Saturday, October 23, 2010

Who will cry when you die by Robin Sharma

I recently read 'Who will cry when you die?' book written by Robin Sharma - the author of the best seller 'The Monk who sold his Ferrari'. The book is a collection of 101 life lessons explained in a very short but succinct manner. Even if we practice only some of these lessons in our day to day life, it will certainly enrich the quality of our personal and professional life. Listing some of the lessons that I liked the most:-

- Start Your Day Well
- Talk to Yourself
- Remember, Genius Is 99 Percent Inspiration
- Get Up Early
- Laugh More
- Spend a Day Without Your Watch
- Take More Risks
- Live a Life
- Always Carry a Book with You
- Enjoy the Path, Not Just the Reward
- Get Good at Asking
- Connect with Nature
- Use Your Commute Time
- Get Serious About Setting Goals
- Walk in the Woods
- Listen to Music Daily
- Learn to Meditate
- Stop Complaining and Start Living
- See Your Day as Your Life
- Be Humble
- Don’t Finish Every Book You Start
- Sleep Less
- Learn How to Walk
- Plant a Tree
- Be an Adventurer
- Respect Your Instincts
- Love Your Work

Enjoy reading !

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

The right perspective

I must thank my friend Sudhir Bangera for sending this very nice story to begin with my day of work. It's actually a food of thought for all ... Sharing the same.

Two brothers grew up in an orphanage. The warden of the institution was a pesky fellow, who would often say terrible things to the children.

Years passed. The little boys grew up to become fine young men, and in time got married and had families of their own.

The elder brother grew up to become bad tempered and gave his family lot of grief. The younger brother, however, turned out to be a good parent and husband. He was successful both in his professional and personal life. People who knew them would express surprise over how the two brothers were so different from each other, in spite of facing the same circumstances while growing up.

The elder brother would say, “The warden, whom we all looked upon as almost a father, set us a bad example. I had no one to guide me, so I couldn’t help but turn out the way he was. It’s not my fault, I have become like him because of my circumstances.”

And, the younger brother would say, “The warden never taught me good values or behavior. But growing up, I made a promise to myself, to hold him as an example of what not to be and to make sure that I don’t to do the things he did.”

How many times have we blamed our failures over bad circumstances or rotten luck? True success and happiness comes from making the best out of a bad situation and looking at things with the right perspective. Look at the brighter side of situations ...

Have a thoughtful day ahead ! :-)

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Panoramic view of Naigara falls

Sharing some beautiful snaps of Naigara falls that I have tried to capture in my small camera... Enjoy !











Saturday, October 16, 2010

Mount Washington photos

On October 2, 2010, my wife and I visited Mount Washington (New Hampshire) along with my friends. Mt. Washington is the highest peak in the Northeastern United States. (6288 ft). It was a wonderful experience that can not be expressed in the words. I have tried to capture the nature's beauty in my camera! Sharing some photos...









Friday, October 15, 2010

We do not have enough time to improve ?

I was reading a book - 'Who will cry when you die?' by Robin Sharma and came across a very nice and thought provoking quote by him :-

"Saying that you don't have time to improve your thoughts and your life is like saying you don't have time to stop for gas because you are too busy driving. Eventually it will catch up with you."

I am sure reading this quote must have started a thought cycle in your mind !

Monday, October 11, 2010

Analyze your app performance with newrelic_rpm

I used newrelic_rpm(2.13.1) (http://www.newrelic.com/) - Ruby performance management system in my rails application to find out the performance bottlenecks and it helped me a lot.

First, it took me only 2 minutes to set up newrelic into my application. Second, the detailed level of information that it provided helped me to debug at granular level starting from sql query execution time to individual template load time. I also liked the Pie chart representation of the analysis.

Here are the installation steps :-
http://support.newrelic.com/faqs/docs/ruby-agent-installation

Readme doc :-
http://github.com/newrelic/rpm/blob/master/README.rdoc