Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Sunday, 8 March 2026

When Bomblets Fall

When Bomblets Fall

Summary of the event (with caveats)

Over the past days I watched and re-watched footage that circulated online showing small, glowing objects descending across the sky over central Israeli cities. Many news outlets and official statements described the images as submunitions released from a ballistic missile carrying a cluster warhead. The broad picture is clear: a missile appeared to open mid‑air, and multiple smaller explosive devices — bomblets — were seen scattering and hitting several locations.

A note of caution: visual material taken in the heat of conflict can be misleading. Debris from intercepted missiles, flare signatures, or separate munitions can look similar on video. I rely on corroborating reporting and statements from authorities and humanitarian organizations to shape the account below rather than any single clip. Still, multiple verified reports and military assessments line up with the conclusion that cluster submunitions were likely involved in recent strikes.

Technical explanation: what cluster munitions are

Cluster munitions are designed to disperse many smaller explosive submunitions from one delivery system — a rocket, missile, artillery shell, or bomb. Instead of one concentrated blast, a single weapon scatters dozens (or in some models, hundreds) of bomblets across a wide area.

Key technical features:

  • Delivery and dispersion: the main warhead opens in flight and releases submunitions that fall without guidance.
  • Area effect: bomblets are intended to cover a broad zone — useful (from a military perspective) against dispersed manpower, light vehicles, or soft targets.
  • Failure rates: a proportion of bomblets often fail to detonate on impact and remain hazardous as unexploded ordnance (UXO).

Different systems vary in submunition count, explosive charge per bomblet, and fuzing mechanisms, but the operational logic is the same: multiple smaller explosions across a wide footprint instead of a single point of destruction.

Legal and humanitarian concerns

Cluster munitions are controversial because their effects are inherently wide-area and indiscriminate in populated settings. The Convention on Cluster Munitions (adopted in 2008) bans their use, production, stockpiling and transfer, and requires clearance and victim assistance for contaminated areas. Many states and humanitarian groups argue the weapons are incompatible with the protections international humanitarian law is meant to guarantee for civilians.

Humanitarian consequences to keep in mind:

  • Immediate civilian risk: dispersal across neighborhoods increases the chance of non‑combatant casualties and damage to critical infrastructure.
  • Long-term danger from UXO: bomblets that do not explode remain lethal for years, obstructing agriculture, reconstruction and safe movement.
  • Clearance burden: locating and neutralizing small bomblets across urban environments is slow, expensive and hazardous for deminers and residents alike.

Why these weapons are tricky for defenses and first responders

From a technical and operational standpoint, cluster warheads complicate both active defenses and post‑strike response.

  • Missile defense strain: systems designed to intercept a single incoming warhead can be overwhelmed if that warhead disperses dozens of submunitions. Interceptors that detonate near the main vehicle may still leave bomblets intact or scatter them unpredictably.
  • Detection limits: radar and tracking systems have difficulty once a single object becomes many small targets, particularly at lower altitudes and over populated terrain.
  • Post‑strike hazard: for emergency services, the pattern of many small impact sites — some with UXO — forces a more cautious and protracted response, delaying rescue and recovery.

Context on Iran and Israel (operational, not historical narrative)

The reported use of cluster payloads in recent missile exchanges reflects an operational choice. For a state using long‑range ballistic systems, adding a cluster warhead changes the tactical effect: it turns a single delivery into a multi‑point threat that can (in theory) increase the likelihood of casualties or infrastructure damage even if some interceptors work.

At the same time, the legal and reputational costs are high. Many international actors treat cluster munitions as a red line because of their long-term humanitarian impact. Whether the perceived military utility outweighs those political and ethical costs is a calculation each user must make — and it is precisely that calculation that escalates tensions and invites international condemnation.

Implications and conclusion

Several implications flow from recent events:

  • Defense calculus: defenders must adapt tactics and resources to deal with both the immediate multiplicity of threats and the long tail of UXO clearance.
  • Humanitarian footprint: affected areas may face months or years of contamination, with attendant casualties and impediments to recovery.
  • Norms and escalation: use of area‑effect weapons in or near population centers risks hardening international positions and could provoke broader responses beyond the immediate battlefield.

I try to hold a few thoughts in balance. Military innovation and adaptation are part of every conflict; yet some innovations carry disproportionate civilian cost. When weapons scatter explosive remnants across towns and fields, the harm can outlive any tactical advantage. If the recent reporting is borne out, what we are seeing is not only a new phase of missile arithmetic — it is also an intensification of the humanitarian problem associated with unexploded submunitions.

We should monitor three practical lines of response: improved detection and clearance capacity where impacts occurred, clearer public guidance to civilians about UXO risks, and renewed diplomatic focus on reinforcing norms that limit weapons with long‑term civilian harm. In the short run the priority is saving lives and securing contaminated areas; in the medium term the priority must be preventing the proliferation of weapons whose effects last long after hostilities pause.

Further reading and resources

  • "Video shows Iranian cluster bomb submunitions raining over Israel; why the weapon is tricky" — Times of India: https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/defence/international/video-shows-iranian-cluster-bomb-submunitions-raining-over-israel-why-the-weapon-is-tricky/articleshow/129304415.cms
  • International Committee of the Red Cross — Cluster munitions and international humanitarian law: https://www.icrc.org/en/law-and-policy/cluster-munitions
  • Convention on Cluster Munitions (official site): https://www.clusterconvention.org
  • Cluster Munition Monitor / ICBL-CMC reporting: https://backend.icblcmc.org/assets/reports/Cluster-Munition-Monitors/CMM2024/Downloads/Cluster-Munition-Monitor-2024-Web.pdf

Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Threemendous: T20 Kings

Threemendous: T20 Kings

Threemendous: T20 Kings

I watched the stadium roar and, somewhere between the noise and the confetti, felt a strange, familiar quiet inside me — the kind that arrives when something larger than sport settles into the cultural bloodstream. This tournament was not just another trophy won; it was a narrative stitched into a nation’s mood: the first team to defend a T20 World Cup title and to claim a third crown at home. The headline said it simply: "Threemendous: T20 kings keep the crown." Times of India.

Why this win matters beyond runs and wickets

Sport has always been a mirror — it reflects who we are and who we want to be. For me, this victory felt like:

  • A confirmation of institutional depth. Winning once can be luck or timing; defending a title and capturing a third shows structures that sustain excellence.
  • A cultural moment. Hosting and winning at home rewrites how a generation experiences the sport; young kids will now remember a roaring home final as part of their early lives.
  • A lesson in composure under pressure. T20 cricket rewards instinct, but championships are often decided by restraint — the discipline to execute basics when the noise is loudest.

Patterns I keep returning to

Over the years I’ve written about foresight and the quiet architecture behind visible success. In a post called "Man Who Sees Future" I explored how small, consistent behaviours compound into outsized outcomes — the same dynamic I see in modern championship teams: systems, culture, practice, and selection working in unison. Man Who Sees Future.

A championship like this doesn’t arrive from a single hero moment. It’s the product of:

  • Repeated small optimizations (skills, margins, recovery routines).
  • Leadership that aligns intent with execution.
  • A talent pipeline that feeds the system and adapts when conditions change.

Those are lessons I carry into my work outside sport: whether building teams, products, or ideas, longevity demands the same mix of structure and boldness.

What the moment teaches us about identity and expectation

There’s a double edge to this success. With three titles and a successful defence comes a new set of expectations. That matters:

  • Expectation sharpens attention: fans, administrators, and players will all re-evaluate benchmarks.
  • Identity evolves: a team ceases to be just contenders and becomes the measuring stick. That shift changes how opponents plan and how the champions must reinvent themselves.

I find that fascinating — success changes the game not only for the winners, but for everyone else who plays against the standard they set.

A personal takeaway

I’m a believer in celebrating the craft as much as the result. The trophy is a headline; the quieter stories — of discipline, selection honesty, and the accumulation of small improvements — are the true monuments. Moments like this remind me to value patience, invest in fundamentals, and design systems that survive beyond any single season.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

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Phase of Worry and Anxiety

Phase of Worry and Anxiety

Why the sell-off feels familiar—and what I tell myself

Last week I read the blunt counsel from K Krithivasan (k.krithi@tcs.com): the AI-driven market rout that has wiped billions from software and services valuations is — in his words — a phase of "worry and anxiety." I found that phrasing liberating. It doesn't dismiss the risk; it frames today's reaction as emotional, not inevitable. Times of India captured the context: global traders are repricing whole business models overnight.

"Will the whole value chain be replaced by an LLM? That's not going to happen," said K Krithivasan (k.krithi@tcs.com). The image of dropping a single chatbot into decades of enterprise plumbing is seductive—but naive.


A personal frame: anxiety looks like a market, not like reality

I've watched technology cycles long enough to recognise the pattern: a leap forward in capability → breathless headlines → investor extrapolation to extremes → panic-driven price moves → a calmer phase of integration and re-pricing. The short-term market outcome can be brutal; the long-term shape usually includes both winners and many reconfigured incumbents.

I wrote about the human side of this once before when I asked, "Wherefore Art Thou, O Jobs?" — the piece was a probe into which roles modern AI might compress and which it will augment (Wherefore Art Thou, O Jobs?). The same emotional dynamics—fear of loss, hope for upside, and the impulse to simplify complexity—are playing out now at the level of corporate valuations.


Three realities beneath the headlines

  • Enterprise systems are messy and context-rich. You cannot "drop Anthropic" into a 25-year banking stack and expect all downstream consultants to disappear overnight. The work of integration, compliance, data governance and domain knowledge remains human-heavy for a long period.

  • AI compresses effort; it does not always compress value. Faster, cheaper delivery pressures pricing and headcount models—but it also creates opportunities to repackage outcomes, sell higher-value products, and build new monitoring, safety and customization services.

  • Markets often price narratives, not fundamentals. When anxiety runs high, multiple plausible futures get conflated into one catastrophic storyline: extinction of an entire business model. That sells headlines—and it terrifies short-term holders.


What leaders should do now (my practical checklist)

  • Tell your organisation the truth: acknowledge the efficiency gains and be explicit about where value might be compressed.

  • Build a migration playbook: identify the messy legacy areas where AI helps but does not eliminate human craft (security, audit trails, compliance, and bespoke integrations).

  • Re-skill with intent: teach engineers to pair with AI agents, not to compete with them. That means focusing on systems thinking, domain expertise, and product design.

  • Re-architect commercial models: move from headcount-driven billing to outcome-based pricing, platforms, and managed-AI operations.

  • Invest in trust and auditability: clients will pay a premium for explainability, controls, and data residency. That is a durable moat.


What investors should ask (and what I would ask if I were reallocating capital)

  • Is the company embedding AI to increase margins or simply shaving hours? The former is additive; the latter is deflationary.

  • How dependent is revenue on recurring, commoditised maintenance versus bespoke transformation work?

  • Can the firm capture revenue from the safety, governance and customisation layers that AI requires?

  • Is management realistic about a near-term pause in growth while investing for the long-term change?


For employees: anxiety is a signal, not a verdict

If you feel threatened, treat the feeling as a call to adapt. Learn to co-pilot with AI tools. Master the context that machines struggle with: the politics of your client, the corner cases in their data, the ethical and regulatory constraints.


Closing thought

I admire the honesty of K Krithivasan (k.krithi@tcs.com) in naming the mood. Calling this moment a phase of "worry and anxiety" is not a denial of risk; it's a reminder to separate emotion from structural analysis. Markets will find their new equilibrium. The work that needs doing—re-architecting systems, embedding governance, capturing new business models—remains.

If you want one practical takeaway: treat today's price swings as a risk-management problem, not a prophecy. Use this pause to build the capabilities that will win in the next decade.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"How can large enterprise software vendors meaningfully capture the economic value that AI creates without losing revenue to efficiency-driven compression?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Parliament's Tense Return

Parliament's Tense Return

Why the second half feels different

I woke up this morning thinking about the peculiar choreography of our Parliament: two halves of the same institution trying to do opposite things at once. The Budget Session is resuming after the mid-session recess, but the calendar and the mood are not aligned. Legislative timetables, Standing Committees and the need to pass Demands for Grants sit beside a political theatre staged to score points ahead of state elections.

I have watched these patterns repeat often enough to stop being surprised. The coming days will likely be dominated more by spectacle than by statute — motions, symbolic debates, and raw positioning — and less by the hard, often boring work of lawmaking.

What to expect when the session restarts

Here are the concrete dynamics I expect to play out, based on the coverage and the rhythm of recent sessions:

  • A highly symbolic no-confidence-style debate: the second half will likely open with a motion that is more about demonstrating unity and sending a message than about actually changing power. Expect lots of floor theatre and predictable outcomes.

  • Broadening of the agenda: even if a motion targets parliamentary procedure or the Chair, the debate will expand to touch on trade deals, tariff decisions, energy imports, and international crises — issues the opposition can use to frame the government’s economic choices as a threat to specific industries and communities.

  • Repeated disruptions and short sittings: when emotions and electoral calculations matter more than committee work, we lose hours. Time that should be used for scrutinising budgetary allocations instead becomes fuel for headlines.

  • An attempt to convert debate into campaign theatre: both benches will use the House to rehearse narratives for voters back home — unity on one side, governance and stability on the other.

  • Little legislative progress in the short term: key bills that need careful scrutiny may be delayed, and several days of sitting time will be consumed by division-lobbies, adjournments and procedural wrangling.

Why this matters beyond politics

The Budget Session is not just a political ritual; it is when the nation’s money is debated and the details that affect schools, hospitals, farms and factories should be examined closely. When parliamentary time is mostly consumed by spectacle:

  • Oversight weakens: ministries get less questioning; details in Demands for Grants are glossed over.
  • Policy risks increase: hurried approvals and missed scrutiny can leave loopholes and unintended consequences.
  • Public trust erodes: when citizens see more shouting than scrutiny, they lose faith in democratic institutions.

Practical fixes I keep returning to

I have argued before that we can preserve the House’s dignity without killing politics. A few practical reforms would blunt the worst effects of these cycles:

  • Clear time quotas for budget debates and for each bill, enforced by the Business Advisory Committee.
  • A stronger role for Standing Committees during the recess so that Demands for Grants and large policy proposals are pre-scrutinised before plenary debate.
  • Limited and enforceable rules on repeated adjournments and frivolous notices that intentionally consume time.
  • A credible program for shifting some procedural business to recorded digital formats — not to silence dissent but to make debate more measured and more accessible.

I have proposed versions of these ideas before, particularly the case for using technology to reduce wasted parliamentary hours and to let committees do the heavy lifting outside the glare of the floor debate. See my earlier reflections on making parliamentary proceedings more productive and virtual-friendly Like every work place: Lok Sabha must…. That post explored how online tools and better time allocation could save hours that are now routinely lost to shouting and procedural stalling.

A personal plea to MPs and citizens

To MPs: remember that your primary job is scrutiny. Theatre might win headlines, but careful questioning and disciplined debate change lives.

To citizens: watch closely, ask tougher questions, and nudge representatives to prioritise committee work and careful budget scrutiny. Democracies are resilient, but only if citizens insist on institutions that function.

What I’ll be watching closely

  • Whether the House allows focused, clause-by-clause consideration of budgetary allocations.
  • If Standing Committees produce timely reports on Demands for Grants during the recess and whether those reports shape debates when the House meets.
  • Signs that both sides will prioritize legislative productivity over instant headlines.

If this session becomes a theatre of posturing, the immediate winners will be soundbites and social media moments. But the real cost will be measured later—in delayed reforms, under-scrutinised budgets, and policies that fail to reflect the reality of people on the ground.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What is the primary purpose of Standing Committees in the Indian parliamentary process and how do they influence the Budget Session?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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Interstellar and Elastic Time

Interstellar and Elastic Time

Introduction

I keep returning to one scene in Interstellar — the slow, impossibly patient ocean where one hour equals seven years back home. That single dramatic device reframed how I think about time: not as a river that flows uniformly for everyone, but as a living medium that stretches, compresses and, sometimes, punishes our attachments.

Why the film resonates for me is not just cinematic craftsmanship; it’s the way the story borrows a real scientific idea — gravitational time dilation — and dresses it in human consequence. The film asks: what does it mean to lose decades to a few hours? How does the world change when clocks disagree?

A short physics sketch (without equations)

  • Clocks disagree when they live in different gravitational depths. Put bluntly: the stronger the gravitational well you sit in, the slower your clock ticks compared with someone farther out.
  • A spinning, massive object changes the rules. A rotating black hole can allow stable orbits much closer to the event horizon than a non-rotating one, and closer orbits can produce dramatically larger differences in elapsed time between two observers.
  • On film, these facts are bent to serve story: a planet placed deep in such a warped region can — under very special and finely tuned conditions — experience hours while years pass elsewhere.

Is the film’s extreme example plausible?

Short answer: marginally plausible in principle, but extremely fragile in practice.

Filmmakers insisted on the 1 hour = 7 years ratio because it heightens the emotional stakes. Physically, achieving such a large factor requires a near-maximum spin for the black hole and a planet orbiting extremely close to the innermost stable orbits allowed by relativity. Those requirements are not impossible on paper, but they demand a chain of unlikely circumstances: the black hole must be rotating almost as fast as theory allows, the planet must avoid destructive tidal forces and hostile radiation, and a life-supporting environment must somehow persist in that hostile neighborhood.

I find the tension between plausibility and poetry instructive. The science provides a scaffold; the human story builds a house atop it. The result is fiction that nudges the reader — or viewer — toward awe without entirely abandoning the laws that produce that awe.

Perception versus physical time

One subtle confusion I often see is between subjective time — how an hour feels inside a moment of grief or joy — and physical time as measured by clocks and governed by relativity. Interstellar does both: it shows us clocks that literally disagree and characters whose inner life compresses and dilates with loss. The emotional compression (how quickly memory, hope, and grief change) is something every human recognizes. The physical compression (how many heartbeats a clock records) is the one the film borrows from modern gravitational physics.

My prior thinking

Years ago I wrote about the idea of time and our cultural fascination with bending it — not as math but as a social and personal problem. I still think those earlier reflections help frame what Interstellar asks of us: when technology (or physics) lets us skip years, what responsibility do we carry to the people left behind? You can read that earlier note in my brief essay Time Travel ?. I keep returning to the same ethical knot: the larger the power to move through or manipulate time, the harder the moral choices become.

What I take away

  • Time is a physical field and a moral horizon. The two meanings are joined in extremes: when physics stretches time, human life is reshaped.
  • Extreme time dilation is technically possible only in very constrained scenarios. The cinematic version trades plausibility at the edges for moral clarity at the center.
  • The most interesting insight is not whether the film’s numbers were perfect; it’s that the movie used a real physical effect to expose something universal about attachment, regret and rescue.

Thought experiments to try at home

  • Imagine a friend who ages ten years while you age one. How would conversations, promises and obligations change?
  • Think about modern technologies that already desynchronize lives: long deployments, deep-space missions, or even years-long migrations. The ethical questions are already with us.

Further reading (short)

  • A popular explanation of the physics and the trade-offs behind the film can be found in accessible science write-ups and essays online — they explain how a rapidly spinning black hole and an orbit very close to the horizon can amplify time differences by huge factors.
  • For a look at my earlier public reflections on the cultural side of time, see my short essay Time Travel ?.

Parting note

We like our thought experiments tidy: an equation here, a moral there. The lesson of Interstellar, for me, is the opposite. Reality hands us messy payoffs. Physics gives us the elastic cloth of time; we are left to stitch lives into it.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh hcp@recruitguru.com


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