Prelude:
We can’t
imagine a world without computers once they entered our lives about 40-45 years
ago. The speed at which these machines have evolved over the last 4 decades is
unimaginable. The first of the computers almost filled a mid-sized room, and a few
simple calculations took almost forever, in today’s context.
From the
Mainframes and Minis, to Desktops (also referred to as Personal Computers –
PCs), Laptops and Handhelds, these computers have come a long way in reducing
the size, weight, et al, while increasing the processing power in Geometric
Progression.
This
article of mine surrounds the time at which I got introduced to these
lovely gadgets and my experiences thereafter. Self-taught, as the learning of
computer operations was very expensive, more due to the novelty involved, it
was an uphill task to upskill ourselves, as the means and opportunities to learn
economically were very limited. The struggles with technology, which many of
my generation may perfectly relate to, made us very adaptive as we learnt the
ropes of newer things, albeit in a difficult way, though not systematically like
a curriculum, but effectively enough to work with these computers.
My
Experience:
My first
experience with this amazing gadget was in my erstwhile workplace at the Mafatlal
Group, Thane, Near Mumbai. In those days, the personal computers (PCs as they came
to be known as and Desktops now) were very few in numbers, and the offices and
establishments that could afford it could be counted on the fingertips. We had an EDP
(Electronic Data Processing) department that was instrumental in all computer-related activities, and our prized possession was the IBM Mainframe 1401
Machine.
That said,
the data entry in those days was two in two stages. First, there was a ‘Punch
Card’ with columns and rows that were punched using a card punch, and this was
a prestigious function in the erstwhile days, resulting in a very high demand
for Punch Card Operators.
These
punched cards were run in the card processor, and each batch of punched cards was
stored for posterity. It required a huge infrastructure to store these card
batches safely.
Then came
the floppy disks that were magnetically written by the disk reader/writer to
store data. Incidentally, the first of the computers required to be started
with these disks to activate the operating system, and only then run the other
programs. These were of 640KB data capacity and were progressively sidelined by
stiff 2½” diskettes (stiffy) that could hold a princely 1.44MB of data. CDs and
DVDs entered the fray much later, let alone the memory cards and the pen drives.
On the RAM
side of it, 640MB was the basic, and additional memory came in multiples of 1MB
(1,024MB). Of course, many in Gen X and Millennials are unaware of any memory size below a gigabyte, while we had not even heard of this term.
One of the
earliest operating systems was MS or PC-DOS (Personal Computer – Disk Operating
System) from Microsoft. There was a plethora of MS/PC-DOS versions before Windows
came into being.
I restrict
the discussion about the evolution of computers here, as this topic is too vast
to comprehend in one go!
Thereafter, I moved to Chennai for a year or so, where our office had just two PCs
dedicated to R&D and Operations. The accounting function was totally manual. In
late 1990, I joined a major Alco-Bev Group in Bengaluru.
There was a
time gap of a few months till I joined this Group in the late 1980s, when my good
friend Srikishan ventured into the business of Computerised Horoscopes and
Predictions. He had invested in a PC and I forcibly helped him out (?) with the
data entry and printouts, heralding my first experiences of using a PC.
Joining this Group in the late 1990s, we had a limited number of PCs to use and had to wait for our
turn. It was only when I was transferred to Goa to head the Finance Dept that
I got a PC for my exclusive use. The price of this PC was a princely Rs.98,000, and it came equipped with a massive 2MB RAM, a 5¼” floppy drive, a 20MB Hard
Drive with MS-DOS – one of the top-end machines those days, and included a
soft-white monitor and a keyboard. Mouse, as an input device, was unheard of in those days.
It was here
that I learnt the tricks of networking. I had visited D-Link’s (one of the
leading networking hardware companies) manufacturing facility in Verna
Industrial Estate to procure the requisite network cards to connect the PCs to
the server. Installing the network cards on stand-alone PCs, connecting it
using coaxial cables, and configuring it to access the server was a different
ballgame altogether to me, as a professional Chartered Accountant. But I always
had a flair to learn anything about computers and electronics, and therefore,
this was a blessing to me. My colleagues in the EDP team were quite helpful in
allowing me to experiment with the networking. In those days, we used the Novell NetWare
operating system to connect to the server.
All the
productivity applications like the erstwhile WordStar, Word-Pro, Lotus 123,
Framework, and a plethora of different versions of the Microsoft Suite of
products like Excel, Power Point, Word, etc., were learnt by us either by trial-and-error
or referring it to friends, peers at work, etc., as was needed in discharging
the daily routine in our work-lives.
From here,
my job took me to Mumbai, where in this greenfield brewery, I had to run,
operate, and maintain the computer systems, including the network (excluding the
Brewing process-related system). We were hit by the scare of Y2K (remember, the
scare that ‘planes will fall off the sky at the stroke of midnight on 31st
December 1999’? Yes, it was this scare) and I had to be in the Brewery, a good
35 km away from our place and during the mid-night, ran the diagnostic program
to enable all the computers (mainly the process related systems) to circumvent
the crash due to Y2K, so that on dawn of 1st January 2000, all
computers were hunky-dory!
Well, I had
been there and done that, too!
My next
sojourn was in Kolkata, where I didn’t play any major role in computers as I
didn’t want to disturb the setup, as the EDP department was quite capable of
handling the software-related issues, and there weren’t any hardware-related
issues.
Providence
took me from here to Johannesburg, South Africa, in mid-February 2002, where I
was supposed to be seconded on a two-year contract extendable by another two
years. Instead, I ended up living at this lovely place and country for over 16
years (the longest two-year contract for anyone, I suppose).
Climbing
the corporate ladder to head the Finance function, I was also the
Administrative Head of the Info-Tech functions of the company. My learning about
computers took a different turn here as the company had countrywide operations
and we had to link with the system users across the country, online and on real
real-time basis. Though not operationally educated on these terminologies, I kept
abreast of the different topologies of networking, including the issues relating to switches, routers, and different types of other peripherals. Understanding the Spec-ing
of required hardware, compliance, and governance of all licensed software was
another soft learning for me, though I had my colleague, the IT Manager, to take care
of all these.
Oh! I
forgot to add that I did take my CISA exams in June 2005 and passed in my first
attempt, as a challenge from my then-colleague and boss. That I didn’t pursue
becoming a member of the Institute, ISACA – USA, is another story.
In between,
we had hit a potential catastrophe of our legacy accounting system (Solution-6)
being redundant and to facilitate the migration to an ERP, I was tasked to create
a common Chart of Accounts (just to mention, we had over 12 breweries and 100 depots
connected to it), so that the accounting stories of each of these breweries
could be on the same page of reference. Needless to add, this exercise saved us
substantially in audit fees. The liberty of adding more lines in the Chart of
Accounts was restricted, and initially, I was sworn at by all the Accountants of
the Breweries as their favourite toy (of opening line of accounts, at the drop
of a hat) was snatched away by me. Once they saw the wisdom, they appreciated
the way I handled the exercise in a very strict manner.
Thereafter,
I was intensely involved in the selection of and implementation of AccPac (Now Sage
300) ERP, setting up with various parameters, accounting controls, migration of
legacy data, et al.
Probably,
my openness in accepting the changes and my flair to learn new things, as life
threw at me, kept me in good standing.
I am sure there are many in my generation, or older/younger, who can relate to my story
and draw parallels.
Epilogue:
Agnostic
about Gen Z, our generation has the attitude of never say die in adapting to newer
technologies, whether by design or default. From the point of running a totally manual environment, we
progressed through the ages of Main Frames, Mini & Micro Computers, Laptops, and to Hand-Held devices. With a pittance of memory (both RAM and ROM) to
unlimited Cloud-based applications and data storage, we were forced to adapt ourselves to the
ever-changing technological advancements, learning on the job, and
implementing our learnings to the actual requirements demanded by our lives.
Change is
the only constant – so they say and to stay relevant, we have to adapt with the
times and tides that are thrown at us. We, from our generation, are probably less
stressed in our lives than the successive generations, and consequently, we have
a better frame of mind in accepting and adapting to the changes life throws at us than the severely
stressed-out Millennials and Gen Z.
3 comments:
Very well written.
How well you have articulated!
Chat gpt have overtaken for processing and speed at which it send analyses and gives personal touch similar to Siri or may be another table top device
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