Mauldin quickly switches gears in his letter when he explains why his female classmates aren’t his equals

Saturday, March 3, 2018

Engineer In The Deadly Washington State Train Crash Missed Speed Limit Signs

9:11:00 AM 0
Engineer In The Deadly Washington State Train Crash Missed Speed Limit Signs

The Amtrak Engineer In The Deadly Washington State Train Crash Missed Speed Limit Signs

The 55-year-old engineer said he knew the curve was coming up, but he did not remember seeing signs warning him to slow down to under 30 mph until it was too late.


The engineer of an Amtrak train that derailed in Washington state in December, killing three people, knew the train was approaching a tight curve but does not recall seeing signs warning him to slow down, according to a new report released Thursday.
The 55-year-old engineer told investigators last week that he approached the curve at about 79 mph and did not apply the brakes until the beginning of the turn, forcing a dozen passenger cars off the rails and onto an interstate highway. Seventy-two other passengers were injured in the crash.
The train, which crashed on Dec. 18 near DuPont, had been on its first run on a new route between Seattle and Portland, which was supposed to reduce the travel time for commuters by 10 minutes.
According to the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), the engineer said he noticed the train was traveling at 79 mph about four miles before hitting the curve. The train, however, was supposed to be traveling under 30 mph on approach.
"The engineer told investigators that he was aware that the curve with the 30 mph speed restriction was at milepost 19.8, and that he had planned to initiate braking about one mile prior to the curve," the NTSB said in a statement.
The engineer said he saw mileposts 16 and 17 but does not remember seeing the sign for milepost 18 or warning of the 30 mph speed restriction ahead.
He does remember seeing a sign at the 19.8 milepost but said he "mistook it for another signal" that was before the curve.
He then noticed the 30 mph sign as the tracks began to curve and began to apply the brakes, but the train quickly derailed.
The qualifying conductor, who was also in the lead locomotive at the time, told investigators he was looking at his paperwork when he heard the engineer say something, causing him to look up as he sensed the train becoming "airborne."
He added that the engineer appeared to be alert during the job briefing for the day and while operating the train.
The comments from the engineer appeared to confirm details that had been gathered by investigators from the train's data recorder. Six seconds before the derailment, investigators had said in late December, the engineer had made a comment about the high rate of speed and tried to slow the train down.
Investigators with the NTSB were unable to interview the engineer and conductor until last week because the two suffered serious injuries in the crash, officials said in a statement.
Officials did not identify the engineer but said he had been hired by Amtrak in 2004 as a conductor and promoted to locomotive engineer in 2013.
NTSB officials said the interviews with crew members would be just one of the several factors they will be weighing as they continue to investigate the cause of the deadly crash.
The investigation is expected to take up to two years.

Friday, October 27, 2017

Mother tears her son's electrical engineering degree after he fails to repair fan at home

3:12:00 PM 0
Mother tears her son's electrical engineering degree after he fails to repair fan at home
India is one country where parents’ capabilities are judged by their child’s caliber. That is one of the reasons why expectations from students are so high.
Parental pressure to perform better sometimes leaves students not living up to the expectations. An incident came to light in Bhopal where a mother tore her son’s electrical engineering degree only because her son couldn’t repair a fan.
Ankur Mahajan, an electrical engineer from LNCT Bhopal, had a really difficult day convincing his mother that his degree isn’t fake. Ankur had completed his engineering in June 2017 and is now preparing for IES while trying to get a job through walk-in interviews.
The incident happened when a ceiling fan of Ankur’s drawing hall stopped working. Ankur’s mother asked him to repair the fan since he’s an electrical engineer. Ankur did not have any option to refuse and started repairing it.
But even after several attempts he couldn’t identify the problem let alone resolving it. The disgruntled mother then brought down Ankur’s degree, which was hanging on the wall of the drawing room itself, and tore it apart.
Ankur left the home after the incident. When Faking News reporter spoke to Ankur, he said, “Yaar electrical engineer hun electrician thodi na hun jo fan tv aur mixer theek karu.. isse accha to ITI hi kar leta.. ghar wale bhi khush rehte aur job bhi mil jati.”
Ankur’s situation tells a lot about the current education system and rising unemployment in the country. Education has become more about getting degrees than gaining knowledge and that’s the reason a technician knows more than a technocrat.
Pradhan Mantri MUDRA Yojana allows small entrepreneurs a loan of Rs 1 lakh, which isn’t enough for an engineer to open a startup that matches his qualification. It’s time the government focused more on creating jobs and revamping the education sector.
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#College #degree #Education #engineering student #fan repair #mother son