Friday, February 12, 2010

We Indian are suffering from disease called "Separatism"

God has given us the world ,united as one

But we have divided it into countries ,states caste creed and religion

We have invited the bloodbath wars and disputes to our gates

And fogotten the only fact that we are human.

We the Indians, have been suffering from a disease like ‘seperatism’ severely.Such malignent disease is dominating the Indian democracy.Indian politics is both’missionless’ and ‘visionless’ . Today, we prefer to remain as being separate rather than being united. We have forgotten the lesson “unity is the strength”. We have become more desirerous of ‘ independent existence’following this grimous trend of ‘separatism’. Smaller or bigger..the real issue is development and it can be ensured only by honest leaderships and transparent practices. The logic that small states could be better governed is not at all based on facts. It is just a slogan by politicians who want power and money in the name of such claims. If that slogan is true, then what is the need of Districts and Panchayats. Our governing system is a meticulously planned one with divisions such as districts and panchayats to ensure effective administration.The 67th amendment in the constitution has provided the panchayats the power to have their own smaller level administration and now If administration is not happening properly then it is only due to corruption of politicians and the bureaucracy. It is studied well, that whenever development is not taking place in any larger portion or part of the state,due to political unrest or imbalance of distribution of miscellaneous facilities,then opponent political parties find the way of separating the state as the solution.Such deprived and opportunistic leaders raise hue and cry and continue violently,inhumanly create sentiments of provocative nature. As the turmoils gets survived..a relentless protest in favour of such division or separation of the state goes on everywhere throughout the state, by pledging and highlighting the golden future of the divided part. The devout leaders impulse and motivate the public towards an uncertain future that the apparent crave public can’t understand its impact. The reckless leaders all, highlight on that, how they have been deprived of their procurable facilities that are avoidable from the respective state administration .It is not wrong at all, to demand the procurable facilities for the deprived section of the society from the government of the state. With a view to solve the long awaited unsolved problem of any part of the state, raising a demand for separate state,can’t bring any significant betterment in future. It can not be the only solution.It would be wise to find an innovative way to solve the problem rather than demanding for separate existence by making a separate state to meet the demand..


Finding possible solution for the existing problem which is long lasting, leaders of opponent should urge for such implementation before we divide us into smaller and smaller states and lead us to our own downfall.Have there any guarantee that such division of state, could provide the same or better facilities as they aspire for. If, someone claims so, then, an opportunistic intention or attitudes of the protesting leaders could be found out latter on. For the instance,the case of ‘Jharkhand,could be stated. Also,how far the development has been taken place in ‘Uttarakhand’ and ‘Chattrishgarh’, could be a matter of discussion for its verification. No, any development, could come through such division. Application of such ‘divisive principle’ with a view to achieving better future for any section or part of the state, would definitely inflict the Indian democracy and integrity. It must be a dangerous approach, in keeping our sovereignity intact. . Continuation of such application to divide any state according to certain section’s need or demand, would humiliate not only ‘Indian Democracy’ but also give the birth to ‘fragile sovereignity’and ultimately,would imperil our ‘independence’, that we have acquired through a great revolution, in past.


                                                                                                         author :Deepankar Shukla










Monday, November 30, 2009

Practicals(Programs) of IWT,ADA for Uktech and UPTU students

IWT practical programs ,according to syballus
IWT programs
ADA practical programs
ADA programs

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Comedy Clips Of Sudesh Lehri

Sudesh Lehri Comedy Clips Part-3
Sudesh Lehri Comedy Clips Part-4
Sudesh Lehri Comedy Clips Part-2
Sudesh Lehri Comedy Clips Part-1

Gate Sybullas 2010 (IT & CSE)

ENGINEERING MATHEMATICS

Mathematical Logic: Propositional Logic; First Order Logic.

Probability
: Conditional Probability; Mean, Median, Mode and Standard Deviation; Random Variables; Distributions; uniform, normal, exponential, Poisson, Binomial.
Set Theory & Algebra: Sets; Relations; Functions; Groups; Partial Orders; Lattice; Boolean Algebra.

Combinatorics: Permutations; Combinations; Counting; Summation; generating functions;
recurrence relations; asymptotics.

Graph Theory: Connectivity; spanning trees; Cut vertices & edges; covering; matching; independent sets; Colouring; Planarity; Isomorphism.

Linear Algebra: Algebra of matrices, determinants, systems of linear equations, Eigen values and Eigen vectors.

Numerical Methods: LU decomposition for systems of linear equations; numerical solutions of non-linear algebraic equations by Secant, Bisection and Newton-Raphson Methods; Numerical integration by trapezoidal and Simpson’s rules.

Calculus: Limit, Continuity & differentiability, Mean value Theorems, Theorems of integral calculus, evaluation of definite & improper integrals, Partial derivatives, Total derivatives, maxima & minima.

COMPUTER SCIENCE AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Digital Logic: Logic functions, Minimization, Design and synthesis of combinational and sequential circuits; Number representation and computer arithmetic (fixed and floating point).

Computer Organization and Architecture: Machine instructions and addressing modes, ALU and data-path, CPU control design, Memory interface, I/O interface (Interrupt and DMA mode), Instruction pipelining, Cache and main memory, Secondary storage.

Programming and Data Structures: Programming in C; Functions, Recursion, Parameter passing, Scope, Binding; Abstract data types, Arrays, Stacks, Queues, Linked Lists, Trees, Binary search trees, Binary heaps.

Algorithms: Analysis, Asymptotic notation, Notions of space and time complexity, Worst and average case analysis; Design: Greedy approach, Dynamic programming, Divide-and-conquer; Tree and graph traversals, Connected components, Spanning trees, Shortest paths; Hashing, Sorting, Searching. Asymptotic analysis (best, worst, average cases) of time and space, upper and lower bounds, Basic concepts of complexity classes – P, NP, NP-hard, NP-complete.

Theory of Computation: Regular languages and finite automata, Context free languages and Push-down automata, Recursively enumerable sets and Turing machines, Undecidability.

Compiler Design: Lexical analysis, Parsing, Syntax directed translation, Runtime environments, Intermediate and target code generation, Basics of code optimization.

Operating System: Processes, Threads, Inter-process communication, Concurrency, Synchronization, Deadlock, CPU scheduling, Memory management and virtual memory, File systems, I/O systems, Protection and security.

Databases: ER-model, Relational model (relational algebra, tuple calculus), Database design (integrity constraints, normal forms), Query languages (SQL), File structures (sequential files, indexing, B and B+ trees), Transactions and concurrency control.

Information Systems and Software Engineering: information gathering, requirement and feasibility analysis, data flow diagrams, process specifications, input/output design, process life cycle, planning and managing the project, design, coding, testing, implementation, maintenance.

Computer Networks:
ISO/OSI stack, LAN technologies (Ethernet, Token ring), Flow and error control techniques, Routing algorithms, Congestion control, TCP/UDP and sockets, IP(v4), Application layer protocols (icmp, dns, smtp, pop, ftp, http); Basic concepts of hubs, switches, gateways, and routers. Network security – basic concepts of public key and private key cryptography, digital signature, firewalls.

Web technologies: HTML, XML, basic concepts of client-server computing.