Monday, October 10, 2005

From Vada Pav to Biryaani

This post has been long over due.

I left Paradox Studios and moved to Hyderabad in persue of my hunger to know more, to make more and to love more games.

Last 2 months was lot of reshuffling and re-settling. Its not easy to switch cities, till now I thought only To-Do lists (Note: Plural) on your desktops and approaching demo deadlines where the stressors, but Boy! Moving cities is a big pain in the *$$. Especially if the city you are leaving is Mumbai (THE CITY of India).

This recent experience made me come up with a To-Do List for moving Cities.

Assuming you know your date or month to relocate.

  • Finalizing a place to stay in the city you are moving to.

    • Fire up your internet and Google for the city’s websites

    • Keywords – City Name – Cost of living – Rentals – Commuting

    • Nice to have details

      • City Map

      • Bookmark Forum’s on rentals/sales.

      • Telephone number’s of estate agents.

        Call up and pretend that you are the richest dude around, make sure you sound as if Bill Gates just applied for a job in your company. This will give you a list and rentals for the best localities around.

        Call up another agent and now pretend you just got fired and filed for bankruptcy yesterday. This will either get you nothing or bunch of cold words, in which you should try to figure out the names of the locations and try to remove the (int) part as they are the rental costs.

        So now you have yourself a price range.

      • List of friends or friend’s friends and/or family members. (This might give you a good chance of locating few more in your family tree, the ones you have never heard off).

      • List of Hotels/Motels/Guest Houses according to your price range.

      • List out modes of travel to that city from yours.

      • Optional – List of wine shops J

      • Your bank Branches.

      • Your Cooking Gas (LPG) Company’s Dealer.

      • Your Mobile operator Branches.

    • Plan a weekend trip to the city (you might want to extend the stay so have leaves applied for)

    • Reach the city and park your gear at your decided temporary accommodation.

    • Buy all local news papers having “Classified” section for rental ads, start calling, try getting lucky.

    • Hook up with an estate agent, but make sure that you tell him your budget which is 20% less than your actual one. My trick: I ask him to show me two sets of apartments:

      • 1st is for myself and my budget is X (less than my actual budget).

      • 2nd for my brother (if you don’t have one, create a fictitious one) which is approx. 10% more than my Budget. This because I am a range guy I like things in brackets. That’s just me.

    • Get lucky – strike the deal –get back home before you leave runs out. I recommend having few days extra, one never knows how much paper work needs to be done and how long it can take.

  • Finalizing the Packing plan

    • This can be quite tricky, depends on how much stuff you have, if you are like me, married without kids and with basic house hold stuff and the company is bearing the relocation cost, I strongly suggest hiring a Mover and Packer agent.

    • Get the list of all the Packers, again I am the brackets guy, inquire the price list from the best to the one with the funniest name, which might sound more like a game studio than a Packer company. Inquire INSURANCE details. Ask details for

      • Packing material that they will be using.

      • Transportation vehicle

      • Packing time

      • Ask them to show you photographs (They generally have one)

      • COST.

      • Hidden cost

      • INSURANCE (Don’t fail ask what if the good needs to be stored for a day or two at the destination city).

    • Pay the booking charges and get all contact information.

  • Finalizing the Travel plan

    • If you already been to the city once for finalizing your apartment, you know how good or bad the last mode of commuting was? If its good book your tickets if not then choose another mode of transport.

    • Confirm the dates to

      • Your current landlord (Notice)

      • Your new landlord (Inquire for availability of keys et al.)

      • Your mover and packer agent.

      • Your maid (Notice period for Mumbai Bai, that’s cool huh!)

      • Your cable operator.

      • Your news paper guy.

      • Your friends and family (This will help them find time for your farewell party)

      • Yourself (you don’t want to forget it yourself in all the stress and anxiety)

    • Request Change of Address to:

      • Your Bank.

      • Your Telephone/Mobile Operator.

      • Your Credit Card agencies.

      • Your Game Developers Magazine Website.

      • Your Tax agents and Insurance Agents.

      • Your Cooking Gas (LPG) Company. (Request for transfer as well)

      • Your internet service provider.

    • You are all set now.

  • Packing, Moving, Reaching and Settling.

    • If you have followed the list above you will be able to ease out Packing, Moving and Reaching.

    • Settling might take a long time.

It has been over a month here and I am still settling in.

Will talk about my New Job is the next post and man! It will be exciting.

5 comments:

DoD said...

hello sir...i was so fascinated after seeing ur photo....finally i found THE ONE from the industry itself...

i m rupesh mandke i.e. Dance_of_Death from IGDA forum....nice to read blog sir.

even i felt the same pain while leaving mumbai n comin to chennai but since the cause was GAMING ....i could not resist myself....ANYTHING FOR GAMING...right???

hope for a long lasting relationship through any medium sir.

tc.

Rupesh Mandke(Dance of death)

Sumit said...

Hi Rupesh,

Thanks! Looking fwd for our interaction.

"ANYTHING FOR GAMING" - No
"ANYTHING LOGICAL FOR GAMING" - Yes.

DoD said...

oh ya sir...

anything LOGICAL...lol

Anonymous said...

sumit's life is logic lol

nice post dude, i've moved so many times in the last 4 years i can do most of this out of my head lolol


ok about the game (chef rastogi)

add another parameter hot/cold boolean and also maybe each ingredient's response to heat. if you add two ingredients and heat them in the range of [0,1,2,3] what happens?
the properties might change.


you can also tie the opposite taste configs
eg make sure if sweetness is in the high range bitterness cant be in the high range as well for the same ingredient and other ingredients you mix as well


here.
Ingredient A - 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 3 | True
Ingredient B - 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | False

if you add the above to make a dish, the dish will have
Dish XYZ - 1 | 3 | 1 | 1 | 3 | True (Higher value is taken; note 1 and 1 does not make the dish (2) twice salty as the proportion of food (Quantity) also increases.

if you take the quantity factor then ,
it should be Dish XYZ - 1 | 2.5 | 0.5 | 1 | 2 | True since in the other fields also quantity becomes double and one ingredient is 1 and the other is 3 so the factor should be average of the two. but that of course is not possible.

so you should try and make rules of how the ingredients are mixed together.
if blended - average( figure out how to do it or use float)
if heated - higher value
barbecued - ......
marianated - ..........


shit i have some other thoughts but gtg, will write again
-blackmagic

Sumit said...

Yup!

You have some valid points there. Keep them coming.

Right now Chef Rastogi is on hold, will start it again in November.

Thanks