IT is not like that !
"....yavaag foreign ge ?"
The familiar sentence is arguably one of the most frequently asked questions , losing only slightly to the even more grave one "...yavaag maduve ?", to someone who unluckily happens to be in the IT Industry and in Bangalore. There was never a better conversation topic for the older generation to suck every drop of blood the poor bloke manages to save despite working as a techie.
It's a wave that everyone wants to be part of, and everyone wants to show they know. The word computer is now a house-hold name. A good relief for many topic starved aunties and uncles, but our poor techie gets stuck like a nail that's half into the wood when it's head decides to painfully break lose.
The popular following that IT has gotten in recent years has been more due to the lucrative travel, than what the techie believes is due to his work. This time it is the uncles who have the upper hand in making a conversation, owing to some 'extra' knowledge, thanks to 'external' contacts. Aunties resign to just asking "...yenappa computer aa ?" ( literally means " are u a computer ?", but it is supposed to be "Are you working in the IT field ?". One must be ready to field a volley of smirks and barrage of questions, if the victim answers a "no", though it would be the right answer for such a question. For if you are not part of the bandwagon, then you'd rather term yourself a foolish old crackpot and be happy with that, than get a loathesome look from the omnipresent aunty.
IT has such a popular following here, most do not know what they are following, but just drift along to be 'seen'. Our aunty gets into her form, and asks our techie, "you computer, my son also computer" ...our techie, just out of a ctrl-alt-tab-enter, has no idea how to respond to this inhuman potrayal, by the aunty, of her son. He just smiles and says "wonderful aunty, which company ?" and is hardly interested in what he hears. The aunty carries on.. " nun maga sapoo"...the indianised MNC becomes "sapoo" from SAP, while our techie replies back, "i work for GE"..aunty is a bit concerned on hearing that, and blurts out "is it a good company ? didnt u get in infosys ?"...techie is at his wits end to explain; aunty is in no mood to understand. aunty's techie son is blushing ear to ear.
while the general social understanding of an IT company hovers between Infosys and Wipro, some good souls give respect to "Vorakal" too. So aunties are generally happy if one is from any of these companies. The other companies will only mean a detailed interrogation about the techie's academic credentials, past criminal record, if any, and a sure minus point as a prospective groom.
It is the conversation between aunties that is the most funny and amazingly astonishing. Recently one of my cousins went onsite, and i being the scape goat , who still 'had' to be in India, was the butt of all discussions.
aunty1 : " foreign ge yaavaga ivnu hogodu ?" (when is he going onsite ?)
aunty2 : "gothilla, innenu swalpa divsdalley hogthaaneno" (He might go in some days !)
aunty1 : "hmmm...they say only brilliants(sic) are sent onsite"
aunty2 : "that's true !"
I was being murdered inch by inch, neat and clean. My reputation in tatters.
This is even bearable, but get this, if a techie manages to stumble on an onsite travel but is cancelled on that last millisecond, then his future is doomed, for aunties will have a field day disecting him and nailing him for not working well at the office. I have been most unfortunate in this case, so much so that if i had got a call to abort the travel 2 seconds later than what i got, i might have had to jump off the plane mid-air.
aunties started flowing in from early evening that day, some trying to stay oblivious of the situation, some trying hard to keep a straight face, and a few more giving their own versions of my story, which by the way i never told anyone !...well one aunty even had the nerve to ask me "did you have a fight with your manager ?"..well i was kind enough to say "no aunty, project got scrapped ", only to realize that the aunty had no idea what a project meant, and instead pressed me to agree that i had indeed done some mistake...finally she let me go when i blurted out "my manager had a fight with the airlines"....well that was enough for me to roll over on the floor and laugh at her, despite the 'humiliation' of not going onsite.
uncles are not far off, and are ever more eager to learn 'computers'. One uncle was particularly curious to know as to why we guys were paid for playing computer games !...apparantely he was of this view after he had seen his 9 year old son only playing games on his newly bought comp. I knew better than to explain, so i told him that it was because if we won, the company would get money. uncle's spirits rose, and in all probability he would have gone home and pestered his innoncent 9 year old son to teach him to play games in the hopes of joining a IT company in future !
uncles are a little more "knowledgeable" though. One uncle came to me one day, when i made the suicidal mistake of attending a social gathering full of aunties and uncles, and asked me as to which company i worked for, and i answered him hoping he would stop there. however , uncle had no such intention and carried on " yaav language ?"...though stunned, i replied back "c sharp uncle" ...uncle's face glowed and then he said " nun maga Java , c# bidhoithanthey!" (My son works on JAVA, C sharp has long fallen from grace) ..In most uncles view, languages are like company shares, the value of which keeps fluctuating on an hourly basis.
Though salary is something of a sensitive issue, uncles don't give didly-squat about that and continue questioning the techie on the same. I was ripped apart when i told one uncle that my gross was 25k, to which, in suspended euphoria, he exclaimed that his son earned 2.5 lakh per month at onsite. Having no room to argue, i kept mum, when uncle went off again "why dont u ask your manager for a raise".... I told him i would consider his advise and ask, though my manager was bit of a dragon, unlike my uncle's son's manger, who was a saint just short of a halo!
Even more weird is the funny way in which people take those mails managers send to techies and their team, as to the good work being done. one of my cousins who recently joined my company got such a mail from his manager, and he thought it was a good idea to take a print out and show it to his father, a folly he still regrets to this day. My uncle not only read the copy, but made a hundred photocopies and distributed it as pamphlets to his near and dear ones. My dad got one too, and i had to field some intense questioning at home, since i had not managed to get one such letter even once ! i had even gone to the extent of thinking about printing one on my own just to escape the 'humiliation'.
while it's often funny to listen to the weird misconceptions people have about IT, it gets irritating if it goes too far. It would be a boring place without the aunties and the uncles, but it would be a wonderful place, if they knew better than to draw conclusions about one's work, of which they know so less about !
The familiar sentence is arguably one of the most frequently asked questions , losing only slightly to the even more grave one "...yavaag maduve ?", to someone who unluckily happens to be in the IT Industry and in Bangalore. There was never a better conversation topic for the older generation to suck every drop of blood the poor bloke manages to save despite working as a techie.
It's a wave that everyone wants to be part of, and everyone wants to show they know. The word computer is now a house-hold name. A good relief for many topic starved aunties and uncles, but our poor techie gets stuck like a nail that's half into the wood when it's head decides to painfully break lose.
The popular following that IT has gotten in recent years has been more due to the lucrative travel, than what the techie believes is due to his work. This time it is the uncles who have the upper hand in making a conversation, owing to some 'extra' knowledge, thanks to 'external' contacts. Aunties resign to just asking "...yenappa computer aa ?" ( literally means " are u a computer ?", but it is supposed to be "Are you working in the IT field ?". One must be ready to field a volley of smirks and barrage of questions, if the victim answers a "no", though it would be the right answer for such a question. For if you are not part of the bandwagon, then you'd rather term yourself a foolish old crackpot and be happy with that, than get a loathesome look from the omnipresent aunty.
IT has such a popular following here, most do not know what they are following, but just drift along to be 'seen'. Our aunty gets into her form, and asks our techie, "you computer, my son also computer" ...our techie, just out of a ctrl-alt-tab-enter, has no idea how to respond to this inhuman potrayal, by the aunty, of her son. He just smiles and says "wonderful aunty, which company ?" and is hardly interested in what he hears. The aunty carries on.. " nun maga sapoo"...the indianised MNC becomes "sapoo" from SAP, while our techie replies back, "i work for GE"..aunty is a bit concerned on hearing that, and blurts out "is it a good company ? didnt u get in infosys ?"...techie is at his wits end to explain; aunty is in no mood to understand. aunty's techie son is blushing ear to ear.
while the general social understanding of an IT company hovers between Infosys and Wipro, some good souls give respect to "Vorakal" too. So aunties are generally happy if one is from any of these companies. The other companies will only mean a detailed interrogation about the techie's academic credentials, past criminal record, if any, and a sure minus point as a prospective groom.
It is the conversation between aunties that is the most funny and amazingly astonishing. Recently one of my cousins went onsite, and i being the scape goat , who still 'had' to be in India, was the butt of all discussions.
aunty1 : " foreign ge yaavaga ivnu hogodu ?" (when is he going onsite ?)
aunty2 : "gothilla, innenu swalpa divsdalley hogthaaneno" (He might go in some days !)
aunty1 : "hmmm...they say only brilliants(sic) are sent onsite"
aunty2 : "that's true !"
I was being murdered inch by inch, neat and clean. My reputation in tatters.
This is even bearable, but get this, if a techie manages to stumble on an onsite travel but is cancelled on that last millisecond, then his future is doomed, for aunties will have a field day disecting him and nailing him for not working well at the office. I have been most unfortunate in this case, so much so that if i had got a call to abort the travel 2 seconds later than what i got, i might have had to jump off the plane mid-air.
aunties started flowing in from early evening that day, some trying to stay oblivious of the situation, some trying hard to keep a straight face, and a few more giving their own versions of my story, which by the way i never told anyone !...well one aunty even had the nerve to ask me "did you have a fight with your manager ?"..well i was kind enough to say "no aunty, project got scrapped ", only to realize that the aunty had no idea what a project meant, and instead pressed me to agree that i had indeed done some mistake...finally she let me go when i blurted out "my manager had a fight with the airlines"....well that was enough for me to roll over on the floor and laugh at her, despite the 'humiliation' of not going onsite.
uncles are not far off, and are ever more eager to learn 'computers'. One uncle was particularly curious to know as to why we guys were paid for playing computer games !...apparantely he was of this view after he had seen his 9 year old son only playing games on his newly bought comp. I knew better than to explain, so i told him that it was because if we won, the company would get money. uncle's spirits rose, and in all probability he would have gone home and pestered his innoncent 9 year old son to teach him to play games in the hopes of joining a IT company in future !
uncles are a little more "knowledgeable" though. One uncle came to me one day, when i made the suicidal mistake of attending a social gathering full of aunties and uncles, and asked me as to which company i worked for, and i answered him hoping he would stop there. however , uncle had no such intention and carried on " yaav language ?"...though stunned, i replied back "c sharp uncle" ...uncle's face glowed and then he said " nun maga Java , c# bidhoithanthey!" (My son works on JAVA, C sharp has long fallen from grace) ..In most uncles view, languages are like company shares, the value of which keeps fluctuating on an hourly basis.
Though salary is something of a sensitive issue, uncles don't give didly-squat about that and continue questioning the techie on the same. I was ripped apart when i told one uncle that my gross was 25k, to which, in suspended euphoria, he exclaimed that his son earned 2.5 lakh per month at onsite. Having no room to argue, i kept mum, when uncle went off again "why dont u ask your manager for a raise".... I told him i would consider his advise and ask, though my manager was bit of a dragon, unlike my uncle's son's manger, who was a saint just short of a halo!
Even more weird is the funny way in which people take those mails managers send to techies and their team, as to the good work being done. one of my cousins who recently joined my company got such a mail from his manager, and he thought it was a good idea to take a print out and show it to his father, a folly he still regrets to this day. My uncle not only read the copy, but made a hundred photocopies and distributed it as pamphlets to his near and dear ones. My dad got one too, and i had to field some intense questioning at home, since i had not managed to get one such letter even once ! i had even gone to the extent of thinking about printing one on my own just to escape the 'humiliation'.
while it's often funny to listen to the weird misconceptions people have about IT, it gets irritating if it goes too far. It would be a boring place without the aunties and the uncles, but it would be a wonderful place, if they knew better than to draw conclusions about one's work, of which they know so less about !
27 Comments:
VEry well written.You reminded of one episode where one old man(poojari) once told me."I heard that the economy is falling because people have stopped giving money to Bill gates and are giving it to Bill clinton instead " I felt like giving him a whack on his head but stopped cos i had exams the next day and didnt want to be the victim of an old pujaris curse.
thanks :)....and right, it is astonishing to see the notions people develop on IT :D
God........ i have a cramp in my abdomen..
the next wodehouse in making ..juggi :-)...
yeah unkils and aunties are the necessary evils to make IT a enjoyable professions..
but stop caring about their conclusions
:D...thanks akku ... yeah, u r right, unkils and aunties do give us an outside view of our profession :D
Most interesting part in entire post is what you think in certain situation as you mentioned.
I am also victim of this and it happened otherway, When I was about to come to US, someone told that people who go to US would marry a phirang and settle in US... because of which even now I get calls from parents about my external activities. Last month I got to know as why I was asked about such things and thanks to my far relatives who bowed the seeds of misconception.
A tipical example of what most software guys experience these day. As far as myself i have experienced twice and still going on. once going for the first time and now after coming back from onsite.
Nice write-up..It's sad but true that most people think about IT this way..
I got a forward of this blog from some guy in Delphi. Its very famous man. I was reading this are thinkin "wow, well written.." antha. Very well written kano. very true too.
I'm not from the IT-world, and you don't know me but this was pretty uproarious! I happened to get your post by mail and had the heartiest laugh in a long time. :)
thanks... it feels good to know you enjoyed it :)
thanks neeraja :)....it's soothing to know that i am not the only one going through the aunty-uncle phenomena :D
Hi Jagadish,
Sorry! I did not know that it was your post.
Of course! as a blogger, I completely understand the need to attribute the article to you. I have updated my blog with proper credit to you.
I'm be a regular to your blog hence forth. Keep up the good work :)
Cheers,
Pradeep Kishore
thanks pradeep :)... It's really an honor.
Hey buddy, thanks for directing me to your wonderfull blog. I got this same post in mail, It was a very funny mail and thats why i decided to post it in my new blog www.jaison.krify.com.
Keep blogging & keep smiling
Jaison
hilarious one! Can relate it very well! Still reminds me of my neighbours flocking to house to say, "Ayyo... software biddhoytantey!" .... " ee sala CET nalli computer seatu innu kaali biddavanthey... "
Wonderful that was!!! I got this forwarded by mail and googled... (thought this should be from somewhere else....). And I got it to YOUR BLOG so sooon.
Uncles and Aunties! - Great People....
Well it was Hilarious, Now soon the jobs are going to move to China, Russia and Brazil...... The Uncles and Aunties wud have one more topic.....
So, finally I found the source of this.
Damn good post and you just stole many of our thoughts.
I recieved via email and was searching for the original author (now a days I am damn sure I can find the author of any mail on the internet, on someone's blog!) but found several copies of it, but none from original author. The Tam ppl even translated and I was wondering which was original! One of the posts also got listed in one of the famous blogmelas.
Now on, I will be regular to ur blog..keep doing these hilarious ones :)
hi rk,
thanks a lot :)... hmmm, yeah it's been circulating around for a while now, and many have posted it as their own. It is kind of de-motivating, but its great that you took so much effort to look for the original author.
your blog's great !...those photos of deepavali are amazing !
kani: hi, glad u like the post :)..thanks. hmmm, yeah it had become rather difficult at that time for me...and i sure can understand your predicament too while facing such situations...
keep reading :)
manjunath, dhasarathy, nostradamus
thanks for your comments...glad u enjoyed the post :)
keep reading ;)
thanks bangaloreguy for the credits :)...
Hello, I am one of those who posted yr article on my blog. Since it came to me in a mail, I assumed it was one of those newspaper articles in circulation. Today I was pointed to your Blog and the post. Havent given you credit on the post yet, but will do in the next couple of days !!! Apologies :)
thanks :)...glad to hear that :P...
Hi Jagadish...
Good article.. I really njoied it..
Regards,
Shwetha
shwetzraj.blogspot.com
You can Just chk
Brilliant post. Enjoyed reading it. I could empathize with most of the situations in your post. Will be following your blog regularly.
-Ranjita
Waaw, this post is a classic. I had read this in a forwarded email a few years back. The topic came into discussion with my cousin and I traced it to your blog, enjoying the post all over again. A timeless classic. Kudos.
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