Lehman Brothers photos
I’ve scanned the photos I took at Lehman Brothers during summers. Comments Praveen 10 Jul 2000 12:00 pm: I would really like to see some photos of LB Mumbai.
I’ve scanned the photos I took at Lehman Brothers during summers. Comments Praveen 10 Jul 2000 12:00 pm: I would really like to see some photos of LB Mumbai.
Whose sites are the most popular on this server? Last month, the top 10 sites were admissions, placement, Prof. Srinivasan’s, and Prof. Bandi’s. I ran http-analyze to get these results.
A paper at eLab talks about how CDNow prices its online advertisements. It argues that CPM is an archaic model, and measuring advertisement performance is more important.
Apps.com is a directory of Internet applications.
An behind-the-scenes report on a hacking attempt. These guys set up a trap and waited for it to get hacked. Once it did, they recorded the conversations of the hackers. If you’re UNIX savvy, it’s a must read.
The Internet Law Journal has a lot of stuff on legal issues on the Net. It’s going to come in handy for our dot-com project. So is dotcomfailures.com, which has details on failing dot-coms.
I bought Built to Last, Archer’s To Cut a Long Story Short, Crichton’s Timeline, Best Practices, and Handy’s The Age of Unreason at Fabmart. It was delivered in 5 days as promised.
Prof. Apte mentioned that the currency forward is not an unbiased estimator of the future spot rate, but is the certainty equivalent of it. The Kelly FAQ gives a good description of what certainty equivalence means.
Clinton signed the e-signature law. To be implemented in October, it’s an interesting contrast to our IT Bill.
The new Emerging Digital Economy report is out. I found the second and first extremely informative.
The Humane Genome Project maps what each of our genes do. You could spend hours exploring genes. It’s implications are quite interesting.
The IT Bill has been passed. That means digital signatures are the same as written ones. We’re hoping to make money on that! We wrote a first-draft proposal for our Business Modules in E-Commerce course.
There were 22 vacancies, and 45 were shortlisted (out of less than 70 applicants). We were interviewed by 5 panels, each with 2 professors. We had submitted our resumes, a writeup on why we were applying for the programme, various declarations and our grade sheet. Though it was rumoured that grades played a 50% part in shortlisting, it was not so. Each panel ranked their candidates independently (in which grades played only an implicit part) – so it was the interview that really counted. After ranking, they pooled the rankings across panels (this is probably where grades might come in) and allocated the first available preference by rank. If the universities you opted for are not available, you would not be considered for other universities even if your ranking is high. So it makes sense to fill out all the universities of your choice if you’re keen on going. ...
Microsoft has been ruled a monopoly. The findings are a pretty interesting economic analysis. (The US District court site also has a copy.)
Citibank awards Rs. 50,000 to 2-3 candidates from IIM Bangalore based on leadership traits. We had to submit ‘brief’ writeups on what leardership is, why we’re good leaders, what our social contributions and academic achievements are, etc., along with our resume. We also had to turn in a student and faculty nomination. Since I had lots of time (I was bedridden with a fractured ankle) I prepared quite well for this interview. 11 were shortlisted. The interviews were scheduled for 20 minutes each. ...
Curious that Google should return Microsoft’s home page when you search for “more evil than Satan himself”… When I tried this on 24th June 2000, it didn’t work. Maybe Google got smart. Or was it Microsoft? On 3rd July 2000, it worked again. Comments Anonymous 18 Dec 2006 3:11 am: I tried it, doesn’t work now Max 30 Mar 2009 6:26 pm: It’s been fixed, Microsoft (and also Bush) were pretty mad at Google.
Punctuation is critical. Believe me, mistakes can be glaring!
Lehman Brothers was recruiting Sales, Trading & Research in Tokyo, and Investment Banking in New York. If that sounds like greek, read Vault’s report on investment banking. They seemed disappointed at the number of questions that came their way during their pre-placement presentation. There were hoping for a lot more, and agressive, questions. The people who came included Alan Cutter, Pamella, Isabella, Sarab Bhutani (all from New York), Dalip Awasthi and Sumant Gupta. They shortlisted 21 people for New York and 9 people for Tokyo. Rajesh Dalmia and I were on both shortlists. ...
Web design guidelines are available at the Web Developer’s Virtual Library.
First year students ranking in the top 20 in CAT from each of the IIMs are eligible to apply to this scholarship. It pays for the tuition fee for the two years at IIM-B, and hence is worth about Rs. 2 lakhs. The resume is the key to shortlisting. The Aditya Birla group assigned a weightage to each achievement (depending on whether it was at the national level, state level, college level, etc.) and added up the points. The top point scorers were chosen. Some points are awarded to the write-up also. From IIM-B, Vijayalakshmi and myself were shortlisted in 1999. 8 were shortlisted from IIM-A and IIM-C respectively, while 2 more were from IIM-L. The scholarship was awarded to 10 people finally. The distribution was 4-1-4-1 across A, B, C and L. Viji won it from IIM-B. ...