Showing posts with label Jugaad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jugaad. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 6, 2021

Trading Jugaad- Stock Trading (Day 5)

Interesting topic, right? The market is so hot these days, and trading stocks is such a favorite pastime, if I did a good job on this post here, I can get a million views LOL. 

These days, the Jugaad in stock trading is simple. The market is so hot, buy stocks of Tesla or any small-cap, preferably a bio-tech or an energy-related, stock that is catching unusually high volume, and you are done! You are more likely to earn money than lose it. Making money is just that simple. I am not going to make it complicated. Enjoy the ride as long as it lasts ;)

Enjoy your day!

An update after 2 days! Tesla stock jumped around 20% over the last two days, from $650 to $780 today, January 8, 2021! If you invested a million dollars as given in this simple advice, you would have made $200,000 in 2 days!!! 


Tuesday, January 5, 2021

Photography Jugaad- Take better photos! (Day 4 )

Photography Jugaad. While taking photos, I often use some Jugaad to take better photos. I am not going to get into a lot of technical details in this post. Instead, I will share some quick tips.(If you want to see better photography tricks, please visit my Trial and Error Photography blog.)

What matters most in photography? In my opinion, it is Light, Light, and Light. In real estate, you have probably heard the term that the important things in buying any real estate are Location. Location and Location. Similarly, in photography, for a better photo, the most important things are Light, Light, and Light. Along with Light, the other two important things are the photographer and the equipment. We can talk about the other two in some other post. Here we are talking about Jugaad so we want to make the best use of the photographer in YOU, and want to use the cell phone or the camera that you have handy! I am not going to say that you would need to use an SLR or an expensive camera to follow the photography Jugaad outlined in this post.

1) Light: Here are some lighting tips:

  • When the background is too bright compared to the person, the subject or person will be too dark. If you are using a real camera, turn on the flash. You can do the same with a cellphone camera but the tiny flash may not be able to give enough light on the person's face. See details here.
  • When the light is low, or even when it is not that low, use the flash on your phone or the camera, to throw more light on people's faces. This will generally help you get better skin tones and people in the photo will pop up.
  • Many times, you can ask a friend or use someone's phone and use that phone's Flashlight too to through more light on the subject. Generally, a phone's flash is not that powerful but using multiple phones, can really get you better light, and hence better photos.
  • Given a choice, take a photo during day time instead of in the evening, or in artificial light.
  • If possible, move around your subject and you can also move around. You will be amazed to see how different angles can impact the light and can help you improve the quality of your photos.
2) Control the light: The second most important thing in taking better photos is the ability to control the light. If you let in more light, the photo is going to be washed out. If you didn't take in enough light, the photo is going to be dark. Now, a one-dollar question is (I wouldn't say "a million-dollar question" because we are on a Jugaad. we don't have the luxury of millions ;) ) how much light is enough light? There is no measure or value that fits all situations. In my opinion, when you have a photo you like, the light is enough. When you have a photo that is darker than you would have liked, the light is not sufficient! When the faces or details are washed out, the light is too much. So how to make a photo that you would like? 
Generally, by default, your camera (when I say Camera, I am including the camera on your cell phone too) decides how much light to let in to create a perfect photo for you. Read this twice. The light is what you see around you. However, to take a photo, the camera opens the shutter for a certain time and lets the light fall on the sensor to make your photo. The perfect amount of light makes a good photo.
Sometimes the camera doesn't do the job right and your photo is too dark or too bright. If you are using a real camera, you can use "Exposure Compensation". Click here if you want to know this in detail. It is a way to tell your camera to take more light in (when by default your camera took a darker photo the first time), or less light (when you want your camera to take a darker photo). You move the slider on the Right side (many times labeled with a + sign) to tell the camera to allow more light or move it left to tell the camera to take in less light. The more you move the slider away from the center, you are telling the camera to take even more, or even less, light in.
Now on cell phone cameras. the trick is very easy. Take a photo. If the photo is good, well and good, you are set. If you think that a darker photo could have been better, touch (lightly press) the brightest part of your phone screen while taking the photo, and take a photo. If you want a brighter photo, touch the darker part of the frame you are viewing and take a photo. This is a sort of reverse psychology ;) When you press the brighter part of the photo/frame, the camera is told that there is more light out there so it takes in less light. When you press the darker part of the photo, the camera is forced into believing that the light is low, so it tries to compensate by allowing more lights in.
Hope this is not complicated. (See this link for a detailed description of exposure compensation for mobile phone cameras.)

3) Use Timer often: Most cameras and cellphones have a Timer function. Many times, when taking a selfie, we have to extend the arm and then press the shutter release button. This results in your face not looking into the camera lens but trying to find and press on the button. To avoid this, I put the timer to 3 or 10 seconds and take a selfie. With countdown, I am able to have the best look. 
** Many phones have voice activate commands, like 'Shoot', 'Smile', etc., or you can also use Siri or Google and use the voice-activated command to take a photo.

3) Use a tripod, or a selfie stick if possible, or find a place to put your phone.  I carry no tripod or selfie stick. I am always (haha, probably most of the time) able to use some Jugaad and find a place to put the phone. Then I use the Timer feature on the phone or camera for 10 seconds. This can help you take sharp photos, particularly in low light. This can also help you to be in the photo, alone or with your friends.

... I am not running out of my tips but of time... so I am stopping here. Maybe write another post on the topic sometime later.

Sunday, January 3, 2021

Life-Jugaad: Limit the consumption of News (Day 2)

I used to watch news on TV like most people do. However lately, I have started avoiding watching the news on TV or on the Internet. There are a variety of factors behind this.
  • Makes Me More Negative: Thia is the most important reason for me to avoid watching news videos. 
    Most of the time, after I have finished watching the news on TV, I find myself more scared, untrustful to other people, and frustrated to see the ways things are going around me. Most of the time, the news would keep highlighting accidents, criminal activities, shootings, police chases (more common in LA and USA I guess), natural calamities, and similar things. 
  • The World has good and bad all the time. It is not new:
    There are good fellows and bad fellows in the world, there are good things and bad things. This is there from Day 1 of human existence. We humans have always tried to eliminate the bad and create a good world but we have never been able to achieve that. (I think the creation and the destruction, Lord Brahma and Lord Shiva, the good and the bad, is necessary for the world to run on autopilot- a topic for the next time I guess). Now by highlighting, and hammering, the bad more than the good out there, we are making society a bit more worse in my opinion. At the end of consuming some news, if I am angry or frustrated, it is most likely going to get reflected on the people I interact with. A person shares and spreads what he has. If I am happy, I am going to make the people I meet a bit happier. If the news had made me angry, it is likely to be reflected in my behavior.
  • Corrupt Media/ Vested Interests: There are times when there is some vested interest that is trying to 'profit' from us in some news. Profit can be in money, or it could be in terms of influencing our thinking and hence behavior. In short, their times when someone's selfish interests want to 'manipulate' us in a certain way for their gains- monetary, political, or religious. 
    I am generally surprised by some uniform opinions in the US about some leaders in other countries who may actually be liked by their citizens. For most Americans, Kim Jong-un is a joker, Fidel Castro is a danger. Every American was led to believe that Saddam had chemical weapons and weapons for mass destruction though none were ever found, Putin is a villain and PM Narendra Modi has always carried the impression of a Hindu fundamentalist. Most news in the USA about Modi will somehow refer to the world Hindu somewhere. Having grown up in Ahmedabad, I have been through communal riots a few times a year but they are no more. It was only during Modi's regime they stopped. and if I am not wrong, more Muslims voted for him in Gujarat elections than those voted against him when he was a CM of Gujarat.
  • No need for me to take a side, or pass a judgment: 
    Here is a classic case. President Trump. I know he won in the 2016 elections so naturally there are people who like him. He lost in 2020 but still, 45% of voters liked him! Being in California, most of the news would highlight how stupid, or a danger he has been to the world. I always wondered that there must be something about him that some people see in him, which I fail to notice.
    Anyway, at one point, I decided not to take any side. My job was to vote and I did. I don't necessarily have to hate or love him. I can accept him like any individual, who has something good and something bad or weird. I don't need to analyze him to pass some judgment. Even if I do my perfect analysis and give a verdict, all that is worth is one vote in reality ;) I can take him as what he is. The same is true about most people or personalities out there. I don't have to put everyone in a love bucket or a hate bucket. I carry an enormously large third bucket which I fondly call as an "IDC" "I Don't Care" bucket.
    I guess I am more like, St Kabir here:
    कबीरा खड़ा बाज़ार में, मांगे सबकी खैर!
    ना काहू से दोस्‍ती, न काहू से बैर!!
    By starting to avoid analyzing and investigating most of the leaders, I save myself many hours of time and some mental overhead. Also, most of the news we are fed has some bias of the media, newsreader/ writer, or channel in it. So the evidence is most of the time corrupt, unreliable for me to do any fair investigation, and pass my 2 cents worth judgment ;)
  • Focus on the right world: There is the world out there as we all know it, and there is my world. That world has 195 countries and around 7.8 billion people, Something is always going on in some part of that world. My world is the world that I live in, you live in, has people whose actions touch me, has matters that matter to me, and that is the world that I can contribute or influence with my limited time, skills, and resources. I simply don't have the luxury of time, or the interest or willingness, in following things that are happening in some particular country or a place. or with a person. 
So this is my jugaad with reference to the news: I don't waste time and energy in knowing things that really don't matter in my world.

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Life-Jugaad: I want to unLearn (Day 1)

I just stumbled upon this video on TED. The speaker talks about doing something new for the next 30 days. This stuck to my head. I challenged myself to do something new over the next 30 days. 

The question was what to do? I love taking photos and I do take photos almost every day. I walk and hike almost every day- thanks to COVID. As I work from home, I get some time every morning to go on my favorite local hike which can be done in an hour and gives around 600 feet elevation gain. So what new to do? I decided to write something every day, and the result is this blog. I am going to call it Man ki Baat. This is a term popularised by Indian PM Narendra Modi. Of course, my talks are not as significant as his but I want to express myself, my thoughts here on this blog. I am going to focus more on making life simple, and more enjoyable. Being in tune with nature and how it intended life on the earth to be like (IMO).

Here is Day 1: What I want to unLearn.

I spent a few decades learning- learning everything that I could and that came across me. Then I started realizing that the majority of this learning has not helped me much; instead, it changed me into a somewhat different person. This has created a mask on me. I have lost my originality. Now I want to focus more on unlearning what is really not needed (in my humble opinion).
  • I was hammered about the benefits of multi-tasking in life. Why stick to one thing, when you can do multiple! Nobody told me that multi-tasking is a CPU job- it is a brain's job. As I get older, I want to live by heart, not my mind or brain. I want to focus on and enjoy one thing at a time. I want peace, not rush. I want to stay human not become a machine. 
  • I am taught that I should always go for winning; now I think it is not always necessary to win. If only wins bring happiness and when everyone tries to win, the world is supposed to end up as a more miserable place. For every winner, there are tens or hundreds of losers. If happiness is in winning, every win is supposed to create 10 or 100 times more unhappiness. 
    Also, success is a lousy teacher. Failure teaches you more.
  • I was told that knowledge is power; now I think wisdom is power. Knowledge is definitely good- no doubt about it. However, as everything else in life, it also has a dark side. We don't talk about the dark side of knowledge. The feeling of possession of knowledge makes one arrogant. It can sometimes take you out of reality. It can make a person stiff, and with stiffness, you miss the opportunity to be humble, the ability to bow and respect the other person. It makes you argumentative. It makes you believe that you are right, and sometimes, with arrogance, and other times with the 'noble' urge to correct/educated guess the other person, you indulge in arguments. Arguments are for winning, and I don't want to win because I don't want to make the other person lose, feel sad. 
  • I learned to be independent; now I think it is okay to take favors and give favors. Nature wanted the world to be interdependent. Just look around. Everything is dependent on some other thing. If someone needs some help, offer help. If someone offers some help to you, accept it with grace- don't be stubborn. It is not a sign of weakness.
  • Be perfectionist. No, I don't want to be perfect. I am okay with what I am. I am okay if I am not perfect.
  • Don't talk with strangers: No, I want to talk with everyone that crosses my path. Every human being has a story, and every story is interesting enough for me. 
  • The more we have, the happier we are. No, I don't think so now. 
  • Take all that you can. No, leave some for the next person. If you have a fruit tree in the backyard and you find some birds or insects coming to eat them, don't pick all the fruits; leave some fruits on the tree for them. No need to be selfish.

Oh, here is the link to the video that I referred in the opening paragraph of this post.

https://www.ted.com/talks/matt_cutts_try_something_new_for_30_days?utm_campaign=tedspread&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=tedcomshare