Trivial pursuit?

(A wonderful article by Arul Mani in Himal Southasian. The original article can be found here)

There was a time when saying that you liked ‘to quiz’ – pitting one’s knowledge base against other quizzers – was dangerous. People would harangue you about finding a more desirable hobby, or yap about a little learning being a dangerous thing, or say something that ended with the dismissive phrase ‘Morons with memories’. I learnt, over many years, that the best defence was to laugh at such responses, and ask whether national hobbies such as obsessing over cricket, minority-hatred or trawling the Internet for BBWs (‘big, beautiful women’, for the uninitiated) struck anybody as particularly more mature.

I don’t find myself defending the pastime anymore. The ‘knowledge economy’ has resulted in a comical world in which quizzing is respectable. Nurturing a quiz team is one of the ways in which a business school can prove that their MBA packs muscle. Holding a quiz is the means by which folks in corporate employ can reassure themselves that they are knowledge-workers. And so on.
Neither way of looking at quizzing does it any justice. The second quiz I attended, while still in school, might say more. The first had ended in the inevitable headache that comes from making too many demands of one’s memory. The second was longer, and was conducted by a kindly old man. One of the questions was about Zen having derived its name from a word in another language. I decided it had to be an Indian language, and set about trying to find a word that sounded like Zen. I came up with dhyana, and that was the correct answer. A little later, we were shown a slide of boys stomping around a court and asked to identify the sport. I noticed that there were no rackets involved, and remembered that the characters in P G Wodehouse’s school novels played something called fives without rackets, and my guess was right again. I had never experienced anything similar before – random, half-forgotten details combining like this to offer a ‘Eureka!’ moment. I was hooked for life.
The old man who took us through 12 rounds of quizzing was G R Mulky, a retired Indian Air Force officer who founded the Karnataka Quiz Association (KQA). He ran the association singlehandedly for a decade and a half, and in that time the KQA’s quizzes were perhaps the first space in which convent schools and ordinary schools, general degree colleges and professional colleges, and Kannada-speakers and chattering Anglophiles all met in open competition – not an easy thing to achieve in a small but strictly divided city. His efforts resulted in Bangalore’s distinctive quizzing culture – small-scale, regularly held events, an emphasis on working answers out rather than on memory, and an easy, irreverent democracy among those who participate.

Several Indian cities can boast of an equally rich quizzing life. Chennai, where the Quiz Foundation continues to be active; Pune, well-known for its Boat Club Quiz Club; Hyderabad, where the K-Circle has organised quizzes since the 1970s; Guwahati, under the leadership of the redoubtable Dilip Barua; and Kolkata, once a hub of quizzing action and still a city that produces some of the best quizzers in India. Cities such as New Delhi and Mumbai were late starters but now also have organisations in place – Kutub Quizzers in the capital, and the Bombay Quiz Club of emphatic nomenclature. Smaller cities such as Bhubaneshwar, Coimbatore, Kochi and Panaji are quickest off the block when it comes to organising venues, publicity, prizes or participation for national events such as Mahaquizzer, KQA’s annual solo championship.

True test
My own private test for the health of a quizzing community is to ask whether they have acquired a resident asshole. This creature is generally male, a petulant complainer, a hand-raiser, and a source of such constant irritation that all the others band together to ensure some general sanity. What constitutes such asshole-like behaviour? I can recall one individual who was single-handedly responsible for the ‘no mobiles’ rule that is still in place at KQA quizzes, for having texted for answers and using his phone’s Internet capabilities. Another stole answers using his superb lip-reading skills, before going on to become an irritating quizmaster. Yet another was known to drive teams in the vicinity to self-destruction merely by maintaining a running post-mortem of the quiz in a voice of a metal-on-concrete timbre. Bangalore has dozens of such creatures, and so does Chennai. Hyderabad has maybe one or two, as does Kochi. Kolkata and Delhi, because of the way they are constituted as cities, are never likely to experience a shortage. These are the places where quizzing will survive willy-nilly. The real causes of worry are Mumbai and Panaji, because their quizzers seem to be uniformly nice people.

Sometimes these communities talk to each other – and the joy of eavesdropping on such conversations is not small. A recurring topic arises from what we can call a capital discontent – the continuing dispute over which city can describe itself as India’s Quizzing Capital. The slanging was originally between Kolkata and Bangalore, before it turned into a Bangalore-Chennai slugfest; either way, the field is now wide open. Inter-city sledging is also organised around the quality of the questions. The term kitchen question was once coined to describe the cooked-up questions of a certain quizmaster – nobody quite remembers how it became such a derisive term. A Bangalore bloke coined the term TCQ – or Typical Chennai Question – to describe questions that looked like they came off the recent-deaths page on Wikipedia. The uncharitable implication – that Chennai players prepare for quizzes while ‘artistic’ Bangaloreans do not – results in much brotherly love.
The arrival of the Internet has only given a fillip to all the fun stuff. Some years ago, I discovered that the Pune quizzers liked to discuss questions, such as what makes for a good quiz, with pages of analysis and graphs – I spent several months wading through the stuff in repulsed fascination. And then somebody in Bangalore announced to the world at large, with a very Charlton-Heston-as-Moses set of chin, that good quizzes uniformly revealed three Bs – breadth, beauty and balance. Another beauteous use of the Internet is in abusing quizmasters. For decades, quizzers had to sit quiet while men with microphones made jokes at their expense. Payback, therefore, was corrosive and sublime. At least one celebrity quizmaster has flipped the bird at a Bangalore audience after a scathing review of previous efforts from various anonymous bloggers.

Quizzers are at their entertaining best when they are overtaken by the need to write their own history. The Wikipedia page ‘Quizzing in India’ was initiated by a Pune-based quizzer as a bland list of quizzing activities in several Indian cities. It lived in this largely blameless fashion for the first couple of weeks. And then, the page became a sort of mosh pit where amateur historians, self-promoters and guardians of city pride would vandalise each other’s contributions – or have their chains yanked by cooler others, who would religiously delete every bit of PR. In time, it attracted its own Wiki Nazi, a roving editor named Ohnoitsjamie who went about deleting everything till that five-scroll article had shrunk to a svelte paragraph.

Despite Ohnoitsjamie’s efforts, there is one liberty with historical fact the page continues to offer. To wit:
Quizzing in India began when Neil O’Brien conducted the first well organized, formal quiz in 1967 at Christ the King Church Parish Hall in Calcutta (now Kolkata). O’Brien who had recently returned from England, and had been exposed to the Pub quiz culture there, started quizzing; it first became popular among the Anglo Indian community before it became popular among a wider audience.
While one’s inner curmudgeon may merely growl at bad punctuation and slovenly writing, he cannot but rise and offer an unparliamentary finger to this biblical beginning.

The Darwin who rises in opposition to such blatant creationism will probably ask for proof that this one little event eventually cascaded into active quizzing across the country – and find none. He will point instead to another fact. After Independence, achieving government employment meant having to take many exams, and required some ability to ride this bucking beast named ‘general knowledge’, or ‘G K’. In time, people began instituting G K prizes and competitions, contests that achieved something of the prestige of sporting contests. The oldest continuously held quiz in Bangalore goes back to 1958 – the Rotary Club’s Ramnarayan Chellaram Inter-collegiate Quiz, which began life as a G K contest. Several Indian cities have tales of similar antiquity to offer.

Our Darwin will persist to wonder about how these contests, which were no more than tests of memory, began to change character, acquire complexity and attract an audience outside school and college. Eventually, he will find investigating the history of the media in India. Quizzes went thus from written tests to interactive events, with rounds cherry-picked from BBC radio shows, foreign television, and from several local traditions rich in riddling, puzzle-making and wordplay.

Miss and curse
Which brings us to the other problem with the Wikipedia account: it implies that quizzing originated as the pastime of the English-speaking classes. The content of today’s quizzes would seem to suggest that the transition from memory test to mind sport happened through several moments of mixing and accommodation among the classes – between a large body of middle-class bilingual aspirants and a smaller Anglophile leisure-class. The Indian version of the sport differs significantly from the UK or US versions – where it is still largely about remembering trivia – because such a mixing occurred.

We will leave our Darwin wondering about how quizzing began to gently disengage itself from general knowledge. If you go by the drivel that quizzers like to believe, then one was for people who really, you know, ‘got’ things; the other for the competition-wallahs. One was beautiful because it served no purpose at all; the other was about getting ahead in life. Only one was about reading and living in a not-from-the-syllabus way. Our Darwin might yet find that this is not quite the truth.

To quiz, thus, is to be entertained occasionally by a goodly number of kooks. For its more reliable thrills – miss-and-curse more often than hit-and-giggle – we must return yet again to anecdote. Earlier this year, I sat for the Mahaquizzer as guinea pig – those who create the quiz like to see one victim before hundreds write the final product. I was somewhat miffed when the results came out to see that I might not have finished in the top ten. I was far more mortified by the fact that I had managed to miss the invitation for a good guess on this gem of a question:
Snell’s law of refraction and the law of reflection of light both can be derived from the ‘principle of least time’ which was stated in 1662 by a multi-faceted scientist whose ‘way of drawing tangents’ inspired Isaac Newton’s early ideas about calculus. Most of us probably know him for other marginal contributions. Name him.
The one word that I somehow did not take in – marginal – would have reminded me of a story, of Pierre Fermat scribbling his Last Theorem in the pages of a copy of Diophantus’s Arithmetica. I have whacked my forehead more times than is healthy, and will remember this sad miss till the day of my demise.

~ Arul Mani is a volunteer with the Karnataka Quiz Association in Bangalore.

A high-scoring rule-breaking jamboree

A report on the July 2010 monthly by Atharv Joshi. The quiz was 'QM'ed by yours truly and can be viewed here.

Version 3.2. of the SEQC Monthlies (that is, the 2nd Quiz of the 3rd Year) was held on the day of American Independence, July the 4th. The QM hosting duties went to Ameya (the man with the silent “A”) and boy! We quizzers, about 50 in number (mostly school children) witnessed one of the longest quizzes, having 78 questions in all. It was also one of the more innovative quizzes (in many factors), be it the Questions, the Theme, the Scoring Pattern and the Formal Rules which stated “The QM is no God, argue with him and if proven wrong, beat him up!” and other such unconventional suggestions.

The scoring pattern of the quiz was, as quoted by the “Man with the Silent “A”, “meant for high-scoring, and to overpower the master-quizzers (Read: Annie and Rajiv) and to create winning opportunities for all teams”. The theme of the quiz was “SEQC” with the rounds being dedicated to quizzers of SEQC; Rajiv, Annie, Anjali, Tallulah, V.G, Chirag, the Young Turks, the Kids, and last, but not the least, “The Man with the last silent “A”, Ameya himself.

Returning to the quiz, it had 13 rounds with 6 questions in each round. The last two rounds were the highest scoring ones as they were the ones having sitters and some easy school-level questions. At the end of it, it was a high scoring encounter as expected with Rajiv’s team taking it all with 254 points. Another record broken was that of the lowest margin of winning a quiz -- just 2 points!! Adish’s team scored 252 points, and were surely in the driver’s seat at one stage, only to receive a -10 and have Rajiv answer a F-1 related ‘Safety Car connect’ question to enforce the safety car and the victory, and it was no overtaking for Adish’s team from there on!

The Quiz had it all.

Third Time Lucky!





One again, was blessed with an opportunity to QM the Monthly Quiz at SEQC. Thus, came up with the quiz published above.

Uparwaalah deta hai, toh chappar phaad ke

For anyone who knows me even a little bit, must have known about my passion for quizzing. For others who haven’t known me in person, but who happen to stumble upon here must have guessed it from the number of quiz related posts that dominate this blog. And for those who actually follow me through this blog and have borne the trauma of reading through each of the posts must have also got aware about my infinitely numerous narrow misses at such big quizzing events.
With the regularity that I was missing qualifying for the finals, and needless to say the wafer-thin margin, it was becoming more of a rule than exception. It wasn’t any soothing experience when all those qualified teams would ‘pass’ some question whose answer I would know better than the back of my hand. It goes without saying that it earned me some lousy gifts as audience prizes. ‘What the hell was I doing sitting in the crowd?’ I kicked myself time and again.
All I could do was pen my feelings down and give vent to the pent up frustrations in me. And that is what I did through my article ‘Luck! No chance’ (http://ameyadilse.blogspot.com/2009/02/luck-no-chance.html). An innocent suggestion from my friend meant that I mail the link to the god of quizzers, Giri. And wholla! he actually commented back to it. He, in a manner fitting to his character, was very appreciative about me and was kind enough to email me back a few words of encouragement. Oh boy! That was the only silver lining to my debacles all this while.
It was not to be the last time that I had to experience such narrow miss, and suffered the same plight at BITS Pilani Quark Fest. As I tied on the same score with the last qualifying team, it was the tie-breaker question that did me in. ‘deja vu!’ I sighed. ‘Seen it, done it, been through it’ was what I was feeling then.
Thus in frustration I called up my good friend as I do quite often than none. Though himself a good quizzer in school days, he had been on some kind of quizzing sabbatical since. But as his good luck would have it, one casual attempt at Tata crucible-Pune and he ended up on stage thus earning his quiet some accolades. He was someone whom I often turn up to when in tizzy and boy! What a motivation he instilled into me with his one statement. He said and I quote “Sachin Tendulkar took 89 ODIs to score his first century”. That one statement and the barometer of my spirit had spiked from the deepest abyss to its summit. And with new zest I was anticipating to participate in the next quiz.
Like a vulture on rain-starved barren land eagerly awaiting the next rain, I had my eyes glued onto the quizzing calendar. And boy! what a treat it was for my eyes. Come 27th February 2010, and there were not one, not two but three quizzes lined up that day. Along with its yearly corporate quiz Wiz-Biz, GIM were also organising a college quiz ‘Inquizzitive Minds’ for the first time. But the biggie of the day was the Tata crucible that was coming to town the same evening. The initial schedule suggested that GIM’s ‘Inquizzitive Minds’ clashing with the ‘Tata Crucible’, but a quick rejig by the GIM organisers meant all was settled. So thus I had my schedule packed for that Saturday and it read something like this:
9.00 AM – Inquizzitive Minds – International Centre Goa
2.00 PM – Tata Crucible Quiz – National Institute of Oceanography
6.00 PM – Wizbiz – International Centre Goa

Though a Saturday was something I used to look up to for an extended siesta, this one was certainly different. I had to break the jinx and I was hoping to do it that day. So seeking blessings from my parents and the all-mighty I left my home for the venue.
Not expecting the GIM organizers to start their quiz on time, I was yodelling my way to the venue when my cellphone blared to life. ‘Lisa calling...’ the screen flashed. Few keystrokes and a short conversation made me realise I was wrong in expecting the prospective managers from GIM not to be punctual. However I was able to convince Lisa in delaying the start by just a few more minutes as I made indicator needle to gobble a few more notches on the speedometer. Oh! You must be wondering, Lisa who? Well she was my partner for the opening quiz of a day. By her own admission she was a quizzing greenhorn though I really didn’t mind that.
Rushing to the venue still gasping for breath, I panted my way through the prelims. The prelims wasn’t very easy and thought I shall be eliminated yet another time. But surprised was I, when my team name ‘Don Quixote’ was called up as finalists. The finals were easier, and had not been for some goof-ups from my part I should have landed in a better position than the third spot that we both secured. The positive take away was not just being able to break the jinx; I had another reason to celebrate. One of the member of the winning team was my partner for the next quiz, the big one of the day Tata Crucible.
The Tata crucible venue was just a stone’s throw away, albeit by a rather strong man. A quick lunch and we landed up at the venue quiet in advance of the reporting time. The organisers further had decided to wait for an ‘on-the-way’ team, which transcended in our wait being longer. But who mind this extra few hours of waiting period when we wait for the entire year this event. Post-prelims, and after discussing the hits and misses over tea, we settled in our seats with our fingers crossed. The format was designed such to eliminate crowding of stage with teams from same institute and ensure at least 4 unique institutes make it. Thus the top teams from 4 unique institutes would directly qualify themselves (even if and quiet often when their scores are lower than the second best team from another college) with the rest slots to be battled out for amongst the rest top six teams. My anxiety had picked out as Giri emerged to declare the names of the six wild-card teams that would slug it out for the last two slots in the finals. And lady luck was totally shining on me, as mine was the first name to be announced, albeit the usual pronunciation goof-up ( http://ameyadilse.blogspot.com/2009/12/its-ameya-no-no-its-ameya.html ). So it was me and my partner Pratyush representing GIM along with another 3 GIM teams and 2 from BITS that would have to face 8 questions on the buzzer for the coveted spot in the finals. A couple of questions into the round and one of BITS team had already got itself qualified leaving 5 of us. Till question 7 it was all even-stevens among 4 of us as some overambitious attempts by one of the team got themselves a few negatives. Thus it was for the Q# 8 to decide who would continue to be on stage?
“The secret formula of Coca-Cola stored in the vaults of Sun-Trust Bank” was our ticket to the finals as we banged the buzzer before Giri could complete the question. That was it... finally... finally I had got myself qualified for TC finals. The feeling was totally ‘on-top-of-the-world’ as for me I had won the battle. Probably me and my partner were a bit too overhelmed, as our performance in the finals was nothing but mediocre. As teams raced ahead, it was a team of young doctors from GMC emerged as the Goa champions. Not winning, yet as happy as the winners I was already on the way to the venue for the next quiz.
GIM annual corporate quiz ‘WizBiz’ would be the grande finale of the day. Being a student of eMBA at GIM, I had got special concessions to participate in the same; and together with my long time quizzing partner Chirag, I was looking to maximise our gains. Chirag was a great partner to have at any quiz, and he had specially flown down from Bangalore for this one. For he wasn’t the only one who had covered some miles to attend this quiz, but so had many bigwigs from the world of quizzing. The pretty handsome prize booty meant it attracted quiet some teams from the expanse of the country, especially from KQA. Although stacked against some formidable teams, we did fancy our chances of qualifying for the finals. For I was having a lucky outing and secondly the quiz-master was kinda lucky for us. Back in 2008 when Ajay Anthony has hosted WizBiz we were able to clear the elims and we were hoping to repeat the feat once again in 2010. And so we did as we qualified for the on-stage finals. Likewise the prelims, the finals too were a really entertaining and informative affair with a great mix of some tough ones sprinkled with old chestnuts. Though absolutely fair and unbiased format adopted, we still found ourselves wanting to answer questions that we knew but unfortunately were grabbed by our opponents. But all given and said, it was really a fun-filled and exciting one.
Thus there was me with my hands full, quite literally with prizes, certificates and gift vouchers and even more so having my heart filled with joy of the experiences I had over the entire day. I had been asking god to just break the jinx  and get me past one of the elims . And see, what he got for me? No wonder , somebody has said it right “Uparwaalah deta hai, toh chappar phaad ke” :)

Plight of a Software Engineer !

(Inspired from a forwarded mail I received. This is not my original write-up but I wholely subscribe to what is mentioned in here. This happens to me more often then none)

After lots of meet ups with my mom-IT friends, relatives, strangers, rickshaw wallahs etc; I noticed that the moment you say that you are an IT guy, they have already made some assumptions about you.

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Myth #1: If you haven't been onsite ...u are a loser

Uncle: "Tum do saal se IT company mein kaam kar rahe ho na?"
Me: (tightening my collar..head high) "Haan uncle ......bas....."
Uncle: "Tum videsh nahi gaye?"
Me: "Nahi uncle project mein requirement nahi hai onsitekaa"
Uncle: "Lekin woh deepak ko toh maanna padegaa.... engg mein 2nd class milaa...fir bhi usne jamke mehnat ki aur usse company ne USA bheja!"

Aaaha! thats the problem. People think that only the smarty pants are sent on site while the loser ones are the people left behind in India. So the assumption is that if you haven't been on site then you don't work hard nor you have any sincerity and ... ok that's enough for now.

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Myth #2: If you are not in the biggies... u are a loser

Auntyji : "Beta, kaunsa tent?"
Me: "Persistent! Aunty I work in Persistent. "
Aunty: "Tumko Info*** mein nahi mila kya?" (in short: "tum second grade gadha lagte ho")

Then I have to make efforts to tell them how I actually work for a much
better company. In case the opposite person is technologically sane then I
give him some product development 'funda' (arrogance).

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Myth#3: You can fix any computer..and calculator and may be clocks too

Most of the computer engineers around must have at east once gone to a friend's place only to fix his /her comp. The task can be from installing a software (next..next.. finish) to fixing a computer which gives electric shocks when its metal areas are touched.

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Myth #4: You have lots of money

Once I met up with my friends from school ...from various fields. I just mentioned that it is such a pain to go to office nowadays and said that I wanted to buy a car.

Friend1: "what problem do u have man .. u are an IT waala"
Friend2: "Tu toh Honda CRV le saktaa hai"
Me: "CRV!! aabey CRV kyaa mere pass VCR lene ka paisa nahi hai"

Even after 5 minutes of convincing them weren't getting convinced.

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Myth #5: Coding means sitting in front of the computer

During my college days , my classmate had an encounter with a guy from mechanical dept:

Mech guy: "Your Computer engineering is a big nautanki.... four years
You learn the same grey dabba... and all you ppl do is sit nicely in front of that dabba and punch the keys"

Well I don't completely disagree

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Myth #6:

One more thing which oldies say : "Now you work in such a big company , you are settled , you should marry now !! "

OMG!! this salary is not enough for one poor soul.. how to handle two ???

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Myth #7:

In Diwali...u get questions like......"Are you gonna get a bonus this Diwali.....??" And when we reply in the negative.....they seem so surprised...!!!!!!!

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Myth #8: A common issue that I have seen:

When I tell anybody that I work with TCS, many times I get a reply "My son/daughter/relative Mr/Ms XXX also works with TCS. You must be knowing him/her" and if I answer in the negative, they feel disappointed (sometimes even angry with me).

How to explain to them that there are around 1,60,000 employees in my company (around 35,000 in Mumbai alone), and I cannot know everybody in my ODC, forget about knowing everybody in the company.

LoLzzzzzzzzzzzzz.....

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Add ons:

#How many times do you face this question

"What does your company make...???"