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Numebr 1 in 2010 IBM ACM contests

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IBM ACM is the largest Programming Contest in the world. It is no cheap competition.

The Indian excuses are hilarious. LOL

Ok lets say it's cheap. How about topcoder, another cheap contest according to indians. Over 400 Indians, second largest group behind the US, from IIT, but none in top 20..Any excuse for that..lol
 
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one day loser, always loser.

you can just imagine what indians will say if the No.1 of the IBM ACM contest is won by an indian.

anyway, most indian students are lazy, they are never going to won that.
 
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This IIIt is not even a 20th rated softare engineering istitute in India.The IITs would never wate their time in something as crappy as the software competition in Harbin.

Are you telling me that your schools are better than MIT, Stanford, Cornell, Uni. of Maryland and Uni. of Michigan? Those are top tier schools in the world pal.
 
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Are you telling me that your schools are better than MIT, Stanford, Cornell, Uni. of Maryland and Uni. of Michigan? Those are top tier schools in the world pal.

Well, MIT and Stanford are world-class in general. Cornell? it's so-so, a small part of it is good.

But Maryland, Michigan? top tier schools in the world , huh? I see now why you're from Indiana... :lol:
 
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Well, MIT and Stanford are world-class in general. Cornell? it's so-so, a small part of it is good.

But Maryland, Michigan? top tier schools in the world , huh? I see now why you're from Indiana... :lol:

Hur hur, Cornell is so-so... It's an Ivy buddy...

Michigan is usually in the top 3 in the US for engineering, it's a top tier, with Maryland closely behind it.

Either the Chinese block has gotten to you or the Queen of England has got her royal behind on top of you with all the overhyped "prestigious" Cambridge and Oxford whoopies.
 
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Hur hur, Cornell is so-so... It's an Ivy buddy...

Michigan is usually in the top 3 in the US for engineering, it's a top tier, with Maryland closely behind it.

Either the Chinese block has gotten to you or the Queen of England has got her royal behind on top of you with all the overhyped "prestigious" Cambridge and Oxford whoopies.


Ivy or not, both Cornell and Michigan are regional powerhouses max., not in the same league as MIT, Yale, Harvard, Oxbridge etc alike top tier in the world, unless by top tier you meant at least top 15 universtities per country.


Even though I am of Chinese origin and studying in England currently, I was born and fed in Europe. So neither Chairman Mao nor her Majesty had a chance getting to me, oke?

On engineering schools, maybe I overlooked a bit of Michigan ann arbor. But uni of Twente, Utrecht Uni and Delft in Netherlands should be also right at top there on the world stage, let alone other big guys in larger countries such as Big 3 in Germany. But you've never been aware of those names, eh? Maryland? Never heard of. Sorry.
 
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one day loser, always loser.

you can just imagine what indians will say if the No.1 of the IBM ACM contest is won by an indian.

anyway, most indian students are lazy, they are never going to won that.

yeah Indians students are lazy and the the PC was invented by the chinese.Thats what ur papa in beijing told u.
 
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yeah Indians students are lazy and the the PC was invented by the chinese.Thats what ur papa in beijing told u.

Not at all,he is living in Australia,it is the paper of Australia told him~~
 
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IBM ACM is the largest Programming Contest in the world. It is no cheap competition.

The Indian excuses are hilarious. LOL

Ok lets say it's cheap. How about topcoder, another cheap contest according to indians. Over 400 Indians, second largest group behind the US, from IIT, but none in top 20..Any excuse for that..lol

When the world acknowledges Indian ability in the field of software devopement ,u are inventing a new benchmark for being a powerhouse in softwares.The gold prize winner will get to become the owner of microsoft,the silver prize winner will become the owner of oracle.Tell me how many such competitions were won by Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.Indians are busy in creating companies not wasting their time travelling to places like Harbin to take part in chinese hacking olympiads. .
 
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Not at all,he is living in Australia,it is the paper of Australia told him~~
The paper of Australia told him, over phone or email,that India students are lazy,and then he told u that.U dont let pass by any chinese whispers on Indians.
 
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The paper of Australia told him, over phone or email,that India students are lazy,and then he told u that.U dont let pass by any chinese whispers on Indians.

Look at the info of him:Location: australia
it is the first time I heard that the students of India are lazy~
 
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When the world acknowledges Indian ability in the field of software devopement ,u are inventing a new benchmark for being a powerhouse in softwares.The gold prize winner will get to become the owner of microsoft,the silver prize winner will become the owner of oracle.Tell me how many such competitions were won by Bill Gates and Steve Jobs.Indians are busy in creating companies not wasting their time travelling to places like Harbin to take part in chinese hacking olympiads. .


Bill Who? Anyone with a half a brain in IT will tell ya that microsoft is shitty on software.

And that´s so typical of Indian mentality you have there. Incapable of winning more than 1 medal in 2008 Beijing Olympics, Indian losers started to trash talk the Olympics Games in general...


IBM ACM-ICPC contest is the equivalent of Software Olympics for worldwide universtiries/colleges. All the universities with a shred of self-repect of every major country would kill to participate in this competition, often with multiple teams per uni. Yeah right, Indian teams had no time...they were so
busy at shitting in Indian railway tracks, huh?

There were 7,109 teams of 1,931 universities from 82 countries on six continents for the year 2010 competition, representing the best of the best.

After regional group competitions for primary elimination (most best Indian teams were eliminated at this first stage alone), only top 103 teams were selected and invited to the World Finals, held in Harbin, China this year.

When you loss, as you always do, stop looking for pathetic excuses, will you?
 
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.List of notable alumni of the Indian Institutes of Technology, sorted by the year they graduated.

Name Campus Year Achievement

V. C. Kulandaiswamy Kharagpur (M. Tech.) 1956 Padma Shri (1992) and Padma Bhushan (2002)
Kirit Parikh Kharagpur (M. Tech.) 1957 Founder, IGIDR; Member, Planning Commission.
Mani Lal Bhaumik Kharagpur (Ph.D) 1958 Physicist, contributed to early development of the excimer laser, honorary fellow of the American Physical Society and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, philanthropist and author.
L.........................................................................................................................................................................................................ord Kumar Bhattacharyya Kharagpur 1960 Professor at the University of Warwick and advisor to Britain's Prime Minister. Padma Bhushan (2002) and Knighthood (2003)
Ashok Soota Roorkee 1965 CEO and Founder of MindTree
Suhas S. Patil Kharagpur 1965 Founder and Chairman Emeritus Cirrus Logic Inc.
Muthuraman B. Madras 1966 Managing Director of Tata Steel
Arun Netravali Bombay 1967 President, Bell Labs, Chief Scientist, Lucent, US National Medal of Technology
Kanwal Rekhi Bombay 1967 CEO Ensim Corporation; Ex-CTO Novell;Founder of TiE - The IndUS Entrepreneurs
Suresh P Sethi Bombay 1967 Charles and Nancy Davidson Distinguished Professor at School of Management, University of Texas at Dallas and Director, Center for Intelligent Supply Networks (C4iSN)
Rajinder Singh Madras 1967 Noted spiritual leader. Winner of Colombia's highest award medal of golden cross. Retired Bell Labs 1989
Srikumar Banerjee Kharagpur 1967 Director, Bhabha Atomic Research Centre, (BARC), Trombay
Vinod Gupta Kharagpur 1967 Founder and Chairman of InfoUSA Inc.
Marti G Subrahmanyam Madras 1967 Charles E. Merrill Professor of Finance at Stern School of Business
Ramesh Agarwal Bombay 1968 IBM Fellow, T.J. Watson Research Center IBM
Rajendra S. Pawar Delhi Co-founder and Chairman of NIIT
N.R. Narayana Murthy Kanpur (M Tech) 1981 Co-founder and Chairman of Infosysand Padma Vibhushan
Duvvuri Subbarao Kharagpur 1969 Governor of Reserve Bank of India
Arjun Malhotra Kharagpur 1970 Co-founder, HCL Technologies
Victor Menezes Bombay 1970 Senior Vice Chairman, Citigroup
Rajat Gupta Delhi 1971 Managing Director, McKinsey
Ajit Jain Kharagpur 1972 President, Berkshire Hathaway Reinsurance Group
Anil K. Rajvanshi Kanpur 1972 Director, Nimbkar Agricultural Research Institute and winner of Jamnalal Bajaj Award 2001, FICCI award 2002, Globe Award 2009.
Arogyaswami Paulraj Delhi 1973 Professor, Stanford Universityand Padma Bhushan
Mriganka Sur Kanpur 1974 Professor of Neuroscience, MIT
Pradeep S Sindhu Kanpur 1974 Co-founder, Vice-President and CTO, Juniper Networks
Arun Sarin Kharagpur 1975 Former CEO of Vodafone
Bharat Desai Bombay 1975 Chairman and CEO, Syntel
Jairam Ramesh Bombay 1975 Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Environment and Forests, Member of Parliament since 2004
Vinod Khosla Delhi 1976 Co-founder Sun Microsystems
Vijay K. Thadani Delhi 1981 Co-founder and CEO of NIIT
Manohar Parrikar Bombay 1978 Ex-Chief Minister, Goa
Nandan Nilekani Bombay 1978 Co-founder and CEO of Infosys
Narendra Karmarkar Bombay 1978 Polynomial time algorithm for LP problems, which is a leading breakthrough in Operations Research
Shrinivas Kulkarni Delhi (M.Sc) 1978 Astrophysicist, professor at Caltech
G. V. Loganathan Kanpur (M.Tech) 1978 Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Virginia Polytechnic Institute
Naveen Jain Roorkee 1979 CEO and Co-founder, Intelius
Krishna Bharat Madras 1982 Creator of Google News, Principal Scientist, Google
Padmasree Warrior Delhi 1982 CTO, Motorola
Arvind Raghunathan Madras 1984 Managing Director and Head of Global Arbitrage, Deutsche Bank
Rajesh Jain Bombay 1984 MD, Netcore Solutions, Founder, IndiaWorld
Raghuram Rajan Delhi 1985 Economic Counsellor, IMF; Fischer Black prize
Manindra Agarwal Kanpur 1986 Clay Research Award, 2002, Godel Prize, 2006
Madhu Sudan Delhi 1987 Nevanlinna Prize, 2002
Raj Kamal Jha Kharagpur 1987 Writer, famous for his Novel "The Blue Bedspread"
Debabrata Goswami Kanpur 1988 (M.Sc.) Scientist, famous for his "Adiabatic Quantum Computing" Work with Lasers; Wellcome Trust International Senior Research Fellow
Arvind Kejriwal Kharagpur 1989 Indian social activist and crusader for greater transparency in Government. Winner of Ramon Magsaysay Emergent Leadership award in 2006
Gunjan Sinha Delhi 1989 Chairman, Metricstream
Ramanathan V. Guha Madras 1989 Invented RSS
Anurag Dikshit Delhi 1994 Co-Founder, Partygaming
Vikrant Bhargava Delhi 1994 Co-Founder, Partygaming
Satyendra Dubey Kanpur 1994 Whistle-blower
Chetan Bhagat Delhi 1995 Best-selling author of "Five Point Someone" and "One Night @ The Call Centre"
Subrah Iyar Bombay ? CEO WebEx Communications
Anant Koppar Kharagpur ? Founder President of Kshema Technologies, one of India's first venture capital funded software services companies
Gururaj Deshpande Madras ? Co-founder of Sycamore Networks
Aniruddha M. Gole Bombay ? Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Manitoba
Sudhakar Muddu Madras 1990 CEO and Founder of Kazeon
.......................................................................................
 
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