The assassination of TECH GC
The assassination of TECH GC
(Part I; Part II - The Revival of Tech GC)
“Yeh batane se pehle tu mar kyun nahi gaaya”
said Ranajay disconnecting promptly. We never talked about it again. He
was reacting to news I had just delivered to him – KGP’s Tech GC1 now had events called ‘Biz Quiz’ and ‘Ad Design’.
Why
did he react like that? Allow me to step back a little, 17 years to be
precise. It was July 2000, when I ran into Ranajay outside the majestic
old building on the hallowed grounds of what we lovingly refer to as
KGP. Fresh from JEE, we were both first year undergraduate students in
the Mechanical Engineering Department2. KGP underwent many
changes during this year, perhaps more than in any year since it was
established. The campus was preparing for its golden jubilee
celebrations and receiving millions of dollars in donations from
generous IIT alumni3. The campus was abuzz with construction
as LAN cables were being laid to accommodate the new subsidized
computers that were arriving on campus due to the generosity of our
alumni, who wished to see IIT truly transformed into a world-class
institution. While Ranajay and I were of the same batch and would later
end up in the same hall (RP), our intellectual paths were not to cross
for another three years.
A couple of ‘stud’ seniors recruited me, in the very first year, as a junior member in the P-team
(Spring Fest -SF). I became a full member of the team the following
year. Spring Fest organization took up quite a bit of my time, though I
did not immediately complain since the position bestowed a mild
celebrity status (it probably still does), and we had been told that P-team members were guaranteed easy entry into the saboon-tel-beedi bechna type careers later. While this prospect enthused many of my fellow P-team
members, I became increasingly repelled. It seemed like a disgusting
end to a glorious profession; a profession paved by the likes of
Aristotle, Newton, Einstein, Bose and nurtured by technophiles like
Jobs, Gates and Musks of today. Understandingly, the deeply unsatisfied
techie inside me was unwilling to embrace the life of a salesman of
cheap soap and cigarette brands. Searching for any events or people to
assist me achieving my techie dreams, I came to the realization that
there were none. KGP’s ‘intellectual’ field was dominated by SF and
Soc-n-Cult ‘studs’, who were content with indulging in all things that
were not tech.
As I entered my 3rd year at KGP, I still clung to my tech dreams. My years of frustrated waiting were finally rewarded in 2003 when my wingie Saket
Kumar became VP Gymkhana (03-04). Tech GC had been one of his
proposals, and now that he was VP he was determined to implement it and
Tech GC, Tau4, was born. I was asked to be RP Hall’s
co-ordinator and was put in charge of selecting individual event
captains and the intra-hall organization. In that capacity I approached
Ranajay to lead Pi, the Product Design Competition. That year, Pi was
planned as a closed-door event since we did not expect Soc-n-Cult
seeped KGPians to have much interest in it. However, Saket insisted the
event be telecast live on the campus LAN. Viewership for the event
surpassed all estimates and expectations to the point of causing a brief
system-wide crash! RP took first prize and Ranajay and his team
received a hero’s welcome back at our hall.
Other
events continued to excite KGP junta and cement the new festival’s
place in the hearts of the tech-minded, this first coming together of
KGP’s tech consciousness, as it embraced Tech GC, will always shine as a
defining moment in my life. RP’s entry to Alpha, the analog circuits
event, was captained by Yogesh and RP won the first prize in that event.
Yogesh, PGM of our class and now a MIT alum, is today a successful
Bay-area entrepreneur.
This
essay is not meant to be a historical account of the first Tech GC. The
point I am trying to make is that Tech GC was not designed as a resume
builder exercise for the socially inept geek. Rather, it was an event
for the hardened techie, who at one moment could quote from Rashmirathi without batting an eyelid, and in another discuss the complexities of a jet engines. In 2005, as Saket and I kissed KGP bhoomi goodbye, we hoped that in some small way we had been able to repay the debt of our alumni.
Fast
forward 17 years to find me staring at a Scholar’s Avenue article which
talked about a Tech GC event called ‘Ad Design’. Shocked, I called up
Ranajay to share my disappointment. He casually, almost matter of
factly, replied that it must have been a misunderstanding - perhaps a
typo for ‘App Design’. I cleaned by glasses, peered again, phoned around
and, tragically, it was not a mistake. Through the years I had kept in
touch with Ranajay since we had a lot in common – we were both proud
nerds and neither of us was a gentleman (by choice). With a heavy heart,
I dialed Ranajay again to deliver the bad news and shatter his
complacence. After a moment of silence, he retorted “Yeh batane se pehle tu maar kyun nahi gaaya” and the line disconnected.
Tech
GC had been assassinated and there are two bullet holes right next to
its heart. One reads ‘Biz quiz’ and another reads ‘Ad Design’. Another
injury is from an abomination called ‘Case Study’. Currently, Tech GC is
in the ICU and is in an immediate need of a good doctor (Doctor Who perhaps).
Frankly,
I have not kept track of KGP’s hall culture and Tech GC history over
the years. Yet, the very presence of these events is indicative of the
deep disconnect of KGP junta with the reality of the tech world and that
somewhere, something went horribly wrong. How else can we explain the
sharp contrast in the global tech world and the happenings at KGP? We
are living in the golden age of technology. Many things, which passed
for science fiction a few decades ago, are the realities of today! Smart
phones have spurred a global revolution in connectivity, internet use
is the norm rather than the exception. Electric cars are a reality and
not a science fiction story. In the west, conferences are being
organized to discuss the intersection of eastern philosophy with the
most challenging question of all – consciousness. Perhaps sometime in
the not too distant future, we will be able to switch consciousness from
one body to another and experience Pandora’s beauty with the Na’vi. Or
we might be headed for a disastrous future, with Skynet opening its eyes
somewhere in the murky depths of the internet and trying to make sense
of all the digital data. Away from the chaos of daily life, space-age’s
second avatar is finally knocking on our doors. Today, thanks in part to
Mangalyaan, Mars seems closer than ever even as Voyager 1 & 2
become the first made-made objects to travel outside of the solar
system. Is Interstellar really all that far away?
But
in sharp contrast to global currents surrounding technology, KGP’s Tech
GC’s inclusion of retro 1990s events points to a disconnect. Perhaps
this is because even now in KGP, saboon-tel-beedi and bahi-khaata (read
banking) jobs are the local reality. Perhaps I am being too harsh since
in popular imagination a Techie is still the IT guy, as evidenced from
the fact that many (if not all) of India’s top startups are essentially
rip-offs. But wasn’t KGP’s first brick was laid imagining the inception
of a new era?
Will the hardened Techie please stand up?
Publication date: This essay was first published by IIT KGP's student run magazine Scholar's Avenue in Feb 2017 ( https://web.scholarsavenue.org/the-assassination-of-tech-gc-3e7ab6db4a40 ). This is a republication of the same essay with minor changes.
Disclaimer: The article is based on true events. The essay expresses the author’s personal views and opinions.
About the author: Dr. Aloke Kumar is currently a Canada Research Chair at the University of Alberta, Canada. Twitter handle: @aalokelab
Notes:
1. (For non-KGP readers) KGP refers to Indian Institute of Technology, Kharagpur, India and Tech GC refers to the annual Technology General Championship.2. Ranajay Ghosh, now an assistant professor at UCF (USA), was in Mech Btech (00-04), while I was in Manu Dual (00-05). Saket Kumar was in Maths & Computing (00-05) and Yogesh in Thoka Btech (00-04)
3. “IIT Foundation Annual Report, Fiscal Year 2003” at www.iitfoundation.org
4. (As best as I can recall) The first Tech GC (tau) had 6 events. 1. Pi – Product Design, 2. Alpha - Analog Circuits, 3. Mu – Maths Olympiad, 4. Gamma – Game Design 5. Chi – Chemical Challenge 6. Phi – Physics Olympiad
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