Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Shortcuts
WIN-D or WIN-M is inevitable when you have a 43 windows open and still want to open that pic you saved on your desktop. Incase you want to un-minimize all the windows you just minimized, WIN-SHIFT-M is what you should try. ALT-F4 or CTRL-F4 to close the application or the document is also widely used. How many of you use ALT-SPACEBAR-X to maximize the current window? Or ALT-SPACEBAR-N to minimize the same... In fact, ALT-SPACEBAR-C is a faster and more economical (in terms of hand/finger movements) way to close an application. Even CTRL-W closes a document.
Invoking the menu items comes next. Like ALT-F for File menu, ALT-T for Tools menu and so on... Its easy to migrate from menu to submenu. ALT-F-S saves your document and ALT-F-A opens the 'Save As' dialogue box. You can even remember key code sequences... say ALT-D-F-F will put an auto filter in an excel sheet. And if you want to insert a page break in your word doc, just finger in ALT-I-B and an enter.
SHIFT-F10 is as good as right clicking and ALT-ENTER opens up the properties dialogue of a selected item. CTRL-TAB does the document shift in tabbed applications like FireFox. CTRL-PAGE DOWN and CTRL-PAGE UP travels through the sheets in an excel file.
F1 is universal for help. I heard these days, even those people drowning at Miami Beach call out F1 to get bay watcherss' attention. F2 renames and F3 finds again, whats already searched using a CTRL-F. Even WIN-F opens the file/folder find dialogue.
Fiddling around within a document too has many key codes. CTRL-S saves docs in most applications. CTRL-RIGHT ARROW and CTRL-LEFT ARROW jumps words. CTRL-HOME takes you to the top of the document and CTRL-END to the bottom. CTRL-B and CTRL-I to make selected text bold and italics respectively. As you know, CTRL-F is for find and CTRL-G opens up a page find or a line find dialogue box.
Ok... now comes some key cuts which are not so short but are faster considering the time you spend in figuring out where the mouse is, then swirling it violently twice to figure out where the cursor is and so on. Hit WIN-R and you get the Run prompt. Now if you key in 'winword' and hit enter, MS Word opens. 'iexplore' will open up IE and if you want the windows explorer, use 'explorer'. But then, its easier to use WIN-E to open windows explorer. From the run prompt, there are other codes like 'notepad', 'mspaint', 'devenv'... And if you ever want to open services under Administrative Tools, keying in 'services.msc' in Run prompt and hitting an enter is all that you need to do.
Now a long cut. CTRL-ESC opens start menu. (why not WIN key?).
Time for me to hit WIN-L to logoff...
(This was just the tip of the iceberg... pls do chip in with your fav shortcuts...)
Monday, March 06, 2006
Life
Often, if you can go out with a broad smile and a warm handshake, the world will greet you back with the same. Generally, people everywhere are good natured and what you get back depends on what you offer. Sometimes, all it takes is a couple of days to kick start a long lasting friendship. People tend to make a much stronger bond with the ones who share their toil during a tough period.
Sunday, February 19, 2006
Lifecycle
Transported to Pune for being a part of the firefighting team of a project on fire. Two weeks to go for the release and the project is in a chaotic state to say the least. Around 1000 bugs, 260 of them real show stoppers. SOSs are send across org locations. DotNet experts are flown down to pune . 40 member team working for close to 16 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Funny side of the story – I told my close friend that I am traveling to pune for firefighting a project on fire. His reply was this “And I thought you were developing software.”
Update: E-Company is growing. ;_)
Wednesday, February 01, 2006
Po Pondy

As the name suggests, Po Pondy, latest trip in our Mair-Uth-Anne tour series, was to
Mair-Uth-Anne
We, the CET Bethaninans at
By the way, we have a movie club - Oomph-Ithet-Al, which in Italian means ‘The show must go on’. Ok, now back to the main topic...
Destination:
Voyagers: Sand, Rat, Jins and Geo
Ship: Sand’s Indica
Started on: 26th Jan 2006 morning.
Wound up by: 29th Jan 2006 evening.
Onward route:
Return route:
We started on 26th morning, with the car stereo playing the official tour anthem “Dil Chahtha Hai”. Kilometers and hours flew by fast... ride was smooth... Sand and me alternated our position behind the wheels. An uneventful journey with planned halts, lunch... by evening we reached Chennai. From there, through the much hyped ‘
Our MUA series is world famous all over
Thus the unplanned awesome foursome reached Pondy in the night and started looking for a place to stay. After unsuccessfully checking out each and every hotel near the beach, we finally managed to get a room, which was a bit away from the sea, somewhere towards the heart of the city. The hotel had a nice suite for four, and we were more than pleased. End of day one, which was dedicated for travel. FTV followed by sound sleep.
Pondy doesn’t have too much on offer when it comes to sight seeing. There are only 2 beaches, one of which is rocky and hence inaccessible. The other attractions around the place are Aurobindo Ashram, Botanical Garden,


Because it was mentioned as the main attraction in travel guides, we visited Aurobindo Ashram on Friday morning itself. Suffice to say we emerged in record time, after covering all those photographs and artifacts of Aurobindo and ‘The Mother’. It was on our way out from the Ashram that Jins asked the million dollar question “Actually, who is this Aurobindo?” All of us were ‘blissfully’ ignorant. I leave it to you to guess the duration for which a botanical garden or a museum can hold the attention of 4 s/w engineers who are on a long weekend trip. Covering spots was never faster!
One of the activities we enjoyed most was the time we spent in the Chunnambar park. A memory trip back to childhood with swings, seesaws, ladders, cages and all. Loads of photos with each of us trying all sorts of monkey tricks on those children’s toys. Forgot to mention the toy train ride we had in the botanical garden. Believe it or not, it cost us just 30 Rs to get the entire train rolling for us.


Auroville is envisioned as a universal town, where people from different nationalities, faiths and beliefs, can live in peace and harmony. The construction of this 'universal town' was started in 1968 under the guidance of ‘The Mother’, a Paris born painter-musician who become sri Aurobindo's disciple and close companion from 1924 till his death in 1950. The development of this Utopia is still in progress. Several countries have offered to set up permanent pavilions, reflecting the culture and ethos of their countries. The Matri Mandir is the spiritual center of Auroville. It is a domed structure, which has a crystal sphere in the meditation room. An open air Amphitheatre in front of the Matri Mandir has a lotus stem like structure built at the center of it, which contains soil from 126 countries, the representatives of which attended the inauguration of the Matri Mandir way back in 1968.




We visited the Auroville beach on Friday evening and returned on Saturday evening to hit the beach, and had a nice time swimming, diving and doing general masti...


Started our return journey on Sunday morning. Since we had already covered the
I particularly liked the last stretch of the journey, which was from Krishnagiri to