All posts by Ruturaj Vartak

Madhya Pradesh Road Trip: हिंदुस्तान का दिल देखो

My birth land, Madhya Pradesh. The “Heart of India” beckoning its son.

I’ve had a few biking (motorbike) trips here and there but none to my मातृभूमि. I had been planning since 2 years now and everytime it turned out to be fiasco. But this time around Manas suggested we should try out car as our vehicle.

Route

Day 1: Amravati

Dec 13, 2014

We had planned for Jabalpur with stopover at Nagpur, going through Dhule (via NH3 or AH47). The road pretty much pristine all the way. At Dhule the NH would’ve changed numbers from 3 to 6, NH-6, The Central India’s East-West link.

We expected that too be along the lines of NH3, but it wasn’t. The road changed to a 2-lane without a median. The road itself was not in a great condition. We had covered around 300kms in 5hrs but just reach Jalgaon from Dhule (90km) took 2 hrs or so. At 1.30pm when we stopped for food, Nagpur was another 400km away, and out of question as our night halt. It had to be Amravati. The road gave our first breakdown, a puncture somewhere before Akola. Our next stop was in Akola where cops unnecessarily stopped us checking for documents, etc. and had to bribe them for not carrying an original RC Book (we carried just a xerox copy).

Post 5.30 ~ 6pm it was dark and had to trudge carefully on the road with overtaking now becoming even difficult with the oncoming high-beam cars and trucks. Amravati came somewhere around 8pm and we lodged ourselves in one.

Day 2: Jabalpur

Dec 14, 2014

We left Amravati around 7am for Jabalpur via Nagpur – Pench. It was foggy all the way till Nagpur, but the road was lovely, big, wide and with median. This ran till Nagpur where we took an unfortunate by-pass which was so bad that even trucks had to navigate through the potholes as big as the roads themselves, a Maruti Alto was no match. This was where we found the front right in the bonnet was creaking. We tried to find what it was, but couldn’t. The bad stretch was only 2km – 3kms but cost us more than 40mins.

Later the road improved and took us into the Mowgli territory, Pench Tiger Reserve. This forrest was the one that housed the stories of Mowgli like kid. It were these stories that inspired Rudyard Kipling to write The Jungle Book. Pench is divides Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh (MP). As soon Pench was over and we moved ahead of Seoni, the ghat section got back into a big 6 laned highway. We stopped around Seoni for a tea break around 11.30pm.

Seoni 4 lane highway
Seoni 4 lane highway
Manas and the Balancing Rock
Manas and the Balancing Rock

Post that Manas road till Jabalpur where we had our lunch somewhere around 2pm. We reached my uncle’s house visiting the famous Balancing Rock around 4pm. Jabalpur was chilly.

Day 3: Bhedhaghat Marble Rocks and Dhuandhar, Jabalpur

Dec 15, 2014

Bhedaghat Marble Rocks Boating
Bhedaghat Marble Rocks Boating

After a very heavy breakfast of Mutter kachoris prepared by my aunt we headed out for one of the flagship tourist attractions of MP. First halt was Bhedhaghat Marble Rocks, where the boating through the gorges of Narmada river takes us into a Marble walled serpant flows of माँ नरमदा.

The next halt was Dhuandhar waterfalls which in roughly mean “Misty watefalls”.  The huge falls creating a mist around the area and hence the name.

We also enjoyed a ride over the waterfalls with a cable car (rope-way) which took us to the otherside of the river, where a restaurant at a scenic place served us lunch.

Day 4: Bargi Dam Cruise, Jabalpur

Dec 16, 2014

Madan Mahal
Madan Mahal

This morning it was Aloo Bonda that silenced our hunger after which we headed out to see Madan Mahal, walking distance from my aunt’s place. Its more of a watch tower on a huge bolder atop a small hill. Now more or less in ruins, but luckily acknowledged by ASI (Archaeological Survey of India) as an important piece in history. From here one could see the entire Jabalpur city.

Manas @ Bargi Reservoir
Manas @ Bargi Reservoir

The main attraction for today was a Bargi reservoir through a  30km winding road from the Jabalpur city to Khamariya. Where the Bargi dam halts the flow of Narmada and creates a huge reservoir. Its from here where the water flow is controlled downstream which continues through Dhuandhar and Bhedaghat. MP Tourism has setup boating, small-cruise facility over here so that people can enjoy the expanse of the water body. The ₹110 ticket allowed us to go deep into the reservoir an hour long ride that served piping hot hindi-item-number music on its deck so that kids and adults alike could enjoy the chilly breeze with their dance steps.

We were contemplating on our next stop, whether it would be Amarkantak (The highest point in Satpura, MP and also the origin of river Narmada) or Pachmarhi a popular Hill station of Madhya Pradesh. We zeroed in on Pachmarhi.

Day 5: to Pachmarhi

Dec 17, 2014

Shiva Statue
Shiva Statue

We had forgotten to see the huge Shiva statue in a temple-sque enviors of Jabalpur. So early morning we left for it. The fog in Jabalpur was thick. When we reached the place, I couldn’t see the statue, it was only as I waked towards the centre of the park the sitting Shankar slowly emerged out of the fog, revealing its massive scale of around 50feet +.

We left around 10.30am for Pachmarhi, via Narsingpur – Pipariya. It was all a state highway but the road was in an excellent condition, just wide enough for 2 cars but neatly lined and smooth. We had lunch around 2pm in Pipariya and left for Pachmarhi at 3pm.

Enroute to Pachmarhi
Enroute to Pachmarhi

Pipariya to Pachmarhi was just 50km but that 50km was of clean long, winding road. 10-15km ahead of Pipariya was flat, but then the Satpura National Park invited us into its depth. The road became narrower which completely ruled out a possibility of an overtaking maneuver unless we came down from the road on to the flat dusty bed of the road. This road was a continuous uphill climbing to 3555 feet above sea level, the altitude of Pachmarhi.

We booked a single night halt at a hotel along with the next day’s excursion of attractions around Pachmarhi with a Maruti Suzuki Gypsy (Jeep). The dinner was pathetic at a local restaurant which served us an uncooked chicken-tikka which was also tasting bad, we couldn’t have anything of it.

Day 6: Pandav Caves, Bee Fall, Reechgarh, Dhupgarh, Pachmarhi

Dec 18, 2014

The Garden from Pandav Gufa
The Garden from Pandav Gufa

We had to take receipt of ₹900 (₹600 car + ₹300 a guide) to enter into the inner green blanket of Pachmarhi’s Satpura Tiger Reserve. First stop was Pandav Caves, which reminded me of many caves in Maharashtra, typically that of Lenyadri, Junnar district, Pune. 5 caves atop on a small hill – where the Pandavs resided during their वनवास. A beautifully curated garden downstairs gave a good photo opportunity for most tourists.

Bee Fall
Bee Fall

Back down we had Maggi noodles a tea and headed out for Bee Fall, a water fall named due to its bee like stinging feeling when one sits under it. The fall is some ride to an edge of a moutain from where one has to trek 400m down to the base of the fall to enjoy its beauty, the fresh refreshing fall’s charge drains immediately as we have to climb back up to the jeep.

Reechgarh
Reechgarh

There was still time for lunch and we decided to check out another attraction, Reechgarh. Its a big cave like place with a cave like entry to an opening which has a periphery of huge rocks around it and giving a very small opening at the top almost 90 feet above. The other side of the entry is an edge of the mountain also known as the Echo point. An echo of a shout is heard almost after 2 seconds and is a lot different in experience from the normal echo points that tourists typically enjoy.

Panorama: sunset point from Dhupgarh
Panorama: sunset point from Dhupgarh

Lunch followed, a good Veg Gutte ki subzi. The next stop was the last for the day, Dhoopgarh / Dhupgarh. The highest point in the Satpura range. But to get to it one has to travel well over 10kms from Pachmarhi along steep and narrow roads through the mountain ranges. Dhupgarh named after its all-day sunny blast atop the mountain. The edges to both the east and the west labelled as Sunrise and Sunset points gather tourists. Since most of the tourists are from Madhya Pradesh and surrounding regions where the concept of a hilly terrain is not common, its quite a place to see the sun set for the honeymooners that frequent the hill station. MP Tourism has created a nice little Amphitheater to enjoy the sunset.

Panorama: sunset from Dhupgarh
Panorama: sunset from Dhupgarh

Post the setting sun, our driver took us back to pachmarhi in his Rally Sport styled driving. We had guts to try another Chicken dish, but yet again fell flat on our faces, this time yet another restaurant to hit us. Another dish going to waste we had to calm our stomachs with good old omelette-bread on a road-side shack.

With MP’s tour and major attractions getting over, we were left with just our journey back to Mumbai. This too would require a night halt and we decided to go via Indore and atleast enjoy its Chappan Chat street.

Day 7: to Indore

Dec 19, 2014

We checked out early by 7.30am, but Manas couldn’t find his pouch of electronic gadgets and it cost us another 30mins before we finally headed towards Pipariya, around 9am along the road we pulled over and ate our breakfast that we had bought the earlier day, Cream rolls, Cake and Chakali.

At Pipariya we headed eastwards towards Hoshangabad. At Hoshangabad we enquired about the route towards Indore, a via-Bhopal or via-Harda. Most of the guys suggested us via-Rehti-Khategaon. So we floored the pedal along NH59A. Around 1.30-2pm we had reached Kategaon and were looking for a good restaurant, but couldn’t find any. We settled for a cleaner version of dhaba, a bhojanalaya. The food was really good and tasty. Veg. though, Manas had given up hopes of having a Non Veg. in MP.

Indore was just 110km from Khategaon, but the restuarant owner said we’d take around 2-2.5 hrs to reach. He was right the smooth road went bad thanks to the extremely high plying of heavy trucks coming in and out of Indore. We reached the outskirts of Indore around 4.30 – 5pm. We settled for Ginger Hotel. The heavy traffic in Indore reminded us we were back to mad-civilization. Chris-cross cars, bikes, trucks, signals you name it.

We dumped our bags in the room and headed out for Chappan Dukan (56 shops) chaat street. Where we were welcomed by groups of teenagers and elders alike storming across multiple street-side shops for chat and sweets. We stopped across Vijay Chat house. While others were buzzing ordering stuff, we wondered what we could order, Khopra Batata Kachoris or Batata kachoris, etc… We ordered Coconut Potato Pea kachoris and various other forms of it. While doing that we ordered Shikanji, though normally a sweet lime water concoction, but here in Indore its a thick rich drink made up of Shrikhand, Rabri, Milk and Dry fruits. The shop owner was quick to spot us as tourists reading the available food items and offered us the drinking and ensuring that we try to identify the taste of its varied ingredients.

Post our diabetes and cholesterol killer food we were back to our hotel room.

Day 8: to Mumbai

Dec 20, 2014

We had around 600km to cover, so we headed off early by 7.30am but not without a visit back to Chappan. This time for its famous Pohe, Poha / Pohe a dish of Rice flakes with tasty garnishing of farsan, sev is a mouth watering dish. Yet again we saw hordes storming early morning. But MP is known for its love for food, time and age doesn’t matter.

With a sumptuous filling we finally head out for Mumbai, back on NH3 or AH47. We crossed the border around 11am and soon had crossed Dhule. The chilly MP weather had turned into a warmer dry barren air. We had our food 30km North of Nashik around 2pm, with this speed we could’ve been home by 6.30pm.

But as Mumbai neared, the traffic became worse, had to wait for 30mins at Kalyan Murbad phata. and then things got slower as we reached Thane. The SCLR was quick but Kalina was just long red tailed lines of cars.

But relatively the 600km took us only about 11 hours, thanks to NH-3.

Photos

Madhya Pradesh Road Trip December 2014

Finding Fanny ? really ?

Agreed, its an off-beat, off-track movie. Art movie perhaps! But I don’t buy it.

The movie has no character to it. A story that is as bad as its editing which could clip the length only to 1:45.

The only good about the movie was – Pankaj Kapoor. Naseeruddin Shah’s character now becoming kind of घिसा-पिटा one.

Its trickery, an art to get good actors in a movie like this one. My Friday badly-spent ( literally @ ₹350! ).

Netbeans 8.0.1 post update exceptions

If anybody was having a Netbeans Exception (post update to 8.0.1. This would prevent Netbeans from indexing your entire project (atleast thats what happened for me).

The exception could be something like this…

java.lang.NullPointerException
        at org.netbeans.modules.php.dbgp.breakpoints.LineBreakpoint.isValid(LineBreakpoint.java:152)
        at org.netbeans.modules.php.dbgp.breakpoints.LineBreakpoint.refreshValidity(LineBreakpoint.java:145)
        at org.netbeans.modules.php.dbgp.annotations.BrkpntAnnotation.(BrkpntAnnotation.java:63)
        at org.netbeans.modules.php.dbgp.breakpoints.BreakpointAnnotationListener.addAnnotation(BreakpointAnnotationListener.java:105)
        at org.netbeans.modules.php.dbgp.breakpoints.BreakpointAnnotationListener.breakpointAdded(BreakpointAnnotationListener.java:82)
        at org.netbeans.api.debugger.DebuggerManager.fireBreakpointCreated(DebuggerManager.java:883)
        at org.netbeans.api.debugger.DebuggerManager.initBreakpoints(DebuggerManager.java:1055)
        at org.netbeans.api.debugger.DebuggerManager.initBreakpoints(DebuggerManager.java:959)
        at org.netbeans.api.debugger.DebuggerManager.getBreakpoints(DebuggerManager.java:597)
        at org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.projects.BreakpointAnnotationProvider.annotate(BreakpointAnnotationProvider.java:149)
        at org.netbeans.modules.debugger.jpda.projects.BreakpointAnnotationProvider.annotate(BreakpointAnnotationProvider.java:143)
        at org.openide.text.CloneableEditorSupport.ensureAnnotationsLoaded(CloneableEditorSupport.java:392)
        at org.openide.text.CloneableEditorInitializer.initAnnotations(CloneableEditorInitializer.java:640)
        at org.openide.text.CloneableEditorInitializer.run(CloneableEditorInitializer.java:351)
        at org.openide.util.RequestProcessor$Task.run(RequestProcessor.java:1423)
        at org.openide.util.RequestProcessor$Processor.run(RequestProcessor.java:2033)

The best way to resolve it is remove the Netbeans cache. I simply deleted the “.cache/netbeans” directory.

rm -fr ~/.cache/netbeans

Popcorn Time is back!

Popcorn time the one which got banned, barred, you name it. Is Back ! This time with a new website – http://www.time4popcorn.eu/

For Fedora users like me they’ll get an error

$ ./Popcorn-Time
./Popcorn-Time: error while loading shared libraries: libudev.so.0: cannot open shared object file: No such file or directory

They can simply fix it by installing yum install libgudev1. If the package is already present, just make a sym link.


# ln -s /usr/lib64/libgudev-1.0.so.0 /usr/lib64/libudev.so.0

This will work like charm.

Further you can create a desktop file so that the app reflects in your Super key search (GNOME, Unity, etc)

Here is my popcorntime.desktop file

[Desktop Entry]
Name=Popcorn Time
GenericName=Popcorn Time
Comment=Watch movies online
Exec=/home/rutu/apps/Popcorn/Popcorn-Time %U
Terminal=false
Type=Application
StartupNotify=true
Icon=/home/rutu/apps/Popcorn/Popcorn-time-logo.jpg
Keywords=Videos;Movies;Torrents;HD;Streaming;

Create the file in ~/.local/share/applications.

I’ve also created / cropped a logo.
Popcorn-time-logo

World Cup 2014 Players

World Cup is back! So is a huge roster of players plying their trade in various countries. Here is one another look at the huge list, the data-science way.

Europe, Europe, Europe!!!

Lets begin with the where all the players play, Europe ? South America ? The answer as expected is not baffling at all, but rather well known.

A whopping 78.1% of the Worldcup players play in Europe!

Lets dig a little deeper, to see which countries do earn.

In top 10 employing countries, European nations check-in the top 8 positions. Mexico does well competing with Netherlands / Holland with 20 players each.

A further drill-down into the clubs and the rich clubs don’t disappoint.

Considering Real Madrid as the richest is still 5th in the order. We’ll analyze that in a moment.

So if we remove the EU out of the picture, how do other leagues do?

Mexico the fierce competitor to Netherlands tops it, The fairly money-laden MLS can’t cut it.

Patriotic Pride

We saw 123 players play in England, subtract 22 players from England and we have close to 101 non-English players playing in England. You’re sure they’ll cross each other in the group stages.

Group H topping with 19 wage earners in England. Belgium (11), South Korea (5) and Algeria (3). This means half of the Belgian players work in England.

Who is that 1 player in the English squad who plays outside England ? He is Frasen Forster, Goalkeeper. Plays for Celtic in Scotland.

Take a look at Russia, its the only team whose all 23 players play in their country, England follows with 22 then Italy with 20.

You wonder how the picture stands looking at the bottom end of the graph.

No marks for pointing out the poor and new nations at the bottom. But shame on Argentina, one of the world cup contenders having a meagre 2 players. Those being Fernando Gago (midfielder, Boca Juniors) and Agustin Orion (goalkeeper, Boca Juniors)

The clubs owe a lot to the nation where they run their business.

Bayern and Barcelona having 7 of their country players. Chelsea, England having the most of foreign World cup players, 13. 4 of which are from Brazil.

Positional Sense

Wonder what could be the most popular formation ? The stats show it could well be 4-4-2. Check the total positional players in World Cup.

Taking a look at continents and positions, there are NO African and Australian forwards playing in their own continent.

References

Flipkart Bug ?

I was searching for some headphones, I got a link where flipkart was promoting a costlier Seller as opposed to cheaper ones..

Flipkart Bug ?
Flipkart Bug ?

My colleague Aamir Khan, yes you read it right, did an extensive research but too couldn’t find a valid reason. Perhaps he could post his detailed study as well.

Ubuntu 14.04 LTS first impressions

The Trusty Tahr is out with support for 5 years. Here are the first thoughts about it…

stupid-browser
Stupid Browser comes up when searching “Appearance”
  • Unity feels more responsive than ever, especially the Alt+Tab.
  • New Desktop environments these days (also read as Cinnamon, GNOME Shell) take up a lot of RAM, I wanted to test 14.04’s unity, after few hours usage it too scooped up 320 MB worth of RAM… I expected better 🙁
  • One thing that definitely annoyed me a lot – Everytime I pressed “Alt + D” (Firefox’s shortcut for address bar focus), the HUD used to come up after the address bar focus. Hence after each Alt+D, I had an “Escape key” following up. I hope Canonical listens to this, They might say “F6” is an alternate shortcut that users might use to avoid this problem. The problem doesn’t occur if I’m slow to use the key combination
  • I would’ve loved if Ubuntu packaged the Ubuntu Tweak Tool as default installation.
  • The Web Apps for firefox seem to have gone! Feel bad for its lovers. If lucky u’ll get a notification to add the app, however when opened it opens up the built in Ubuntu Web Browser. No more integration with firefox tabs.
  • When I try to reach the “Appearance” app using the dash, a stupid Browser comes up as the first result
  • This Browser loads up “Ubuntu Home page” There are no UI elements to navigate anywhere else. The only way you could access is thru HUD ! – I have no idea why its included.

The Acid test is still pending, I’ve still got to use it during office hours. With apache, mysql, IntelliJ, Netbeans, Sublime Text all running at once.  Only then will Ubuntu as a desktop will truly be gauged. The test machine is fairly strong.

  • Intel® Core™ i5 CPU M 540 @ 2.53GHz × 4 Intel® Core™ i5 CPU M 540 @ 2.53GHz × 4
  • 3.7 GiB of RAM

All in all, Ubuntu continues to roll out another strong release.

Final Rating: 4/5

Update (30 Apr ’14): The update of Firefox 29 seems to have knocked off the HUD Bug when using Alt + D combination to focus the address bar.