Thursday, September 2, 2010
Kaadhal Rojavavae Song Lyrics
Lyric : Kaadhal Rojaavae
Music : A.R Rahman
kaadhal roajaavae engae nee engae
kanneer vazhiyudhadi kannae
kannukkul needhaan kanneeril needhaan
kanmoodip paarththaal nenjukkul needhaan
ennaanadhoa aedhaanadhoa sol sol
thenral ennaith theendinaal saelai theendum njaabagam
chinnap pookkal paarkkaiyil dhaegam paarththa njaabagam
velli oadai paesinaal sonna vaarththai njaabagam
dhaegam rendum saergaiyil moagam konda njaabagam
vaayillaamal poanaal vaarththai illai kannae
neeyillaamal poanaal vaazhkkai illai kannae
mulloadudhaan muththangalaa sol sol
veesuginra thenralae vaelai illai inru poa
paesuginra vennilaa penmai illai oayndhu poa
poo valarththa thoattamae koondhal illai thaeindhu poa
boomi paarkkum vaanamae pulliyaagath thaeindhu poa
paavai illai paavai thaevai enna thaevai
jeevan poana pinnae saevai enna saevai
mulloadudhaan muththangalaa sol sol
Saturday, August 14, 2010
Vinnathandi Varuvaya: Mannipaaya Lyrics
Lyric : Mannipaaya
Music : A.R Rahman
Kadalinil meenaagha, irundhaval naan,
Unakkena karai thaandi vandhaval-thaan,
Thudithirunthen…tharainileh..
Thirumbivitten yen kadalidameh..
Oru naal sirithaen,
Maru naal veruthaen,
Unnai naan kollamal kondru puthaithaeney,
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..
Oru naal sirithaen,
Maru naal veruthaen,
Unnai naan kollamal kondru puthaithaeney,
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..
Kanne thadumaari nadanthen,
Noolil aadum mazhayaagi ponen,
Unnal thaan kalaignaai aaneney..
Tholai thoorathil velicham nee,
Unnai nokkiye yenai eerkiraaiyeh..
Melum melum urugi urugi,
Unnai yenni yengum
Idhayathai yenna seiveyn..
Oohhhh.. Unnai yenni yengum
Idhayathai yenna seiveyn..
Odum neeril, orr-alai thaan naan..
Ulley, ulla eeram neethaan,
Varam kidaithum naan,
Thavara vitten-mannipaaya anbey..
Kaatriley aadum kagidham naan,
Neethaan ennai kaditham aakinaai,
Anbil thodanggi anbil mudikkiraen,
En kalangarai vilakkamey..
Oru naal sirithen,
Maru naal veruthaen,
Unnai naan kollamal kondru puthaithaeney,
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..
Anbirkum.. unndo aazhaikum thaazh..
Anbirkum unndo aazhaikkum thaazh,
Aarvalar-pun kaneer poosal-tharum..
Anbilaar-ellam thamakkuriyar,
Anbudayaar endrum uriyar pirarkku,
Pulambal ena-chendren pullinaen nenjam,
Kalathal uruvadhu kanndu…
Yen yen vaazhvil vandhaai kannaa nee..
Poovaayo kaanal neer poley thondri..
Anaivarum urunggidum iravinum neram,
Enakkadhu thalaiyanai nanaithidum neram..
Oru naal sirithen,
Maru naal veruthaen,
Unnai naan kollamal kondru puthaithaeney,
Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya..Mannipaaya.. Mannipaaya..
Kanne thadumaari nadanthen,
Noolil aadum mazhayaagi ponen,
Unnal thaan kalaignaai aaneney,
Tholai thoorathil velicham nee,
Unnai nokkiye yenai eerkiraaiyeh..
Melum melum urugi urugi,
Unnai yenni yengum
Idhayathai yenna seiven..
Melum melum urugi urugi,
Unnai yenni yengum
Idhayathai yenna seiveyn..
Oohhhh.. Unnai yenni yengum
Idhayathai yenna seiveyn..
Vinnathandi Varuvaya: Hosanna Lyrics
Lyric : Hosanna
Music : A.R Rahman
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yennn idhayam, Udaiythaiy norungave
Yennn maru idhayam, Tharuven nee udaikave
Ohh Oooh...Hosanna...Hosanna...Ohh Ohh...(2)
Andha neram andhi neram
Kan paarthu kandhalaagui pona neram
Yedho aache
Oh vaanam theendi vandhachu
Appavin veettu ellam kaatrodu
Poyé poche
Hossanna …En vaasal thaandi ponaalé
Hosanna..Vérondrum séiyamalé
Naan aadi poghiren
Sukku noor aaghiren
Aval pona pinbu yendhan nenjai
Thedi poghiren…
Hosanna…Vaazhvukum pakkam vandhén
Hosanna…Saavukkum pakkam nindrén
Hosanna…Yén endral kadhal enbén
Hosanna…
Hey babe i never wanna know what'd be lika feel lika
I really wanna be here with you…
It's not enough to say that we are made for each other
It's love that is hosanna true...
Hossana'll be there when you're callin' out my name...
Hossana...feeling like my whole life has changed...
I never wanna be the same...
It's time we rearrange...
I take a step,you take a step, I'm here callin' out to youu...
Hello...Helloooooo……
Hosannaa…….Hoooo………Hosanna…….Hooo…….
Vanna vanna pattu poochi
Poo thédi poo thédi
Angum ingum alaighindradhé
Oh sottu sottaiy
Thotu poga mégam ondru mégam ondru
Eng'engo nagarghindradhé
Hosanna pattu poochi vandhacha
Hosanna mégam unnai thottacha
Kilinjal aaghirén naan
Kuzhandhai aaghirén
Naan unnai alli kaiyil véythu pothi kolghirén
Helloo…Hellooo…
Hosanna… en meedhu anbu kolla
Hosanna…yénnodu sérndhu sella
Hosanna…Humm endru sollu podhum
Hosanna…
Yennn idhayam.....
Udaiythaiy norungavé.....
Yennn maru idhayam......
Tharuvén nee udaikavé...
Yennn idhayam...
Udaiythaiy norungavé...
Yennn maru idhayam...
Tharuvén nee udaikavé...
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Credibility Management
Sunday, August 1, 2010
New Learning
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
Inception
Friday, July 2, 2010
särkänniemi, Tampere
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Umpteen
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Drudgery
Saturday, June 19, 2010
Shawshank Redemption
Thursday, June 17, 2010
Facetious
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Hamstring
Kheema Macaroni
Why does it happen to me?
Friday, June 4, 2010
Grab the situation!
Saturday, May 22, 2010
Word of the Day - Heed
Friday, May 21, 2010
Cricket - India vs Pakistan in Finland
Word of the Day - Repose
Air Crash in Managalore
Thursday, May 20, 2010
My revenue target for the Half Year
Bi-lateral Trade proposal between India and Pakistan
Monday, May 17, 2010
Hyundai to launch one new car model every year in India
Economic Crisis - Recession
Friday, May 14, 2010
Oasis to Mirage - Ideas loaned from my wife!!
I would like to express my transition from real freedom to assumed freedom. I am here talking about my transition from my college to the booming IT industry. I would like to pour my experience of the so called glamorous and fun filled IT industry.
We used to wander those spacious heat filled open grounds and closed class rooms with just 50 rupees in pocket and plan the whole week’s budget with that. But now we wander along the well cleaned, fully air-conditioned corridors with about five to six credit cards in our pocket thinking where to swipe the cards with credit cards eagerly waiting to eat next month’s salary. I can’t believe that it was just few years before that the 50 rupees seemed to be thousands, but now, thousand seems to be nothing.
College canteen, Tea shops were the favorite hot spots where we spent hours together, having a hearty chat with our buddies forgetting the whole world. But now Cafe coffee Day, Quickies, Baristas have taken those places. The money of approx 3 rupess we had spent for coffee has now gone up to 50 rupees.
Those precious days where we used to laugh for nothing, while chatting or while playing or even when you fail in your paper because you have got 30 marks for an empty paper, rarely comes into picture in our so called serious corporate world
Hatred and Ego were the words you haven’t heard in those days. You smash or hit your friend for some reason and the next moment you walk along him with hands on his shoulders. But now you don’t like the guy sitting beside you because he’s getting a salary 10k greater that you or he’s always being appreciated by your PM. True friends are hardly found here!!
Those days, should somebody speak badly about your college, you can find your blood boiling inside even though you don’t like your principal. But here loyalty is the lost word; whenever someone is talking badly about your company you join them to criticize your own company. You join the company with the resignation day in the mind because you’re looking much more for you than you deserve , Don’t mind – Along with us, Tom, Dick & Harry are also planning for the same!!
You have seen the late nights only on the eve of the exam, where you rely on your friend to wake him/ her at night 1 or 2. And how can we forget those last minute tensions in exam, you remember that only just before entering the exam you find that you have forgotten to revise an important question that your friend suggested that it will surely appear on this exam. You rush back and flip those pages with tension.
But today you work at least 2 days a week till 1 or 2 in the night to deliver something to your unknown client who is at US or UK. You are aimlessly typing at the useless word document that your supervisor asked you to finish with his tailor made smile. Loads of tension with calls from home, with your eye lids eager to kiss each other and you promise them to allow it a little later, cursing Bill Gates for inventing MSWord.
We are all in the same desert where I have realized that we are moving from the warmth ness of the Oasis to chase a mirage. A mirage that promises a lot of thing, but still it’s just a mirage. When I turn back I can find thousands chasing that mirage with a ID card around their neck. I wish all the best for them.
Monday, May 10, 2010
Indian Stock Markets May 2010 - Where are they headed!! Nice article from ET
The latest decline in the Indian stock market coupled with the unraveling of the Greek sovereign debt crisis have raised the spectre of a double dip recession.
And investors are running around for answers as only a few weeks ago Nifty looked poised for a fresh high. However, the optimism was affected by a poor show by the Euro zone and its contagious impact on global investors.
Foreign institutional investors (FIIs) have suddenly turned net sellers on Indian bourses while domestic mutual funds (MFs) continue to sit on the fence. Meanwhile, corporate earnings have been patchy so far with no certainty about the year ahead.
Amid all this, investors would do well to make stock specific calls rather than taking a market view. But before you open up your wallet to make fresh purchases, let’s pause and run a diagnostic check on the Indian equity market and the factors that drive it.
The stock prices are primarily driven by two factors, underlying earnings growth (of listed companies) and the liquidity flow or the amount of purchasing power of investors/traders.
While the former acts a push factor, the latter pulls the market up as cash-rich investors bid-up stock prices. So to get a handle on the current wobble on the Dalal Street, we need to get to the bottom of these two factors.
Let’s handle the liquidity factor first. The two sources of liquidity (or funds) for Indian equities are, domestic and foreign. The key domestic sources are retail investors, mutual funds (MFs) and insurance companies.
Of these, MFs and insurers play the most important role given their size and influence on the market. Foreign money primarily comes from institutions investors (FIIs) and they now collectively account for nearly a quarter of the fund flow on the Indian bourses.
The chart (Fully Loaded) shows the historical movement in the cumulative FIIs flow and MFs investments in the equities. As the chart shows, on a cumulative basis, the FIIs inflows into India remain strong despite the recent wobble on the Street.
In contrast, domestic MFs have been net sellers on the market since September last year. The corresponding data on insurance money is missing but, it is most likely to be positive or at worst stable since, insurance premiums are committed expenses and their flow doesn’t change much in the short-term.
On the balance, however, more money has flowed into the market in the past 12 months compared with the cash that has gone out.
This probably explains the continued positive bias on the Street despite the occasional bouts of sell-offs. In May so far, however, FIIs have been net sellers and this is the reason behind recent market correction. The future course of the market will be greatly influenced by liquidity flow on the Street in the coming weeks and months.
Domestic liquidity is greatly influenced by the Reserve Bank of India’s monetary policy. Right now, there is an uncertainty regarding monetary tightening.
The central bank has not been very aggressive in addressing high inflation. It hiked the key interest rates and cash reserve requirement moderately, leaving the systemic liquidity almost unaffected.
But, headline inflation is still hovering in the double-digit zone and there are no signs of easing up of inflationary pressures.
Despite new rabi crop arrivals, food prices continue to remain at higher levels. And now rising raw material costs have pushed up prices of manufactured products.
RBI has clearly hinted in its latest policy document that aggressive measures could not be ruled out if inflationary pressures continue to be high. And if that were to happen, domestic liquidity could be sucked out, adversely affecting equity markets.
Lack of domestic liquidity could be compensated by higher inflows of FIIs money. This, in turn, depends on global liquidity position.
Global liquidity is broadly defined as money supply (M2) growth in the G-4 countries, Japan, the euro zone, the UK and the US.
The bail out packages given by these countries during the financial crisis resulted in a surplus liquidity globally, which has spilled over to emerging markets. These countries have not yet started withdrawing cheap and easy money from the system. As a result, foreign capital inflow continues in emerging economies.
However, inflation is now rearing its head in most major economies and this may push their central banks to withdraw easy monetary policies soon.
In that case, emerging markets, such as India, could see a reversal in capital flows, hurting the domestic equity market.
According to an International Monetary Fund (IMF) study, a 10% decline in global liquidity growth is associated with a 2% decrease in equity returns of the liquidityreceiving economies, which are essentially emerging markets.
The other global factor is the potential loss to the global banking system from any possible sovereign default in Europe.
Most global banks and large asset managers, such as pension funds, have big exposure to the European sovereign and if they face a haircut in Europe, they will be forced to repair their balance sheet by selling in other markets.
And even if the default is averted through timely intervention, the global investment climate has been vitiated and investors would be risk-averse in the near term. This is not a great recipe to attract FIIs into the Indian market.
Liquidity becomes a minor issue if an asset shows the potential for higher future earnings. This is especially true in case of equities as it not only provides capital appreciation to investors but also offers the possibility of earning recurring dividend income.
So in the long-term, the equity prices should ideally track the growth in corporate earnings and other financial indicators.
This is shown in the adjoining chart where we have plotted the historical trend in Nifty value against its earning per share, book value and dividend per share.
All indicators are based to the value 100 on January 1, 1999, and thus show their relative movement over the years. The latter three indicators are derived by inverting the Nifty’s readily available valuations ratios such as P/E multiple, price to book value and dividend yield.
The chart shows that, even after the recent correction, Nifty is trading ahead of the underlying fundamentals. This would not have been a major issue if India Inc’s growth momentum had remained intact.
As the chart shows, there has been an absolute decline in Nifty’s EPS, book value and dividend per share in recent months. And there are no immediate signs of a trend reversal either.
The complete picture would, however, emerge only after the current earning season that ends this month. So far, earning growth has been patchy and pockets of good growth such as shown by the auto sector have been undone by laggards like cement. And in many sectors, the growth has been aided by non-recurring factors such as low-base effect.
The silver lining, however, is the fact that that Nifty EPS has been highest in over two years, implying that most companies have recouped the losses they suffered in the late 2008 and early 2009. It is yet to be seen how the new fiscal pans out for India Inc amid global macroeconomic uncertainty.
Tuesday, May 4, 2010
Tandoori Chicken
Ambassador - Revived
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Idhazhil Kadhai Ezhuthum from Unnal Mudiyum Thambi
Movie Name: Unnal Mudiyum Thambi (1988)
Singer: Balasubrahmanyam SP, Janaki S
Music Director: Ilayaraja
Lyrics: Muthulingam Pulamaipithan
Year: 1988
Producer: Rajam Balachander
Director: Balachander K
Actors: Gemini Ganesan, Kamal Hassan, Seetha
idhazhil kadhai ezhudhum naeramidhu
inbangal azhaikkudhu aaaa
manadhil sugam malarum maalaiyidhu
maanvizhi mayangudhu aaaa
ilamai azhagai alli anaippadharkae ()
irukaram thudikkudhu thanimaiyum nerungida inimaiyum pirakkudhu
(idhazhil)
kaadhal kiligal rendu jaadai paesakkandu
aedhaedhoa ennam en nenjil udhikkum
naanum neeyum saerndhu ragam paadumboadhu
neeroadai poala en nenjam inikkum
iniya paruvamulla ilanguyilae ()
aen inum thaamadham manmadhak kaaviyam ennudan ezhudha
naanum ezhudhida ilamaiyum thudikkudhu
naanam adhai vandhu idaiyinil thadukkudhu
aengith thavikkaiyil naanangal edharkadi
aekkam thanindhida oru murai thazhuvadi
kaalam varum varai poruththirundhaal
kanni ival malark karam thazhuvudamae
kaalam enraikkuk kanindhidumoa
kaalai manam adhuvarai poruththidumoa
maalai malar maalai idum vaelai thanil
dhaegam idhu virundhugal padaiththidum
thoagai poalae minnum poovai undhan koondhal
kaarmaegam enrae naan solvaen kannae
paavai endhan koondhal vaasam yaavum andha
maegam thanil aedhu nee solvaai kannaa
azhagaich chumandhu varum azhagarasi ()
aanandha poomugam andhiyil vandhidum sundhara nilavoa
naalum nilavadhu thaeyudhu maraiyudhu
nangai mugamena yaaradhaich chonnadhu
mangai un badhil manadhinaik kavarudhu
maaran kanai vandhu maarbinil paayudhu
kaaman kanaigalaith thaduththidavae
kaadhal mayil thunai ena varugiradhu
maiyal thandhidum vaarthaigalae
moagam enum neruppinaip pozhigiradhu
moagam neruppaaga adhaith theerkkumoru
jeeva nadhi aruginil irukkudhu