
Friday, February 12, 2010
Sunday, January 24, 2010
Netaji Jayanti celebration at Kataka
Monday, October 05, 2009
Weekend News and Views-October
Who is to be blamed?
Over 8000 seats in Engineering, 2000 in MCA, 1300 in MBA streams are lying vacant even after two rounds of Joint Entrance examinations followed by Counseling conducted by the JEE Committee constituted by Policy Planning Body of Government of Orissa. Many wealthy people (not entrepreneurs) have jumped into the higher and technical education sector to make quick money without understanding the ground reality. Without any constructive thought the state government has given NOC and AICTE, NewDelhi has granted permission to start 30 new engineering colleges in the state increasing the seat capacity from 20,000 to 30,000 suddenly in 2009. In this year a substantial portion of eligible science students have migrated to southern states for engineering education due to lower fee structures prevailing there. The students coming from neighbouring states like Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Bihar etc. have preference for older engineering colleges in Orissa. Therefore the newer engineering colleges have failed to fill even 25 % of their allotted seats and in the process have made their future dark. Who is to be blamed for this sorry state of affair in engineering education? The promoters, the state Government or AICTE. In my view all the above three are responsible for this gloomy state and it shows lack of vision, planning and coordination among the stakeholders.
Green Rating for Residential Building
The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), in association with Indian Green Building Council, has introduced a green home rating system for the residential sector. The proposed rating system will serve as a frame work for urban planning and will address issues like water conservation, handling of consumer wastes, use of renewable energy sources, etc. State Bank of India (SBI) has announced to offer concession to developers and owners constructing green homes. With payback period of 3 to 4 years for an incremental investment of 8-10 %, the green home concept may become successful in near future.
Bijay Panda no more
I came to know from Prof.R.K.Sahoo the sad demise of Sri. Bijay Kumar Panda who graduated in Mechanical Engineering from REC, Rourkela in 1966. Though I am not fortunate enough to meet him personally, yet I knew him indirectly from the people who have worked with him. He will be remembered for his impeccable integrity and style of management at Rourkela Steel Plant, Rastriya Ispat Nigam Limited, Essar Steel and Nilachala Ispat Nigam Limited.
Over 8000 seats in Engineering, 2000 in MCA, 1300 in MBA streams are lying vacant even after two rounds of Joint Entrance examinations followed by Counseling conducted by the JEE Committee constituted by Policy Planning Body of Government of Orissa. Many wealthy people (not entrepreneurs) have jumped into the higher and technical education sector to make quick money without understanding the ground reality. Without any constructive thought the state government has given NOC and AICTE, NewDelhi has granted permission to start 30 new engineering colleges in the state increasing the seat capacity from 20,000 to 30,000 suddenly in 2009. In this year a substantial portion of eligible science students have migrated to southern states for engineering education due to lower fee structures prevailing there. The students coming from neighbouring states like Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, and Bihar etc. have preference for older engineering colleges in Orissa. Therefore the newer engineering colleges have failed to fill even 25 % of their allotted seats and in the process have made their future dark. Who is to be blamed for this sorry state of affair in engineering education? The promoters, the state Government or AICTE. In my view all the above three are responsible for this gloomy state and it shows lack of vision, planning and coordination among the stakeholders.
Green Rating for Residential Building
The Confederation of Indian Industry (CII), in association with Indian Green Building Council, has introduced a green home rating system for the residential sector. The proposed rating system will serve as a frame work for urban planning and will address issues like water conservation, handling of consumer wastes, use of renewable energy sources, etc. State Bank of India (SBI) has announced to offer concession to developers and owners constructing green homes. With payback period of 3 to 4 years for an incremental investment of 8-10 %, the green home concept may become successful in near future.
Bijay Panda no more
I came to know from Prof.R.K.Sahoo the sad demise of Sri. Bijay Kumar Panda who graduated in Mechanical Engineering from REC, Rourkela in 1966. Though I am not fortunate enough to meet him personally, yet I knew him indirectly from the people who have worked with him. He will be remembered for his impeccable integrity and style of management at Rourkela Steel Plant, Rastriya Ispat Nigam Limited, Essar Steel and Nilachala Ispat Nigam Limited.
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
RELEASE OF NEW TECHNICAL JOURNAL

A new technical journal titled " Journal of Engineering Innovation and Research" is released on 26th May 2009 which is edited by me. My Father and my small family innaugurated the Journal. This technical endevour will provide platform for sharing engineering thoughts and ideas in our locality. The famous mathematical equation of great scientist Albert Einstein
E=MC square, where E stands for Energy, M stands for Mass and C stands for velocity of light.But in my view E stands for Engineering, M stands for Merit and C stands for Collaboration. So we engineers have to communicate and share our ideas to uplift society to a new level. This journal is the first step in this journey. Access the online version of journal .
Friday, April 10, 2009
Election in Orissa
The people of Orissa will elect their representatives for Legislative Assembly on 16th and 23 rd april of 2009. But one simple question that comes to my mind Are we actually electing the right candidates who will take care of us .
Friday, March 06, 2009
Saturday, October 04, 2008
Dashahara Festival Celebration
This is the time for the ageold celebrationof Dashahara festival . The recent devastating flood in the rivers of Odisha has somewhat dampened the spirit of the celebration. Njoy Odiyas.
Thursday, July 10, 2008
IIM-A ropes in MIT expert to promote innovation
Prof. Eric Von Hippel, an innovation expert from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology(MIT) will be visiting the Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad in november to promote the importance of user based innovations in creating successful companies." India and Indians residing worldwide have a wonderful record as innovators and entrepreneurs. I believe users tend to be the real developers of many important products." says Eric Hippel , professor and head of Innovation and entrepreneurship Group at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
Tuesday, March 18, 2008
Friday, January 04, 2008
HAPPY NEWYEAR 2008
Very happy Newyear to all my friends. Letus hope Orissa will witness sustainable development.
Monday, September 17, 2007
CELEBRATING ENGINEERS' DAY
In our country we celebrate 15th September as Engineers' Day in the memory of late Sir M.Visheshwaraya, one of the chief brains behind India's industrial and engineering development.
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
MAY MASALA
The INSEAD business school in Fontainebleau,France has conceived a Global Innovation Index(GII), a model to show how countries are responding to the challenge of long term economic growth through innovation. The index is based on data from a variety of sources, some objective and some subjective, and includes things such as GDP growth rates, university enrollment rates, and results from the World Economic Forum's annual Executive Opinion Survey.
The GII has in INSEAD's terminology 8 pillars, five input pillars and three output pillars. The input pillars, which support a country's ability to generate and use ideas for innovation, are (1) institutions and policies,(2)human capacity,(3)infrastructure,(4)technology sophistication,(5)business markets and capital. The output pillars, which represent the total benefits of innovation, are (1)knowledge,(2)competitiveness, and(3)wealth.
Out of the 107 countries measured, the GII shows that the US is the most innovative country by a wide margin, followed by Germany, the UK,Japan, and France.India ranks 23rd and China 29th .Because of its recent rapid growth India will presumably move up the GII ranks in future.
The GII has in INSEAD's terminology 8 pillars, five input pillars and three output pillars. The input pillars, which support a country's ability to generate and use ideas for innovation, are (1) institutions and policies,(2)human capacity,(3)infrastructure,(4)technology sophistication,(5)business markets and capital. The output pillars, which represent the total benefits of innovation, are (1)knowledge,(2)competitiveness, and(3)wealth.
Out of the 107 countries measured, the GII shows that the US is the most innovative country by a wide margin, followed by Germany, the UK,Japan, and France.India ranks 23rd and China 29th .Because of its recent rapid growth India will presumably move up the GII ranks in future.
Monday, April 23, 2007
A New Business Paper " UDYOG DUNIYA"
I am launching a business newspaper titled " UDYOG DUNIYA" in Oriya language for the benefit of both existing and budding entrepreneurs of Orissa. If anybody interested to subscribe this fortnightly paper , then contact me immediately.
For a sample of UDYOG DUNIYA, you may email me with your mailing address ...chinmaydas@gmail.com
For a sample of UDYOG DUNIYA, you may email me with your mailing address ...chinmaydas@gmail.com
Friday, March 16, 2007
CRICKET WORLDCUP,INDIAN BILLIONAIRS AND NANDIGRAM
World Cup Cricket-2007
Herschelle Gibbs of South Africa scored six sixes in a over of Bunge of Scotland, surpassing the previous record of Jayasurya of Srilanka in World Cup cricket.
Indian Billionairs rule the Business World
According to Forbe's latest list of Billionairs , India has 36 in the hotlist, becoming the country having maximum number of billionairs in Asia surpassing Japan. Steel Baron Laxmi Narayan Mittal is in 5th position while Ambani Brothers are in 14th and 18th place in the world.
From Kalinga Nagar to Nandi Gram
Acquisition of land for the development of Industries in many places of eastern India had resulted in bitter pills for government due to poor and hasty handlings of various deals. Nearly 17 adibasi people died while protesting against the acquisition of their land by Tata group in Kalinga Nagar of Orissa. Now Nandi Gram(West Bengal) residents are opposing the setting of SEZ. As per the latest report 12 peole have died in Nandigram , making the both Central and State Government to think judiciously about the imlemetation aspect of Globalisation and Industrialisation.
Herschelle Gibbs of South Africa scored six sixes in a over of Bunge of Scotland, surpassing the previous record of Jayasurya of Srilanka in World Cup cricket.
Indian Billionairs rule the Business World
According to Forbe's latest list of Billionairs , India has 36 in the hotlist, becoming the country having maximum number of billionairs in Asia surpassing Japan. Steel Baron Laxmi Narayan Mittal is in 5th position while Ambani Brothers are in 14th and 18th place in the world.
From Kalinga Nagar to Nandi Gram
Acquisition of land for the development of Industries in many places of eastern India had resulted in bitter pills for government due to poor and hasty handlings of various deals. Nearly 17 adibasi people died while protesting against the acquisition of their land by Tata group in Kalinga Nagar of Orissa. Now Nandi Gram(West Bengal) residents are opposing the setting of SEZ. As per the latest report 12 peole have died in Nandigram , making the both Central and State Government to think judiciously about the imlemetation aspect of Globalisation and Industrialisation.
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
FEBRUARY COOL STUFFS
BANGALORE : The Chip City
Bangalore is now home to 70 of the 130 firms(including multinationals) engaged in chip design in India. That makes it not just way ahead of the rest of the Indian competition but one of the top global clusters in chip design, comparable to Silicon Valley, Cambridge(UK), and Taiwan. If we break up the chip design work into design services(designing for others) and proprietary or innovative designing, Silicon Valley, Cambridge(UK) are already ahead. But if design services are considered, Bangalore is in forefront. Global players opt for chip design services offered by Bangalore firms for multiple reasons like talent availability, cost advantage etc.
Travel Portals get Rs.500 cr from PEs in 2006
Travel Portals are increasingly catching the fancy of Private Equity (PE) players with investments in this fast emerging business segment registering a 100 percent jump. The past year alone has witnessed investments of nearly Rs.500 crore being pumped in.
Bangalore is now home to 70 of the 130 firms(including multinationals) engaged in chip design in India. That makes it not just way ahead of the rest of the Indian competition but one of the top global clusters in chip design, comparable to Silicon Valley, Cambridge(UK), and Taiwan. If we break up the chip design work into design services(designing for others) and proprietary or innovative designing, Silicon Valley, Cambridge(UK) are already ahead. But if design services are considered, Bangalore is in forefront. Global players opt for chip design services offered by Bangalore firms for multiple reasons like talent availability, cost advantage etc.
Travel Portals get Rs.500 cr from PEs in 2006
Travel Portals are increasingly catching the fancy of Private Equity (PE) players with investments in this fast emerging business segment registering a 100 percent jump. The past year alone has witnessed investments of nearly Rs.500 crore being pumped in.
Thursday, January 11, 2007
Good Time for SMEs
Small and Medium Enterprises(SMEs) heve become the darlings of corporate India. Bankers pursue them with loan offers, IT vendors say that their real market lies with them, stock market analysists search among them for next infosys, and consultants make presentations about them. SMEs with a turnover of Rs.50-400 crore are hot property these days. Everybody from banks, VCs, private equity players and hedge funds are zooming in to capitalise on their entrepreneurial zeal.
Today's SMEs are a different breed. They have acquired companies abroad, become part and parcel of global supply chains and are even convincing foreign manufacturers to outsource patented design work to them. Two main trends---ancillarisation and export orientation---have been responsible for the change. Small and medium vendors have adapted themselves to the needs of large local manufacturers and have also become suppliers to global manufacturers, the auto ancillaries industries being a prime example.
Give your opinion.
Today's SMEs are a different breed. They have acquired companies abroad, become part and parcel of global supply chains and are even convincing foreign manufacturers to outsource patented design work to them. Two main trends---ancillarisation and export orientation---have been responsible for the change. Small and medium vendors have adapted themselves to the needs of large local manufacturers and have also become suppliers to global manufacturers, the auto ancillaries industries being a prime example.
Give your opinion.
Saturday, January 06, 2007
UCEAN Register in Alumni Website
To get in touch with old pals of U.C.E., Burla , you may register with www.alumniuce.com and get access to a large pool of old friends.
Thursday, October 05, 2006
Technology For Future-I
Technology Developed in M-Commerce Domain
In Indian telecom history Short Messaging Service (SMS) has become a whole new language, accounting for revenue worth Rs.2300 crore and growing at 30% per annum. And now this mobile handset is all set to replace our wallet and becomes the preferred choice for financial transactions. This means booking airline tickets, movie tickets, making P2P or bill payments on the move-all through SMS- no need for WiFi connectivity. One of the killer applications in this domain is m-cheque. Customers wishing to avail of this facility would need to replace their SIM cards with a high powered memory chips (number remains the same) which can be bought over the counter at service provider’s outlets, while personalization or credit card authentification is done through an SMS to the concerned bank. Once the credit card data resides on the chips, the mobile phone is ready to make transactions. Walk into a merchant establishment that accepts this form of payment and give him your mobile number. The merchant, who has a handset with a similar chip, sends an SMS to a predetermined number with customer’s mobile number. The server that receives this SMS maps the data and sends it to the bank’s payment gateway. In turn, the bank’s server checks the credit limit and sends a message to the customer asking to verify the transaction. Customer’s acceptance is completed through an SMS along with the mobile PIN. This goes to the bank’s server, which sends an SMS to the merchant confirming the payment. Finally, customer receives an SMS, which serves as a proof of purchase. The same mobile handset can be used to draw cash in ATMs replacing the use of plastic cards.
New Technology for Old Transistors
Silicon is the edifice of the electronics revolution. By putting hundreds of thousands of tiny transistors on a single silicon chip, engineers shrank the size of a computer from as big as a room to a pocket sized pc in a matter of four decades. And this reduction in dimension did not affect the performance of computers-in fact, their power grew exponentially. For instance, while an 8088 microprocessor chip had just 6000 transistors, today’s Pentium IV chip carries as many as 50 million transistors. One giant snag: silicon based transistors are not expected to go very far and will soon hit a technology roadblock. The problem with all transistors in current technology and almost all proposed transistors is that they regulate current flow by raising and lowering an energy barrier. Using electricity to raise and lower energy barriers has worked for a century of switches, but that approach is about to hit a wall. Even if it were possible to build an ultra advanced laptop computers with molecule sized transistors using current transistor technology, it would take so much electricity to run the laptop that resultant heat generated would probably vaporize the computer itself.
In order to overcome this technology roadblock, a novel concept is under development that can lead to molecular transistors, which would make the next generation of tiny, powerful computers. Such transistors will be as small as one nanometer. A team of scientists showed for the first time that a single charged atom on a silicon surface can regulate the conductivity of a near by molecule, there by allowing current to pass through. This device is known as Quantum Interference Effect Transistor or QuIET.
The Chicken Came First.
My salute to Vinod Kapur and his farm Kegg (Kapur + egg) that produces the most extraordinary chickens. The birds have helped 7,00,000 rural households in Uttaranchal, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Assam and North-Eastern states of India increase their income by Rs.300 crore every year for the last five years. Kegg tinkered around with imported poultry stock from the US to create high yield birds suited to Indian conditions for the urban markets. And the outcome is called Kuroiler (Kegg + Broiler) chickens, which is custom bred for the small farmers, is very different from the local village birds. Unlike desi hen, which produces 40 eggs in its 18 months cycle, a female Kuroiler gives 200 eggs in the same period. Then, they grow quicker. A male Kuroiler reaches the 1 Kg weight in 6-7 weeks, compared to a desi’s 18-20 weeks. Significantly, they are low on maintenance. They don’t need a special diet and can survive on scavenging, foraging and supplementary wastes from kitchen. They fly a little and run quicker, from predators. So they live longer.
In Indian telecom history Short Messaging Service (SMS) has become a whole new language, accounting for revenue worth Rs.2300 crore and growing at 30% per annum. And now this mobile handset is all set to replace our wallet and becomes the preferred choice for financial transactions. This means booking airline tickets, movie tickets, making P2P or bill payments on the move-all through SMS- no need for WiFi connectivity. One of the killer applications in this domain is m-cheque. Customers wishing to avail of this facility would need to replace their SIM cards with a high powered memory chips (number remains the same) which can be bought over the counter at service provider’s outlets, while personalization or credit card authentification is done through an SMS to the concerned bank. Once the credit card data resides on the chips, the mobile phone is ready to make transactions. Walk into a merchant establishment that accepts this form of payment and give him your mobile number. The merchant, who has a handset with a similar chip, sends an SMS to a predetermined number with customer’s mobile number. The server that receives this SMS maps the data and sends it to the bank’s payment gateway. In turn, the bank’s server checks the credit limit and sends a message to the customer asking to verify the transaction. Customer’s acceptance is completed through an SMS along with the mobile PIN. This goes to the bank’s server, which sends an SMS to the merchant confirming the payment. Finally, customer receives an SMS, which serves as a proof of purchase. The same mobile handset can be used to draw cash in ATMs replacing the use of plastic cards.
New Technology for Old Transistors
Silicon is the edifice of the electronics revolution. By putting hundreds of thousands of tiny transistors on a single silicon chip, engineers shrank the size of a computer from as big as a room to a pocket sized pc in a matter of four decades. And this reduction in dimension did not affect the performance of computers-in fact, their power grew exponentially. For instance, while an 8088 microprocessor chip had just 6000 transistors, today’s Pentium IV chip carries as many as 50 million transistors. One giant snag: silicon based transistors are not expected to go very far and will soon hit a technology roadblock. The problem with all transistors in current technology and almost all proposed transistors is that they regulate current flow by raising and lowering an energy barrier. Using electricity to raise and lower energy barriers has worked for a century of switches, but that approach is about to hit a wall. Even if it were possible to build an ultra advanced laptop computers with molecule sized transistors using current transistor technology, it would take so much electricity to run the laptop that resultant heat generated would probably vaporize the computer itself.
In order to overcome this technology roadblock, a novel concept is under development that can lead to molecular transistors, which would make the next generation of tiny, powerful computers. Such transistors will be as small as one nanometer. A team of scientists showed for the first time that a single charged atom on a silicon surface can regulate the conductivity of a near by molecule, there by allowing current to pass through. This device is known as Quantum Interference Effect Transistor or QuIET.
The Chicken Came First.
My salute to Vinod Kapur and his farm Kegg (Kapur + egg) that produces the most extraordinary chickens. The birds have helped 7,00,000 rural households in Uttaranchal, Uttar Pradesh, West Bengal, Bihar, Orissa, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Assam and North-Eastern states of India increase their income by Rs.300 crore every year for the last five years. Kegg tinkered around with imported poultry stock from the US to create high yield birds suited to Indian conditions for the urban markets. And the outcome is called Kuroiler (Kegg + Broiler) chickens, which is custom bred for the small farmers, is very different from the local village birds. Unlike desi hen, which produces 40 eggs in its 18 months cycle, a female Kuroiler gives 200 eggs in the same period. Then, they grow quicker. A male Kuroiler reaches the 1 Kg weight in 6-7 weeks, compared to a desi’s 18-20 weeks. Significantly, they are low on maintenance. They don’t need a special diet and can survive on scavenging, foraging and supplementary wastes from kitchen. They fly a little and run quicker, from predators. So they live longer.
Monday, September 18, 2006
Some Emotional Thoughts, Engineers’ Day and Steve Irwin
Someone had once told me that a successful life stands on three essential and equal legs—professional success, family (friends) happiness and a healthy body. The stress on each has to be equal to achieve maximum result. If all the legs had an equal score of 10, when multiplied (10x10x10), one can score the maximum of 1000. Any other combination as long as the total sum is 30, will always be lesser. And if you ignore one of them, then you are a big zero (25x5x0 =0). [This thought I got from Rajeev Karwal, CEO, Consumer Durables, Reliance Retail]
My little daughter Tamanna is an amazingly notorious questioning machine. Whenever she finds time to interact with me, her talking sentences start with What, Why, How, When…etc. Through these simple words she reminds me how we hesitate to ask question when we grow older. I remember the famous quote of Edward Gibbon.
“ The end comes when we no longer talk with ourselves. It is the end of genuine thinking and the beginning of the final loneliness.”
On fifteenth September of each year we celebrate Engineers’ Day. Sir M.Visheshwaraya, the famous engineer of India, was born on this day. When I asked some engineering students and my colleagues what they mean by engineering, I was surprised to know that they didn’t have right answer. There may be many definition of engineering, but this one I think is the most appropriate one.
“ Engineering is the profession in which a knowledge of the mathematical and natural sciences gained by study, experience and practice is applied with judgment to develop ways to utilize, economically, the materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind.”
In the morning hours of each day, I and my daughter Tamanna, used to enjoy Crocodile Hunter’s Diary on Animal Planet. And it is quite shocking to know that Steve Irwin died of a stingray barb while filming off Australia’s Great Barrier Reef on September 4. We will really miss you Steve.
The Kerala government will rechristen a crocodile park after Steve. This might be the first time a memorial was being marked for Irwin.
For more details on how stingray kills other click.
My little daughter Tamanna is an amazingly notorious questioning machine. Whenever she finds time to interact with me, her talking sentences start with What, Why, How, When…etc. Through these simple words she reminds me how we hesitate to ask question when we grow older. I remember the famous quote of Edward Gibbon.
“ The end comes when we no longer talk with ourselves. It is the end of genuine thinking and the beginning of the final loneliness.”
On fifteenth September of each year we celebrate Engineers’ Day. Sir M.Visheshwaraya, the famous engineer of India, was born on this day. When I asked some engineering students and my colleagues what they mean by engineering, I was surprised to know that they didn’t have right answer. There may be many definition of engineering, but this one I think is the most appropriate one.
“ Engineering is the profession in which a knowledge of the mathematical and natural sciences gained by study, experience and practice is applied with judgment to develop ways to utilize, economically, the materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind.”
In the morning hours of each day, I and my daughter Tamanna, used to enjoy Crocodile Hunter’s Diary on Animal Planet. And it is quite shocking to know that Steve Irwin died of a stingray barb while filming off Australia’s Great Barrier Reef on September 4. We will really miss you Steve.
The Kerala government will rechristen a crocodile park after Steve. This might be the first time a memorial was being marked for Irwin.
For more details on how stingray kills other click.
Tuesday, September 05, 2006
The Places Around CUTTACK
In our busy day-to-day life, we Kataki miss to celebrate small things like visiting nearby places etc. Being in the field of education, I get ample free time during which I explore the places surrounding the millennium city, Cuttack. On a Sunday afternoon after a sumptuous meal, I decided to start a merry go round type journey starting from Sikharpur area of the city. The first place at which I stopped was the Mahanadi Barrage. It was a manifestation of engineering endeavor. Due to incessant rain in previous days there was flood in Mahanadi and all the gates of barrage were made open. Oh what was the power of this mighty river [Pic1, Pic2]. The famous Taladanda canal originates from this place. This river fed canal is stretched up to Paradeep, the port of Orissa.
The next interesting place on the bank of Mahanadi is Jobra Barrage Works. It is a heritage building constructed by the British people. Initially it was a factory at which boats and streamers were repaired by English mechanics. During that time the rivers were the most popular paths for communications. The chimney of the factory is now called Pillar of Jobra [Pic]. The dilapidated building shows an ancient Wall Watch and a Bell at the top [Pic]. Mahanadi boat club is established near his structure.
Bhubanananda Orissa School of Engineering (BOSE), the oldest engineering school of orissa, is one of he milestone at the periphery of Cuttack. SCB Medical College, the premier institution imparting medical education with all modern hospital facility, is another proud possession of this ancient city.
The next interesting place on the bank of Mahanadi is Jobra Barrage Works. It is a heritage building constructed by the British people. Initially it was a factory at which boats and streamers were repaired by English mechanics. During that time the rivers were the most popular paths for communications. The chimney of the factory is now called Pillar of Jobra [Pic]. The dilapidated building shows an ancient Wall Watch and a Bell at the top [Pic]. Mahanadi boat club is established near his structure.
Bhubanananda Orissa School of Engineering (BOSE), the oldest engineering school of orissa, is one of he milestone at the periphery of Cuttack. SCB Medical College, the premier institution imparting medical education with all modern hospital facility, is another proud possession of this ancient city.
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