5 Feb 2012

Kritansh 2012

Posted by Akshay Kumar | 5 Feb 2012 | Category: , , | 1 comments



Kritansh, the Annual techno-management fest of KIIT University, Bhubaneswar, is one fertile platform where ideas can grow and get transformed later into well-engineered creations. The Fest spans through 3 days from 14th February 2011 to 16th February 2011 and includes an array of events from both the fields of technology and management.





Events:

Learn

Does Gray Matter?

Codiac

Tales from the Crypt

Quest of the Strings

Hackathon



Robosphere

Robowars

Wall-I

Crack the Track

Arkitek

Robo Race

Pathfinder

Aquabots

Destined

Insta



Create

Blitzkreig

Contraption

Impulse

Elektrina

Mega Builders

Innovation Intensified

Stack ‘em up

Kautuk



Play

Kurukshetra

Khoj

Karmayudh



Gurukul

Orazione

Big Fight



Corporate Finestra

Consigliere

Genesis

Bulls & Bears

Ad-Valorem

Kronos



Joie De Vivre

Holocaust

Ground zero



Kreative Eye

LEARN

Does Gray Matter?

Codiac

Tales from the Crypt

Quest of the Strings

Hackathon



Website: http://kritansh.in/




3D Street Art by Tracy Lee Stum

Posted by Akshay Kumar | | Category: , | 0 comments



3D Street Art with Tracy Lee Stum

 Mon Feb 06 2012 at 12:00 pm
 Venue : In front of Bakul Children's Library, 16 Satyanagar, Bhubaneswar










Bakul Foundation and the US Consulate, Hyderabad in association with the Broken Scooter and 93.5 RedFM present Tracy Lee Stum,one of the best 3D street artists in the world. Tracy, who holds the Guinness record for the largest chalk painting, will do workshops with children and art students to expose them to this interesting art form. Tracy will be doing a chalk painting on the road herself as well.

We invite all of you to come and witness this great art and the artist on 6th Feb. The art but not the artist will be there to see on the 7th.


Contact Details : +91 9777402001
You Can Find her on Facebook: Tracy Lee Stum




12 Sept 2011

12 Tips to Improve Your Study Habits Next Term

Posted by Akshay Kumar | 12 Sept 2011 | Category: , | 0 comments

messy_notes

 

 

How did your studying go last term? Did you spend time learning things as they were being taught, or did you end up having to go through caffeine-loaded, marathon study sessions the night before your finals?

Improving study methods a week before exams isn’t going to help. But if you get the right habits early on in the term, you can save yourself time and agony later.

 

What are Good Studying Habits?

I’m just another student like yourself. I don’t believe there is one perfect key to excellent grades that will work for everyone. But there are some common themes to improving study habits and not all of them require investing more time. In fact, most of these suggestions will be aimed at reducing your total time usage, by studying smart–not just hard.

I believe learning is a product of investment. If you make small, efficient investments in learning throughout the term you can spare yourself the frustration of cramming near the end. Your grades will thank you and your social life doesn’t need to wither and die to learn more each term.

Here are some tips for improving your study habits next term:

  1. Use 30-Day Trials. Popularized by Steve Pavlina, trial periods work under the principle that by committing to a change for a month, it will become a habit. Since it is study techniques you want to reinforce, pick one or two habits and work on them for an entire month.
  2. The Learn-It-Once Approach. Spend your time learning things as they come up in your courses. Attend classes with the perspective that you could be tested at any moment. It should only be material that you were just presented that you might not have had time to fully learn. Waiting before tests, assignments or finals is taking things too far.
  3. Morning Review. Wake up a half hour earlier and spend that time reading from your textbook. If you’ve already read the chapters, spend the time rewriting the key concepts into a notebook. A half-hour out of your day in the morning probably won’t create a huge impact on your schedule, yet over the entire term it can be invaluable in boosting your understanding.
  4. Link Courses to Daily Life. Spend some time each week looking for practical ways you can use the information you are learning. If you can find situations from your daily life that are similar to your subjects, they can go from abstract theories to concrete tools.
  5. Background Reading. Invest some of your time each week in reading the background of the ideas surrounding your subjects. Pick out interesting topics in the news or books that make use of ideas from your field of study. Background reading can reinforce the ideas by connecting them with reality.
  6. Set Daily Study Times. Set periods of time that you will spend studying each day. Once you spend a month reinforcing these learning periods, it will become automatic. Regular studying times prevent the need for cramming and can give you consistency in your schedule.
  7. Cut Wasted Time. I’ve had classes where I received an A+, yet I attended less than a third of the lectures. I have had courses where I didn’t buy or read the textbook. Talk to other classmates about how the course is graded (mostly textbook, mostly lectures, etc.) and use that as a basis for deciding where to cut time if you have to. Skipping a class can be a good strategy if it means you could better learn the subject on your own.
  8. Focus on Learning, Not Grades. Grades are just an artificial marker used to assess how much you’ve learned. While they are useful as a measurement tool, focusing on grades over understanding and learning useful ideas wastes your time. Look for ways you can use the material you are learning and focus on understanding it first, put grades afterwards.
  9. Read Papers Upside Down. A good editing habit when checking over your essays and assignments is to read them upside down. This prevents you from speed reading the page and missing grammatical or sentence structure errors. This also gives you a better feeling of how an essay might be read through fresh eyes, letting you improve your style.
  10. The 10-Year Old Rule. Pretend you had to teach everything in your course to a ten-year old. Could you do it? While advanced theoretical physics might not be comprehensible by a young child, the idea is that you should be able to simplify your subject into easily understandable pictures and metaphors. If you can do this for yourself, it will make your job far easier for remembering later.
  11. Seek Your Professors. A great tip from Tim Ferris in the 4-Hour Workweek involves what to do if you get a bad mark on a paper. He recommends meeting your professor during office hours and asking for suggestions for improvement. Tim recommends that you exhaust every possible question, staying for an hour or two if you have to. By doing this you will not only have a wealth of information about how papers are marked, but your professor will also hesitate to give you a lousy mark in the future.
  12. Schedule a Balance. Compress your work and studying into the weekdays and mornings so you don’t need to work all of the time. Good habits also involve taking time for rest as well.

 

 

[Source]




11 Aug 2011

PhotoWalk | Finally It Starts

Posted by Akshay Kumar | 11 Aug 2011 | Category: , , | 0 comments

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Photo Walk, “Yes” the first event organised by KIIT Student Center. Ever since we started KIIT Student Center, my friend always asked, “What is this KIIT Student Center ? You attend meetings with the other Core Members but you don’t do anything. We haven’t seen anything organised by you. No events that you claimed will be organised.” I told them to wait as it takes time, we will soon have an event.
 
”Finally it started” Photo Walk was the first event started and organised by KIIT Student Center in association with KIIT Photographers Club. In this event [Photo Walk], photographers had to walk around with their cameras and photograph their surroundings. Recently the term has become synonymous with a group of photographers, walking in predetermined locations and then sharing their imagery. Alone or with a group, the purpose is still the same and that is to go out and shoot.
 
”Photo Walk” started from Big Bazaar, Patia to some 100-200 meters towards Nandan-Kanan. Photographers took various pictures of whatever they found in their surroundings while walking. The session was headed by Juggal Debata Sir, Faculty of Art and Media Sciences in KIIT. It was a great event.
 
Check out this section for Update. We will soon Upload some of the Pictures clicked by the photographers during the event.
 
[Update]
Here are some of the Pics of core members of KIIT Student Center having fun at the event:




4 Aug 2011

Zuck’s Sis Quits On Him | Randi Zuckerberg Is Leaving Facebook

Posted by Akshay Kumar | 4 Aug 2011 | Category: , , | 0 comments

randi-zuckerberg-040811

 

Facebook's director of marketing Randi Zuckerberg, sister of the social network's billionaire founder Mark Zuckerberg, is leaving her brother's company to start her own social media consulting company RtoZMedia.

 

Randi, who has been with Facebook for the last six years, said she feels it is the "perfect time" to move outside of Facebook to build a company focused on the "exciting trends underway in the media industry."

 

Here’s her Facebook Status Update where she announced about this:

screen-shot-2011-08-03-at-3-14-13-pm

 

 

According to her resignation letter posted on the website AllThingsD, Randi said she has focussed on innovating and pushing the media industry forward by introducing new concepts around live, social, participatory viewing.

"We have made incredible progress, but there is still much to be done and other ways I can affect change."

A prominent name in Silicon Valley, Randi has been on maternity leave for the last three months. She was recently nominated for an Emmy award in the category of live coverage of a current news event for her work on 'Facebook Live', a real-time news show she created and hosted for the company.

 

Copy of Randi Zuckerberg's resignation letter:

 


 

 

Credits: CNN-IBN | TechCrunch




3 Aug 2011

A Visual Tour of Facebook India Office: What Happens Inside

Posted by Akshay Kumar | 3 Aug 2011 | Category: , | 1 comments

1

Few months back, Facebook opened its first office in Asia at Hyderabad (India), popularly also known as "Cyberabad” to extend its multi-lingual support base.

The office, covering about 50,000 sq. foot ground is currently powered by 300+ people who look after the 10 million+ active users in India and other countries in Asia.

 

For those who haven’t seen it yet, the office has been beautifully designed and the walls have been decorated with some awesome graffiti. Here are some pictures:

 

 

 

The Office, for sure, looks amazing. It has been designed in a way to ensure that everyone enjoys their work in a cool environment. What do you think?

 

[Source]




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