Saturday, April 22, 2006

Thank you Alan Shearer



So it was confirmed today - the inevitable after the injury he sustained in the game against arch rivals, Sunderland - Alan Shearer announced his official retirement from football.

Without a doubt, he's been the top striker of his generation, and to have been consistently performing well for 17 straight years, that's almost unheard of. He retires holding the record for the most number of goals scored in the Premiership, as well as the record number of goals scored for his beloved hometown, Newcastle United. He broke into the game with a wham, as a 18 year old debutant for Southampton, came in as a substitute and scored a hat trick in his first game - against Arsenal of all teams. He moved to Blackburn for then a British record fee, and his firepower netted Blackburn the Premiership title. He then moved to Newcastle for then a world record fee, and realized his dream of playing for Newcastle for the next 10 years.

Seriously, how much more can you ask for, for a hometown boy to return? He amassed 379 goals in 733 games in his career, 260 goals in 441 Premiership games, and the record 206 goals for Newcastle in 404 appearences. He also scored 30 goals in 63 games for England. He's probably the only person who was equally impressive in normal shots, headers, free kicks and penalty kicks. He was also the captain for Newcastle and England for the longest time. Showing that not only did he have skills, but also leadership.

I can't even describe how much respect I have for this man - he's the reason why I started supporting Newcastle since 1998, and it's going to feel different from now on when he's not going to be around. I really hope he comes back as the manager one day, but it doesn't look like that's going to happen for some time as he takes a break. He had the chance to move to Manchester United, to win a lot of titles and cups, but loyalty and dream took him to Newcastle, it's just a great pity he never succeeded in winning anything for Newcastle. Nevertheless he brought them to heights we would otherwise not have enjoyed. We came really close on couple of occasions though.

What is going to happen to Newcastle from now on? The future's cloudy - will Roeder get his licence to become a full time manager next season? Who will become the new captain? Who will replace Shearer as the main goalscorer?

Let football decide. It is unpredictable and that's the way many would like it to be.



I think it's just a fitting finale to his career that he had to end it against Newcastle's most hated rival Sunderland. Not only that, he went out of the game after scoring the goal that gave us the lead to a game we eventually won. I don't think you can end a story better than that.

Thank you Alan Shearer, for a great 10 years of service and memories which probably cannot be eclipsed.

Friday, April 21, 2006

The Georgia Tech Terrorist

I had a major scare yesterday, reading some articles off CNN and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution (the articles are HERE and HERE respectively) where supposedly someone was caught. The descriptions being the following:

21 years old, Georgia Tech student, Engineering major, Bangladeshi, lives in Atlanta.

All of the above descriptions fits me. BUT it wasn't me. Imagine my relief.

Some dude got caught for harboring some terrorist intentions and whatnot. I was so afraid FBI or someone was gonna call me up or knock on my door and take me for questioning. I don't know the dude who got caught, neither have I ever heard of him. I don't know other Bengalis around in campus except for this other guy who's in my fraternity and it certainly isn't him either. Except for that, I don't think there's more than a handful of students who fit that description on campus, so there was good reason for me to be afraid for questioning.

Even though there is no link or information that I can provide, I thought I'd get in serious trouble just for being against American foreign policies, but hey, who isn't guilty of that?

It's been pretty fun in ATLanta. There was some suspicious item found in the airport on Wednesday which caused the airport shutdown for like 2 hours, delaying all flights and conducting a search, etc. On the other hand, some kids from Riverton, Kansas were planning a Columbia High School massacre style shooting, but one of the guys posted something on MySpace which led authorities to unveil the plot. Seriously, how dumb can you get? You're planning something like that, thinking you're all so smart and cool and then you give it away on the net. Real smart.

It's another example where what you post on the web isn't exactly private, no matter what you think. Blogs, social websites, etc are all on the World Wide Web. Anything on the web is visible in one way or another. Always remeber that: you leave tracks everywhere.

Wednesday, April 19, 2006

The Amazing (Logistics) Race

The Logistics Institute of the H. Milton Stewart School of Industrial & Systems Engineering at Georgia Tech conducts a 'fun' experiment each year, where they send out identical packages to different couriers to a particular destination.

This year, they used FedEx, UPS and DHL to deliver identical packages to 4 locations:
1. Ouadadougou, in Burkina Faso
2. Split, in Croatia
3. Surabaya, in Indonesia
4. Punta Arenas, in Chile

Needless to say, the goal is to find out which courier service is able to deliver the packages to its intended destination in the shortest time, which in Industrial Engineering terms, is a measure of how their logistics & freight network infrastructures are set up. So far, DHL seems to be in the lead. You can track the race by clicking here.

In 2003, the sole destination was Singapore, in which UPS and FedEx tied (the story being quite hilarious, where both the FedEx and the UPS man was infront of the door at the same time, the FedEx guy got to open the door first, but the UPS man got the signature first, hence a tie) and in 2004, FedEx was the clear winner. Somehow there wasn't a race in 2005.

Am I the only one (apart from the people in The Logistics Institute) who finds this amazingly interesting? Or am I just a geeky Industrial Engineer in training?

:: UPDATE ::
UPS is in the lead, by winning 2 of the 4 races, beating DHL to Split, Croatia by 3 minutes after first delivery attempt was unanswered. However, they had some major problems with 2 of the other destinations.

Monday, April 17, 2006

8 Movies

I managed to watch 8 movies over the Easter weekend. Quite a bit considering it was like any other weekend. I guess the fact that this weekend was the first time this year that I was completely free allowed me to catch some great movies this weekend.

Friday
Samy Y Yo (Samy and I)
Broken Flowers

Saturday
Al Otro Lado (The Other Side)
Ellie Parker
Paradise Now

Sunday
The 40 Year Old Virgin
The Ice Storm
A Clockwork Orange

Saturday, April 15, 2006

Back from the absence

I'm terribly sorry I haven't been updating. Here's an entry to explain what I've been up to for the past 4 months or so. I realized this is the first weekend in 2006 that I have absolutely nothing obligatory and whatnot. Usually I'll have to do some sort of work, assignment, go to a meeting and the such, but this seems to be the first ever free weekend I've had, so I decided to take the liberty to sit down and just go at this.

So... What happened this year? I'm working, I guess that's the most important one. I have 3 more weeks before I return to school for the summer semester, so I guess I can say I'm pretty excited. I'll be taking my first set of my major classes, so I'm really eager to do that. Once this summer is over and I may include the fall semester (which is my work semester again), the rest of my time in university is expected to go extremely smoothly. I guess I planned everything right in my first two semesters where I juggled quite a bit and overloaded myself, but it's definitely paying off. It's really hard to imagine that half of my university like has flown by. It's a sign of good things to come, hopefully.

I've also been taking distance learning classes, to cut down on the amount of classes I'll have to take before graduating. Okay, let me explain what I'm doing. The School of Industrial Engineering at Georgia Tech has announced a major overhaul in curriculum near the end of 2006, so I was still mulling over what exactly to concentrate in - I've been reading about Health Systems, which seems really interesting. It's about management and industrial engineering application in hospital settings, like cutting down on patient wait time and more efficient flow of equipments and human resources being used and such. However, that is currently completely set up at the Graduate level, and the undergraduate program won't be set up before I graduate. So I decided to concentrate on three areas that are kinda overlapping, something that's related with what I do at work as well - Supply Chain Logistics as my primary, and Manufacturing and Quality Engineering as my two other. I figured out a way to get the 3 tracks without having to take a single extra class. On top of that, I'm doing a certificate program in Nanomaterials as well as Engineering Entrepreneurship, which requires me to take 3 additional classes on top of what I already have. Hence, I decided to take some classes which I consider to be a waste of my time or clases that I really aren't interested in outside of Georgia Tech while I'm working so that the class credit can be transfered and the grades won't affect my GPA (I tend to do badly in social sciences) All I need is a C, so there's no pressure to get a good grade, it works out well. So I'm almost completing one of the classes, I signed up for another one, but I kinda got a little too busy, so I'm postponing that til the fall, since the deadline to complete the class is in December. I'll take accounting in the fall as well.

Now what got me so busy this semester? I joined a fraternity - again. I really had a good time when I was with a fraternity in my first semester, but because I didn't really know what I was doing or what was going on, plus I had all these other stuff that I wanted to do, I thought it was the best for me to leave then. Now that it has calmed down a little, I decided to go for it, for many reasons I shouldn't bother to explain, but most important reason was that it's really a good organization to be part of. So I had no doubt that I wanted to go anywhere else but the same one that I was part of. During the spring, the enrollment of greek organizations are relatively low, so there was only two new members, the other being someone I already knew and I was the one who told him to check the place out. We get along great, so we had fun. And since there were only 2 of us, there was added responsibility to do all the things that a new member class would have to do. Which is the main reason why I went missing. My daily schedule was to wake up at 6:30AM, get ready for work, go to work, come back from work around 5:30PM, take a shower, and then if I had class work or paperwork to deal with, I'll do that and then head over to the fraternity house to do all sorts of things and by the time I came back to my room to sleep, it was like 12:30AM or something. It's okay initially, then it hits you, like hard. Since I'm working abour 42 or 43 hours a week, it takes a toll on you. But I've been in many situations as stressful and tiring, that I almost got used to it. So I just took it all in and it all came out fine. So yeah, as I said, everything is sort of settling into place.

I've managed to keep my film watching streak going, though not as much as it used to, just because I had so little time. But I've seen some great ones, Tech recently had 2 film festivals, one for Russian and another for Latin American ones, I managed to catch 2 of the Latin American ones, which were pretty good. I just watched 'Paradise Now' and that was something.

When I went over to Phoenix for my spring break, my brother brought along the entire first season of the TV show 'Lost.' I initially resisted watching it, but out of curiosity, I caught the pilot. I was definately hooked to it, so much that I spent whatever free time there was catching the episodes and I actually managed to finish watching the entire first season during my 1 week stay there. The moment I returned, I went and downloaded whatever season 2 episodes there were available on BitTorrent. I'm officially up to speed and my buddies from my freshmen year get together to watch the show every Wednesday, so I'll be joining them. I also went ahead and downloaded every single episode of 'Grey's Anatomy' and was on my way to downloading '24' but my hard disk space ran out, so I have to put that off for a while. I have enough shows to keep me entertained over the summer. I'll suspend my Netflix account for the summer and just study, watch the World Cup and watch episodes as much as possible.

On an unrelated note, Big Boi, half of the rap duo Outkast came to perform at Tech few weeks back, together with the indie band Cake. Everyone was disappointed that Andre 3000, the other half of Outkast, did not come, but since it's rumoured that he stopped performing public shows, it was understandable. But in my mind, Cake made up for that. It's funny, I was waiting for two of my friends from Emory to come over and we just decided to head over to the stadium a little early, as I was crossing 5th street, I see this guy walking pretty fast behind me. He was wearing a hat like the one Fidel Castro wears, with a face full of beard, and a pretty thick jacket. It was pretty hot that day and I was wondering why he was like that. He walked right by me and headed on to the direction of the stadium. I thought, okay, he's going to the gig, I suppose he felt he was being late, after all, it was already 20 minutes past the gate opening. After a while, when we were scouting for seats and getting ourselves comfortable, I looked towards the stage and guess what, that dude was the lead singer of Cake. I didn't really follow Cake before the gig, only heard few of their songs, so I wasn't aware of how their band members looked like, but they really did impress me, I liked the tunes that they were playing, mix of a slight jazz, light rock and interesting lyrics. Big Boi was sensational, without a doubt, and I just went ecstatic when they played my favorite Outkast track, which is 'Bombs Over Baghdad.' I think to get two major artists to come down and provide a pretty good gig was a sign of really good success for the concert this year.

So yeah, nothing too special going on with me, even though I've not blogged. Things hasn't really changed - it's just work, movies and hanging around with friends for dinner or late nights. Just the way I like it. I guess there could have been more that I said, but nothing else is coming to my mind now, so I'm just gonna leave this post here and may get back to it at a later date.