sbit insight newsletter vol 4 issue 1 sep 2011

34
ional Seminars nferences ances Workshops Cultural Fest Summits National Conference CSI NHRDN Alliances Cultural Fest T echAeon IEEE hops Explorica Sem National Seminars Conferences Alliances Workshop Cultural Fest ISTE National Conf Sum Alliance Cultural Fe Engin Explorica Workshops Explorica ances hops Cultural Fest ances Cultural Fest Explorica IEEE hops Sem National Conferences Conferences Alliances Robotics Cultural Fest ISTE National Conf Sum Alliances Sports Fest Engin Explorica Workshops Explorica ional Seminars nferences ances Workshops Cultural Fest Summits National Conference CSI NHRDN Alliances Cultural Fest T echAeon T T IEEE hops Explorica Sem National Seminars Conferences Alliances Workshop Cultural Fest ISTE National Conf Sum Alliance Cultural Fe Engin Explorica Workshops Explorica ances hops Cultural Fest ances Cultural Fest Explorica IEEE hops Sem National Conferences Conferences Alliances Robotics Cultural Fest ISTE National Conf Sum Alliances Spor ts Fest Engin Explorica Workshops Explorica NSTITUTE NEWSLETTER Volume 4 | Issue I | September 2011 National Seminars Conferences Summits Workshops Alliances Convocation Engineering Futures of Excellence With Firm Foundations Shri Balwant Institute of Technology NCR Delhi, Sonepat Approved by AICTE, Min. of HRD, Govt. of India and DTE, Govt. of Haryana Affiliated to DCR University of Science & Technology, Murthal, Sonepat ENGINEERING COLLEGE IN HARYANA BY BIG BRANDS RESEARCH d e k n a R By Careers 360 Outlook Group An ISO 9001:2008 Certified Institution

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Page 1: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Admission Office

AG-16, Ring Road

Shalimar Bagh

Delhi - 110088

Mob : +91 9250231221

Campus

Meerut Road (Pallri), Near DPS

Sonepat (NCR Delhi) - 131001, Haryana, India

Mob. : +91 9996316282

Tel. : 0130 2340237, 2340896, 2340897

Fax : 0130 2340237

For Queries

Call : 0130 3262040, +91 9996316282

Email : [email protected]

[email protected]

Website : www.sbit.in

Meerut Road (Pallri), Near DPS

Sonepat (NCR Delhi) - 131001

Haryana, India

Mob. : +91 9996316282

Tel. : 0130 2340237, 2340896, 2340897

Fax : 0130 2340237

Email : [email protected]

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w.s

bit

.in

National Seminars Conferences

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural FestSummits

National Conference

CSI NHRDNAllia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

TechAeonIEEE

Workshops

Explorica

Seminars

National Seminars Conferences

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural FestISTE

National Conference

Summits Allia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

EngineeringExplorica

Workshops

Explorica

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural Fest

Allia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

ExploricaIEEE

Workshops Seminars

National ConferencesConferences

Alliances R

ob

otic

sCultural Fest

ISTE

National Conference

Summits Allia

nce

s Sports Fest

EngineeringExplorica

Workshops

Explorica

National Seminars Conferences

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural FestSummits

National Conference

CSI NHRDNAllia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

TechAeonTechAeonTIEEE

Workshops

Explorica

Seminars

National Seminars Conferences

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural FestISTE

National Conference

Summits Allia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

EngineeringExplorica

Workshops

Explorica

Alliances

Wo

rksho

ps

Cultural Fest

Allia

nce

s

Cultural Fest

ExploricaIEEE

Workshops Seminars

National ConferencesConferences

Alliances R

ob

otic

sCultural Fest

ISTE

National Conference

Summits Allia

nce

s Sports Fest

EngineeringExplorica

Workshops

Explorica

NSTITUTE NEWSLETTER

Volume 4 | Issue I | September 2011

National Seminars Conferences Summits Workshops Alliances Convocation

Engineering Futures of

Excellence With Firm

Foundations

Shri Balwant Insti tute of TechnologyNCR Delhi, Sonepat

Approved by AICTE, Min. of HRD, Govt. of India and DTE, Govt. of Haryana Affiliated to DCR University of Science & Technology, Murthal, Sonepat

M.Tech | B.Tech | MCA | MBA | BBA | BCA

ENGINEERING

COLLEGE

IN

HARYANA

BY BIG BRANDS RESEARCH

dekn

aR

By Careers 360 Outlook Group

An ISO 9001:2008 Certified Institution

Page 2: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

"The difference between a person and

others is not a lack of

not a lack of but rather

a lack of

successful

strength,

knowledge,

will."

Page 3: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Year at a Glance 2

Students Participation at National Level 4

ISTE Student Chapter Launch 8

National Conference - RTRI 2011 9

Leadership Talent Hunt - 2011 10

AIMA National Student Management Quiz - 2011 11

TechAeon 2011 12

National Robotics Challenge - 2011 14

Library Innaugration 15

Convocation - 2011 16

Shaping Careers - 2011 20

Engineer’s Day - 2011 21

IEEE Student Branch Launch 22

CSI Student Chapter Launch 23

Clubs@sbit 24

Result 26

Articles 28

Chief Editor (Faculty)

Editor (Student)

Designer

Student Editors

C. R. Chaudhuri

Yatika Girdhar, IT IV Year

Manish Batra, CSE III Year

Ankit Biala, CSE II I Year

Amit Goswami, ME II I Year

Cheshta Uppal, IT II Year

R. Sirisha, IT I I Year

Volume 4 | Issue 1 | September 2011

NSTITUTE NEWSLETTERNSTITUTE NEWSLETTER

Content

2

Year

at

a G

lance

18-19 Feb 2011

Mr. Ashish SethiManager-HR Cushman &Wakefield

Mr. Gurusharan SinghAsst. Vice PresidentTech Mahindra

Mr. C S RajuGeneral Manager, HRMaruti Suzuki India Limited

Mr. Ashish SaxenaVice PresidentMindLance Inc.

Mr. Gurpreet SinghDirector - InstitutionsCoCubes

Ms. Jatinder PetersGeneral Manager, HROil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (ONGC)

Edith FreyHead of International Relations, ECAM

Vincent CailleHOD, Mechanical Engineering, ECAM

Mr. Kamal SinghDirector - CMDAll India Management Association (AIMA)

Mr. R S VermaManager, Bush Foods Overseas Pvt. Ltd.

Wajahat HabibullahFormer Chief Information Commissioner, Govt. of IndiaChairperson, National Commission for Minorities (NCM)

Dr. V R SinghSecretary, IEEE India Council, Fellow-IEEEChairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMBS Society

28 Jan 2011

3 Feb 2011

5 Feb 2011

10 Feb 2011

11 Feb 11

11 Feb 11

18 Feb 11

21 Feb 2011

28 Feb 2011

16 Mar 2011

25 Mar 2011

HR Day in SBIM

Indian Society for Technical Education Student Chapter Launch (ISTE)

National Conference onRecent Trends in Recruitment

Industry (RTRI-2011)

Annual Inter CollegeManagement Fest

"Prikshit-2011"

Annual Inter CollegeTechnical Fest

"TechAeon-2011"

Shri Balwant MemorialPainting Compitition-2011

NHRDN Delhi & NCR Chapter Special Events

National Robotics Challenge "NRC-2011”

13

12

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

NHRDN Delhi & NCR Chapter Special Events

Praveen YadavRegional HeadCushman & Wakefield India Pvt. Ltd.

Mr. Ranjit SinghExecutive Secretary &Programme DirectorISTE

Leadership Talent Hunt-2011

AIMA, 7th National StudentManagement Quiz-2011

(NSMQ-2011)

French Engineering College(ECAM) Visited SBIT Campus

for University Association

Dr. D S MorSection Chairman, Haryana SectionISTE

NA

NA

NA

NA

Rakesh VijVice President, Business Head Wireless and Convergence Aricent Group

Mr. Siddharth SoodCTO, HCL Learning

Mr. Kanav AgnihotriMarketing Officer, HCL learning

Dr. Manoj DuhanChairman, ECE Deptt., DCRUST, Murthal, Sonepat

Prof. M M SharmaFormer Scientist “F”, DRDO

IC Engine Workshop11 14-15 Mar 2011Mr. Vijay KumarWorkshop Manager, Emagineer India

S.No. Name of Event Date Prominent Speakers

ww

w.s

bit

.in

Page 4: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Year at a Glance 2

Students Participation at National Level 4

ISTE Student Chapter Launch 8

National Conference - RTRI 2011 9

Leadership Talent Hunt - 2011 10

AIMA National Student Management Quiz - 2011 11

TechAeon 2011 12

National Robotics Challenge - 2011 14

Library Innaugration 15

Convocation - 2011 16

Shaping Careers - 2011 20

Engineer’s Day - 2011 21

IEEE Student Branch Launch 22

CSI Student Chapter Launch 23

Clubs@sbit 24

Result 26

Articles 28

Chief Editor (Faculty)

Editor (Student)

Designer

Student Editors

C. R. Chaudhuri

Yatika Girdhar, IT IV Year

Manish Batra, CSE III Year

Ankit Biala, CSE II I Year

Amit Goswami, ME II I Year

Cheshta Uppal, IT II Year

R. Sirisha, IT I I Year

Volume 4 | Issue 1 | September 2011

NSTITUTE NEWSLETTERNSTITUTE NEWSLETTER

Content

2

Year

at

a G

lance

18-19 Feb 2011

Mr. Ashish SethiManager-HR Cushman &Wakefield

Mr. Gurusharan SinghAsst. Vice PresidentTech Mahindra

Mr. C S RajuGeneral Manager, HRMaruti Suzuki India Limited

Mr. Ashish SaxenaVice PresidentMindLance Inc.

Mr. Gurpreet SinghDirector - InstitutionsCoCubes

Ms. Jatinder PetersGeneral Manager, HROil and Natural Gas Corporation Ltd. (ONGC)

Edith FreyHead of International Relations, ECAM

Vincent CailleHOD, Mechanical Engineering, ECAM

Mr. Kamal SinghDirector - CMDAll India Management Association (AIMA)

Mr. R S VermaManager, Bush Foods Overseas Pvt. Ltd.

Wajahat HabibullahFormer Chief Information Commissioner, Govt. of IndiaChairperson, National Commission for Minorities (NCM)

Dr. V R SinghSecretary, IEEE India Council, Fellow-IEEEChairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMBS Society

28 Jan 2011

3 Feb 2011

5 Feb 2011

10 Feb 2011

11 Feb 11

11 Feb 11

18 Feb 11

21 Feb 2011

28 Feb 2011

16 Mar 2011

25 Mar 2011

HR Day in SBIM

Indian Society for Technical Education Student Chapter Launch (ISTE)

National Conference onRecent Trends in Recruitment

Industry (RTRI-2011)

Annual Inter CollegeManagement Fest

"Prikshit-2011"

Annual Inter CollegeTechnical Fest

"TechAeon-2011"

Shri Balwant MemorialPainting Compitition-2011

NHRDN Delhi & NCR Chapter Special Events

National Robotics Challenge "NRC-2011”

13

12

10

9

8

7

6

5

4

3

2

1

NHRDN Delhi & NCR Chapter Special Events

Praveen YadavRegional HeadCushman & Wakefield India Pvt. Ltd.

Mr. Ranjit SinghExecutive Secretary &Programme DirectorISTE

Leadership Talent Hunt-2011

AIMA, 7th National StudentManagement Quiz-2011

(NSMQ-2011)

French Engineering College(ECAM) Visited SBIT Campus

for University Association

Dr. D S MorSection Chairman, Haryana SectionISTE

NA

NA

NA

NA

Rakesh VijVice President, Business Head Wireless and Convergence Aricent Group

Mr. Siddharth SoodCTO, HCL Learning

Mr. Kanav AgnihotriMarketing Officer, HCL learning

Dr. Manoj DuhanChairman, ECE Deptt., DCRUST, Murthal, Sonepat

Prof. M M SharmaFormer Scientist “F”, DRDO

IC Engine Workshop11 14-15 Mar 2011Mr. Vijay KumarWorkshop Manager, Emagineer India

S.No. Name of Event Date Prominent Speakers

ww

w.s

bit

.in

Page 5: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

3

Prof. H S ChahalVice ChancellorDCR University of Science & Technology, Murthal, Sonepat

His Excellency - Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana

25 Apr 2011Convocation 201114

Ms. Golda Malhotra Sr. Education Advisor & Events CoordinatorFrench Embassy

Mr. Pankaj Bansal CEO and Co-founderPeopleStrong

Prof. Philippe Cadene Attache for Scientific and University CooperationFrench Embassy

Dr. Vivek SrivastavSr. Faculty Engineering StudiesTrump and Gates

Mr. Sumit Beniwal Co-founder Aquskill

2-3 Sept 2011Shaping Careers-201115

Mr. Kshitij Sharma Co-founder Aquskil

Mr Updesh Singh Manager, Global HelpdeskPrometric

Mr Nirmal Banik AVP7N Consultants

Prashant Vasishtha Global Head – Capability SupportNokia Siemens Networks (NSN)

Prof (Dr) V R Singh Fellow - IEEE, Secretary - IEEE India CouncilChairman - IEEE Delhi Section

Prof (Dr) N S Gill Head, Computer Science DepartmentMDU, Rohtak

Mr R K Vyas Regional Student Coordinator CSI

15 Sept 2011Engineers Day-2011 17

16 15 Sept 2011IEEE Student Branch Launch

23 Sept 2011Computer Society of India (CSI)

Student Chapter Launch18

Prof. M N Hoda Chief Convenor - IndiaComSecretary - ISTE

Year a

t a G

lance

ww

w.s

bit.in Students participated in the NHRDN Young Managers Conference held on 9-10 September 2011 at The Grand, New Delhi 4

Stu

dents

Part

icip

ati

on a

t N

ati

onal

Level

ww

w.s

bit

.in

S.No.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

24

Group Dance

(Maestros-2011

Group Dance

(Confluence-2011)

Elements Culmycon-2011

Group Dance

Robot Implementation

(TATVA-2011)

Enterprencaur's

(TATVA-2011)

Robor War

(TATVA-2011)

Cultural Zest

(Zest-2011)

Group Dance

LAN Gaming Technical

(Zest-2011)

Singing

(Zest-2011)

Robotics

(Zest-2011)

Trust-2011

Technical Robowar

Tarang-2011

Technical Quiz

Tarang-2011

Garland War Technical Quiz

Tarang-2011

Solo Singing

Tarang-2011

Paint Ball

Tarang-2011

Band Performance

Tarang-2011

Duet Singing

Tarang-2011

Sketching

Tarang-2011

T-Shirt Painting

Tarang-2011

Musical Instrument

(Duet Performance)

Tarang-2011

Group Dance

Tarang-2011

Paint Ball

Tarang-2011

Mr. & Miss. Tarang

Dhoti Competition

Tarang-2011

Debate

EVENT

Panipat Institute

of Technology

Panipat

NIT

Kurukshetra

Y.M.C.A

Faridabad

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

IIT Delhi

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

COLLEGE DATE PRIZE

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Sunny (IV year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Parveen (IV year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Parveen (IV year)

1. Deepak Sharma (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

3. Nisha Yadav (II year)

4. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Deepak Sharma (II year)

1. Sunil Parida (2nd year)

2. Mohd. Sadiq (2nd year)

3. Yash Kumar (2nd year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Sunny (IV year)

1. Hitesh Parashar (II year)

1. Bhupender (I year)

2. Harmanjeet (Iyear)

1. Lakshay (II year)

2. Deepak (II year)

3. Yuvraj (II year)

4. Cheena (II year)

1. Vash (II year)

2. Sunil (II year)

3. Mohd. Sadiq (II year)

1. Cheena (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Cheena (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

3. Ritu (III year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Bhupender (II year)

2. Harmanjeet (I year)

1. Sandeep Nair (III year)

1. Sandeep Nair (III year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpender (IV year)

3. Priyank (IV year)

4. Akanksha (III year)

5. Tanuj (II year)

6. Nikhil (II year)

7. Naveen (IV year)

1. Yuvraj (II year)

2. Rishabh (II year)

3. Atish (II year)

4. Govinda (I year)

1. Kushagra (I year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Rishabh Jain (III year)

2. Vikas Mittal (II year)

PARTICIPANTS

10 Feb 2011

17-20 Feb 2011

17 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

25-27 Feb 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

III Prize

III Prize

III Prize

III Prize

NIL

NIL

NIL

VIII

position

III Prize

II Prize

III Prize

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

I Prize

III Prize

25Tarang-2011

Technical QuizIIT Roorkee

1. Puneet Kathuria (II year)

2. Shivani (III year)4-6 Mar 2011 I Prize

Page 6: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

3

Prof. H S ChahalVice ChancellorDCR University of Science & Technology, Murthal, Sonepat

His Excellency - Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana

25 Apr 2011Convocation 201114

Ms. Golda Malhotra Sr. Education Advisor & Events CoordinatorFrench Embassy

Mr. Pankaj Bansal CEO and Co-founderPeopleStrong

Prof. Philippe Cadene Attache for Scientific and University CooperationFrench Embassy

Dr. Vivek SrivastavSr. Faculty Engineering StudiesTrump and Gates

Mr. Sumit Beniwal Co-founder Aquskill

2-3 Sept 2011Shaping Careers-201115

Mr. Kshitij Sharma Co-founder Aquskil

Mr Updesh Singh Manager, Global HelpdeskPrometric

Mr Nirmal Banik AVP7N Consultants

Prashant Vasishtha Global Head – Capability SupportNokia Siemens Networks (NSN)

Prof (Dr) V R Singh Fellow - IEEE, Secretary - IEEE India CouncilChairman - IEEE Delhi Section

Prof (Dr) N S Gill Head, Computer Science DepartmentMDU, Rohtak

Mr R K Vyas Regional Student Coordinator CSI

15 Sept 2011Engineers Day-2011 17

16 15 Sept 2011IEEE Student Branch Launch

23 Sept 2011Computer Society of India (CSI)

Student Chapter Launch18

Prof. M N Hoda Chief Convenor - IndiaComSecretary - ISTE

Year a

t a G

lance

ww

w.s

bit.in Students participated in the NHRDN Young Managers Conference held on 9-10 September 2011 at The Grand, New Delhi 4

Stu

dents

Part

icip

ati

on a

t N

ati

onal

Level

ww

w.s

bit

.in

S.No.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

24

Group Dance

(Maestros-2011

Group Dance

(Confluence-2011)

Elements Culmycon-2011

Group Dance

Robot Implementation

(TATVA-2011)

Enterprencaur's

(TATVA-2011)

Robor War

(TATVA-2011)

Cultural Zest

(Zest-2011)

Group Dance

LAN Gaming Technical

(Zest-2011)

Singing

(Zest-2011)

Robotics

(Zest-2011)

Trust-2011

Technical Robowar

Tarang-2011

Technical Quiz

Tarang-2011

Garland War Technical Quiz

Tarang-2011

Solo Singing

Tarang-2011

Paint Ball

Tarang-2011

Band Performance

Tarang-2011

Duet Singing

Tarang-2011

Sketching

Tarang-2011

T-Shirt Painting

Tarang-2011

Musical Instrument

(Duet Performance)

Tarang-2011

Group Dance

Tarang-2011

Paint Ball

Tarang-2011

Mr. & Miss. Tarang

Dhoti Competition

Tarang-2011

Debate

EVENT

Panipat Institute

of Technology

Panipat

NIT

Kurukshetra

Y.M.C.A

Faridabad

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Delhi Technical

University

Delhi

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

Lingya's University

Faridabad

IIT Delhi

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

IIT Roorkee

COLLEGE DATE PRIZE

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Sunny (IV year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Parveen (IV year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Parveen (IV year)

1. Deepak Sharma (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

3. Nisha Yadav (II year)

4. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Deepak Sharma (II year)

1. Sunil Parida (2nd year)

2. Mohd. Sadiq (2nd year)

3. Yash Kumar (2nd year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Sunny (IV year)

1. Hitesh Parashar (II year)

1. Bhupender (I year)

2. Harmanjeet (Iyear)

1. Lakshay (II year)

2. Deepak (II year)

3. Yuvraj (II year)

4. Cheena (II year)

1. Vash (II year)

2. Sunil (II year)

3. Mohd. Sadiq (II year)

1. Cheena (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Cheena (II year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

3. Ritu (III year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Bhupender (II year)

2. Harmanjeet (I year)

1. Sandeep Nair (III year)

1. Sandeep Nair (III year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpender (IV year)

3. Priyank (IV year)

4. Akanksha (III year)

5. Tanuj (II year)

6. Nikhil (II year)

7. Naveen (IV year)

1. Yuvraj (II year)

2. Rishabh (II year)

3. Atish (II year)

4. Govinda (I year)

1. Kushagra (I year)

2. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Rishabh Jain (III year)

2. Vikas Mittal (II year)

PARTICIPANTS

10 Feb 2011

17-20 Feb 2011

17 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

24-26 Feb 2011

25-27 Feb 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

4-6 Mar 2011

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

III Prize

III Prize

III Prize

III Prize

NIL

NIL

NIL

VIII

position

III Prize

II Prize

III Prize

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

I Prize

III Prize

25Tarang-2011

Technical QuizIIT Roorkee

1. Puneet Kathuria (II year)

2. Shivani (III year)4-6 Mar 2011 I Prize

Page 7: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

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Tarang-2011

Extempore

Momentum-2011

Conference in Computing

Technical

Paper Presentation

Conference in Computing

Technical

Paper Presentation

Technical

(Jashn-e-Delhi)

Tech-Surge

Technical

(Mock Placement)

Tech-Surge

English Bee

Tech-Surge

Paint Ball

Tech-Surge

Techno Spark

Conference-2011

LAN Gamingh

(Zeneith-2011)

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Zephyr 2011

Moksha'11

Technical

GATES 11

GATES 11

GATES 11

GATES 11

GATES 11

GATES 11

7th Young Managers Conference

Young Leaders : Success Code

IIT Roorkee

ITM University

Gurgaon

Bharati Vidya Peeth

Deemed University

Institute of

Management

&

Research

Delhi

Bharati Vidya Peeth

Deemed University

Institute of

Management

&

Research

Delhi

MAIT

Delhi

MAIT

Delhi

MAIT

Delhi

MAIT

Delhi

Bharat

Institute of

Technology

Sonepat

Maharaja Surajmal

Institute of

Technology, Delhi

DCRUST

Murthal, Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

Hindu College

of Engineering

Sonepat

NSIT Dwarka

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

GTBIT

Delhi

NHRDN

1. Vikas Mittal (II year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

9. Sunny (IV year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

1. Lakshay Kakkar (IV year)

2. Shruti Gaur (IV year)

3. Harleen Kaur (IV year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Paras Relan (I year)

1. Rajneesh (IV year)

2. Pushpendra (IV year)

3. Naveen (IV year)

4. Priyank (IV year)

5. Nikhil (II year)

6. Tanuj (II year)

7. Akanksha (III year)

8. Ravinder (IV year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

2. Satyavarat Yadav (I year)

3. Ayush Sharma (I year)

4. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Lakshay Sharma (II year)

2. Satyavarat Yadav (I year)

3. Ayush (I year)

4. Paras Relan (I year)

5. Jatin Pal (I year)

1. Shalu (III year)

2. Richa Jain (III year)

1. Shalu (III year)

1. Shalu (III year)

2. Richa Jain (III year)

1. Shalu (III year)

2. Pooja (III year)

1. Nandini (III year)

2. Rishabh (III year)

1. Sapna (III year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Mohit Chhikara (I year)

2. Paras Relan (I year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

2. Lakshay (II year)

1. Deepak (II year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Deepak (II year)

2. Rishabh (II year)

3. Nisha (II year)

1. Cheena Saini (II year)

1. Anuj Jain (III year)

2. Anuj Kumar (III year)

1. Yatika Girdhar (IV year)2. Srishti Agarwal (IV year)3. Ankit Biala (III Year)4. Nishant Bhatia (IV Year)5. Gaurav Yadav (IV Year)6. Sonal Gupta (IV Year)7. Shagun Malik (I Year)

4-6 Mar 2011

8 Mar 2011

10 Mar 2011

10 Mar 2011

10-11 Mar 2011

10-11 Mar 2011

10-11 Mar 2011

10-11 Mar 2011

10-11 Mar 2011

10 Mar 2011

11-12 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

14-15 Mar 2011

23-24 Mar 2011

30 Mar-1 Apr 2011

30 Mar-1 Apr 2011

30 Mar-1 Apr 2011

30 Mar - 1 Apr 2011

30 Mar - 1 Apr 2011

30 Mar - 1 Apr 2011

9-10 Sep 2011

III Prize

II Prize

Paper

selected

&

Had giving

the

Pre-

sentation

Paper

selected

&

Had giving

the

Pre-

sentation

I Prize

II Prize

II Prize

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

I Prize

II Prize

II Prize

I Prize

I Prize

I Prize

II Prize

II Prize

II Prize

II Prize

II Prize

I Prize

Watch

Rs. 2499/-

Rs. 400/-

Rs. 250/-

II Prize

Rs. 350/-

Not

Applicable

8. Rahul Singh (IV Year)9. Prerna Bisht (III Year)10. Nidhi Sharma (IV Year)11. Priti Arora (II Year)12. Isha Saini (II Year)13. Kartikay Tandon (IV Year)14. Cheshta Uppal (III Year)15. Manisha Sharma (I Year)

Students who have shown excellent performance in various technical, cultural and sports festivals and national level contests

held at various Institutes like IIT Delhi, IIT Roorkee, DTU etc.

Passion to Excel Passion to Excel

Creating their

own path

Creating their

own pathStudents of class of 2007-11 who have shown exceptional

committment, dedication and sincerity through out their course of study for participation and contribution in various activities

organized within and outside the campus

Page 8: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

8

On 3rd February 2011, SBIT launched the student chapter of ISTE. In the launching ceremony, Dr Ranjit Singh,

Executive Secretary and the Programme Director, ISTE awarded the certificate to Ms. Sushil Yadav,

Chairperson, SBIT enabling the Institution to be enrolled as student chapter of the ISTE fraternity. Dr.

Dharmender Yadav, member of ISTE was also present at the function, He expressed his delight and congratulated

the membership awarded to SBIT.

It is surely the hall-mark and an achievement to be proud of. Ms Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT along with Mr. Rajesh Yadav,

Vice Chairman pondered for the requirement of the student chapter and would enable the students and the faculty

members to cultivate a spirit of learning, while maintaining an effective linkage between technical institution, industry

& the society.

ISTE Membership Benefits

• A member of a National Professional Organization.

• Eligibility for nomination of Best Student Chapter Award

• Joined an academic fraternity of over 45,000 strong professional.

• Preference to attend short-term training programme for the academic excellence and to become eligible for career advancement opportunities.

• Getting bi-monthly newsletter.

• Quarterly Indian Journal of Technical Education (at concessional rates).

• Many more publications for Self Development, Institution Development, etc.( at concessional rates).

• Eligible to participate in Chapter level, Section level and National level Conferences, Workshops and other activities of your academic interest etc.

IST

E S

tudent

Chapte

r Launch

ISTE

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Page 9: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

A National Level Conference on “Recent Trends in Recruitment Industry” was Organized by Shri Balwant Institute of

Management on 5 February, 2011. Like any other industry, the recruitment "industry" is cyclical. It follows the cycles of

other industries to a large extent: And the recruitment industry has a significant advantage because of the "products" it

promotes i.e. skilled manpower. For any organization, in any kind of economy, skilled manpower is absolutely essential.

Objective

• The purpose of the conference to focus on Recruitment Innovations, trends and best practices from the top employers and leading organizations in India as well as across the world.

• To create awareness and explore the avenues of the recruitment industry

• To gain insight from HR leaders of leading companies

The conference was divided into two parts

In the innaugural session Chief Guest Mr. C S Raju , GM-HR, Maruti Suzuki along with Guest of Honor Ms. Jatinder

Peters, GM-HR, ONGC, Mr. Gurusharan Singh , RMG-Head, Tech Mahindra addressed the students on the recent

trends & developments in the recruitment industry. In the second part of the conference, there was a panel discussion

chaired by Ms. Jatinder Peters of ONGC. Other members of the panel discussion were Mr. Gurusharna Singh from Tech

Mahindra, Mr. Ashish Saxena, VP, Mindlance and Mr. Gurpreet Singh, Director, Instituions from Co-Cubes.

9

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TR

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SBIM organized a The Grand Finale of ‘Leadership Talent Hunt-2011’ at the campus on 10 February 2011. Miss

Anamika from IRS College, Muzaffarpur, Bihar and Miss Shristi from Dyal Singh College, Delhi were awarded as the

winners of “Leadership Talent Hunt- 2011″.

The purpose of the event was to discover leaders of tomorrow who have the power of dreams and who can set trends

for the upcoming generations. Leadership hunt began 3 months ago to search the evolving leaders throughout the

country. The regional rounds of the event were held at more than 50 colleges of different states like Delhi, Haryana,

Bihar, Uttrakhand & Jharkhand. The final year under undergraduate students of all disciplines took part in the hunt.

The finale was held at Auditorium in the campus on 10 February 2011. Top students of each college were invited to

participate in the grand finale. The event consisted of various rounds like shoe game, creative marketing round, just a

minute session and see & speak round to explore the young talents. The day witnessed the enthusiasm of the

participating students.

At the end of the day Ms. Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIM & Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman, SBIM handed over the

prizes to the winners and runner-ups of the Leadership Talent Hunt and extended there warm and best wishes for their

bright future.

Leaders

hip

Tale

nt

Hunt

- 2011

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Page 10: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

A National Level Conference on “Recent Trends in Recruitment Industry” was Organized by Shri Balwant Institute of

Management on 5 February, 2011. Like any other industry, the recruitment "industry" is cyclical. It follows the cycles of

other industries to a large extent: And the recruitment industry has a significant advantage because of the "products" it

promotes i.e. skilled manpower. For any organization, in any kind of economy, skilled manpower is absolutely essential.

Objective

• The purpose of the conference to focus on Recruitment Innovations, trends and best practices from the top employers and leading organizations in India as well as across the world.

• To create awareness and explore the avenues of the recruitment industry

• To gain insight from HR leaders of leading companies

The conference was divided into two parts

In the innaugural session Chief Guest Mr. C S Raju , GM-HR, Maruti Suzuki along with Guest of Honor Ms. Jatinder

Peters, GM-HR, ONGC, Mr. Gurusharan Singh , RMG-Head, Tech Mahindra addressed the students on the recent

trends & developments in the recruitment industry. In the second part of the conference, there was a panel discussion

chaired by Ms. Jatinder Peters of ONGC. Other members of the panel discussion were Mr. Gurusharna Singh from Tech

Mahindra, Mr. Ashish Saxena, VP, Mindlance and Mr. Gurpreet Singh, Director, Instituions from Co-Cubes.

9

Natio

nal C

onfe

rence - R

TR

I 2011

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SBIM organized a The Grand Finale of ‘Leadership Talent Hunt-2011’ at the campus on 10 February 2011. Miss

Anamika from IRS College, Muzaffarpur, Bihar and Miss Shristi from Dyal Singh College, Delhi were awarded as the

winners of “Leadership Talent Hunt- 2011″.

The purpose of the event was to discover leaders of tomorrow who have the power of dreams and who can set trends

for the upcoming generations. Leadership hunt began 3 months ago to search the evolving leaders throughout the

country. The regional rounds of the event were held at more than 50 colleges of different states like Delhi, Haryana,

Bihar, Uttrakhand & Jharkhand. The final year under undergraduate students of all disciplines took part in the hunt.

The finale was held at Auditorium in the campus on 10 February 2011. Top students of each college were invited to

participate in the grand finale. The event consisted of various rounds like shoe game, creative marketing round, just a

minute session and see & speak round to explore the young talents. The day witnessed the enthusiasm of the

participating students.

At the end of the day Ms. Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIM & Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman, SBIM handed over the

prizes to the winners and runner-ups of the Leadership Talent Hunt and extended there warm and best wishes for their

bright future.

Leaders

hip

Tale

nt

Hunt

- 2011

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Page 11: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

SBIM, Sonepat, celebrated the season’s warmest day with the Seventh National Student Management Quiz (NSMQ-

2011) under the patronage of AIMA, an apex body of management. It was a great event along with the visit of the

french engineering college (ECAM) team represented by Vincent Caille, HOD – Mechanical Engineering and Edith Frey-

Head of International Relations. Ms Reema Gurung of the French Embassy accompanied the two delegations

exchanged the program and invited the students to visit their institution at Lyon.

Ms Vandana Puri, Deputy Director, AIMA opened the competition for the participants representing their institutes

from the northern zone. It had been the first preliminaries of the regional rounds where more than 50 teams

participated from various colleges & universities of northern part of India.

Ajay Punia, the quiz master, being witty & sparkling anchored the battle of brains with much panache and was the host

for the show too.

Chief Guest for the Event, Mr Praveen Yadav (Regional Head-Cushman & Wakefield), Ms Sushil Yadav, Chairperson

and Mr Rajesh Yadav, Vice-Chairman accoladed the prizes winners.

11

AIM

A N

atio

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tudent M

anagem

ent Q

uiz - 2

011

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Page 12: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

A new morning, a new day

Let us aspire, evolve and lead today

We no longer discuss the future of India. We say the future is India

The Annual Inter CollegeTechnical Fest, TechAeon was organized at the campus on 18-19 February 2011. The

theme for the fest was FUTURE INDIA. It was a platform for the students, teachers and the educationists to

strengthen their creativity- the essence of science and technology embedded in two of the fundamental impulses,

the desire to discover and the desire to invent. It is of great importance as the technological era is in boom and the

world at large needs technological inputs to lead the global population ahead of times-may be light years.

There were around 30 events in the fest that attracted the interests from all the fields. Fun Zone came as a bonanza

for all those who were looking for some fun and frolic in the fest. The Fun Zone took off with much pomp and vigour

with stalls by Vodafone, Oriflame and State Bank of India who were the lead sponsors for the fest. More than 50

colleges were invited for the fest.

The Chief Guest of the event was Mr. Wajahat Habibullah, former Chief Information Commissioner, Govt. of

India and the Guest of Honor were Prof. (Dr.) V R Singh, Chairman, IEEE Delhi Section and Dr. D S Mor, Chairman,

ISTE, Haryana Section.

Mr. HabiBullah had been a name to reckon with as an officer of par excellence of Indian Administrative Service

from 1968 to 2005. He had been the member of the IAS Cadre till superannuated in the year 2005. He is known for

being an author of several books.

Dr. V R Singh is the Associate Editor of IEEE Transactions of Instrumentation & Measurements (TIM)-USA and IEEE

International Sensors Journal (USA). He has over 36years of research-cum-teaching experience in India and

abroad. He has been working at National Physics Lab, New Delhi. As a Director-grade-scientist/distinguished

researcher/head-Instrumentation, sensors and biomedical measurement & standards, he has to his credit, over

250 papers, 200 talks, 4 books, 14 patents, 30 consultancies and has guided 22 PhD scholars.

Dr. D S Mor is the Director of CDLM, Govt. Engineering College, Panniwala Mota, Sirsa. He is still on the helm of

educational activities as the part of Executive Council, Member of CDL University, Sirsa, Chairman of Board of

study in engineering CDLU, Sirsa and would remain to be an active member of various expert committees in U.P.

Vodafone and Oriflame sponsored the various prizes. Prize distribution ceremony was held in the evening of 19

February 2011. Special gift vouchers were given to the Core team, the Organizing team and the winners.

To add to the fun, a fashion show was organized and the theme was FUTURE INDIA.

The college band, “GOONJ” vibrated with the sounds of Vande Mataram and the whole college sang to the beat. It

was a proud moment for all.

12

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eon 2

011

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Page 13: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Ms. Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT along with Dr. V. R. Singh, Chairman, IEEE, Delhi Section and Dr. D.S. Mor, Director, CDLMof TechAeon-2011 , awarding the young talent

The Management, Staff and Students of

S o n e p a t

Chief Guest

Former Chief Information Commissioner, Govt. of India

Chairperson, National Commission for Minorities (NCM)

Guest of Honor

Chairman, IEEE, Delhi Section

Chairman, ISTE, Haryana Section

Wajahat Habibullah

Dr. V. R. Singh

Dr. D. S. Mor

on the occasion of its

S e e G r e e n S e e L i f e

Annual Inter College Technical Fest

Welcomes18-19 February 2011

13

TechA

eon 2

011

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SBIT in collaboration with Building Blocks hosted the National Robotics Challenge (NRC-2011) on 25 March 2011 in

the campus. Ms Sushil Yadav, Chairperson , SBIT, Mr Rajesh Yadav, Vice-Chairman, SBIT along with Judges Prof. Naveen

Rathee, Dean, SBIT, Professor M M Sharma, Former Scientist, DRDO and Dr. Manoj Duhan, Chairman-ECE Deptt.

DCRUST, Murthal and Mr. Tarun Bhalla, Director,Building Blocks innaugurated the NRC 2011.

More than 30 teams participated various events. Several renowned institutes like IIT Roorkee, IP University, BMIET,

Sonepat, IIMET, Jaipur AKGES, Ghaziabad, Hindu College of Engg., Sonepat participated in the competition. Various

rounds were there in this challenge consisting of an elimination round followed by semi finals and final. The goal of the

competition was to create and nurture scientific minds.

The team of Ajay Kumar Garg College of Engineering, Ghaziabad stood first, IIMET, Jaipur student team stood second

position and third position was grabbed by the SBIT, Sonepat students

The Chief Guest, Mr. Rakesh Viz, VP, Aricent expressed his delight that the students have shown their keen interest to

show case their unique discovery.

The Guest of Honor Mr. Kanav Agnihotri, Marketing Officer, HCL learning appreciated the role of the institute to make

the contests a successful event. The students felt the need for exposure to such contest in future to learn the various

aspects of engineering while performing and taking part in such competitions.

Nati

onal

Roboti

cs

Chall

enge -

2011

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Page 14: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Ms. Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT along with Dr. V. R. Singh, Chairman, IEEE, Delhi Section and Dr. D.S. Mor, Director, CDLMof TechAeon-2011 , awarding the young talent

The Management, Staff and Students of

S o n e p a t

Chief Guest

Former Chief Information Commissioner, Govt. of India

Chairperson, National Commission for Minorities (NCM)

Guest of Honor

Chairman, IEEE, Delhi Section

Chairman, ISTE, Haryana Section

Wajahat Habibullah

Dr. V. R. Singh

Dr. D. S. Mor

on the occasion of its

S e e G r e e n S e e L i f e

Annual Inter College Technical Fest

Welcomes18-19 February 2011

13

TechA

eon 2

011

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SBIT in collaboration with Building Blocks hosted the National Robotics Challenge (NRC-2011) on 25 March 2011 in

the campus. Ms Sushil Yadav, Chairperson , SBIT, Mr Rajesh Yadav, Vice-Chairman, SBIT along with Judges Prof. Naveen

Rathee, Dean, SBIT, Professor M M Sharma, Former Scientist, DRDO and Dr. Manoj Duhan, Chairman-ECE Deptt.

DCRUST, Murthal and Mr. Tarun Bhalla, Director,Building Blocks innaugurated the NRC 2011.

More than 30 teams participated various events. Several renowned institutes like IIT Roorkee, IP University, BMIET,

Sonepat, IIMET, Jaipur AKGES, Ghaziabad, Hindu College of Engg., Sonepat participated in the competition. Various

rounds were there in this challenge consisting of an elimination round followed by semi finals and final. The goal of the

competition was to create and nurture scientific minds.

The team of Ajay Kumar Garg College of Engineering, Ghaziabad stood first, IIMET, Jaipur student team stood second

position and third position was grabbed by the SBIT, Sonepat students

The Chief Guest, Mr. Rakesh Viz, VP, Aricent expressed his delight that the students have shown their keen interest to

show case their unique discovery.

The Guest of Honor Mr. Kanav Agnihotri, Marketing Officer, HCL learning appreciated the role of the institute to make

the contests a successful event. The students felt the need for exposure to such contest in future to learn the various

aspects of engineering while performing and taking part in such competitions.

Nati

onal

Roboti

cs

Chall

enge -

2011

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Page 15: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Ms. Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT along with His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana and Smt. Shanti Pahadia inaugurating the Library

15

Library Inaugurated by His Excellency, Shri Jagannath Pahadia

The inauguration of advanced library in SBIT, Sonepat was done by His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble

Governor of Haryana on 25 April 2011. On the occasion Smt. Shanti Pahadia (First Lady), Prof. H.S. Chahal, Vice

Chancellor, DCR University of Science and Technology, Murthal, Sonepat, Mr. Rajeev Sharma (Commissioner,

Rohtak), Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh, Ms Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIT and Mr Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman, SBIT,

were present.

The two storied Library is spread over 17000 sq. ft. area with more than 25000 books, is fully online and equipped with

IEEE journals and other international journals and periodicals.

They appreciated the college for its effort for the development of students in all aspects with the facilities provided to

them. The advanced library is fully AC with online book management system and Delnet.

It is inclusive of all the books from latest academic publications to the new technology magazines. On the occasion, the

Governor also addressed the faculty, staff and students of the SBIT. He said that the future of any country relies on the

quality of the educational infrastructure. His Excellency lauded the efforts of SBIT in making progress in the field of

science and technology. He called upon the students to focus on materializing the dream of making India a progressed

and prosperous country.

Lib

rary In

naugra

tion

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st1 Convocation held at SBIT in presence H.E., Shri Jagannath Pahadia

“We do not fear the future, because of what we have achieved and what we will achieve”

With these words SBIT and SBIM completed its 1st Convocation on 25th April, 2011 in the presence of His Excellency

Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana. It was great honor for the students and college to have such

eminent personality as Chief Guest. Along with Hon’ble Governor Smt. Shanti Pahadia (First Lady), Sh. H.S. Chahal,

Vice Chancellor DCR University of Science and Technology and Mr. Rajeev Sharma (Commissioner, Rohtak) grace the

occasion with their presence.

Madam Sushil Yadav (Chairperson, SBIT), Mr. Rajesh Yadav (Vice-Chairman) and Dr. R.K. Sharma (Director, SBIT) gave a

warm welcome to all the eminent guests. Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh congratulated all the graduates for successfully

completing their degree and entering the world of professionals.

The programme commenced with Academic Procession with band followed by the welcome address of the

Chairperson and presenting the degree and awards of excellence. It ended with National Anthem at 07:30PM.

Setting new trends in the field of achievements our students “Ms. Chitra, Ms. Meenakshi Dangi, Ms. Aena, Ms. Promila

and Mr. Vinay Panwar received not only recognized the

students for their academic performance but praised their contribution to the Institute throughout their academic

years. was awarded to Ms. Meenakshi Dangi. For overall performance in all

the fields the was given to Mr. Amit Saroha.

“Chairman Gold Medal of Excellence Award”.

“Shri Balwant Gold Medal of Excellence”

“Chanderwati Student of the Year Award”

The Institute

Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh lighting the lamp

16

Convocati

on -

2011

His Excellency Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana addressing the students

His Excellency Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana lighting the lamp

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Page 16: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Ms. Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT along with His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana and Smt. Shanti Pahadia inaugurating the Library

15

Library Inaugurated by His Excellency, Shri Jagannath Pahadia

The inauguration of advanced library in SBIT, Sonepat was done by His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble

Governor of Haryana on 25 April 2011. On the occasion Smt. Shanti Pahadia (First Lady), Prof. H.S. Chahal, Vice

Chancellor, DCR University of Science and Technology, Murthal, Sonepat, Mr. Rajeev Sharma (Commissioner,

Rohtak), Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh, Ms Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIT and Mr Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman, SBIT,

were present.

The two storied Library is spread over 17000 sq. ft. area with more than 25000 books, is fully online and equipped with

IEEE journals and other international journals and periodicals.

They appreciated the college for its effort for the development of students in all aspects with the facilities provided to

them. The advanced library is fully AC with online book management system and Delnet.

It is inclusive of all the books from latest academic publications to the new technology magazines. On the occasion, the

Governor also addressed the faculty, staff and students of the SBIT. He said that the future of any country relies on the

quality of the educational infrastructure. His Excellency lauded the efforts of SBIT in making progress in the field of

science and technology. He called upon the students to focus on materializing the dream of making India a progressed

and prosperous country.

Lib

rary In

naugra

tion

ww

w.s

bit.in

st1 Convocation held at SBIT in presence H.E., Shri Jagannath Pahadia

“We do not fear the future, because of what we have achieved and what we will achieve”

With these words SBIT and SBIM completed its 1st Convocation on 25th April, 2011 in the presence of His Excellency

Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana. It was great honor for the students and college to have such

eminent personality as Chief Guest. Along with Hon’ble Governor Smt. Shanti Pahadia (First Lady), Sh. H.S. Chahal,

Vice Chancellor DCR University of Science and Technology and Mr. Rajeev Sharma (Commissioner, Rohtak) grace the

occasion with their presence.

Madam Sushil Yadav (Chairperson, SBIT), Mr. Rajesh Yadav (Vice-Chairman) and Dr. R.K. Sharma (Director, SBIT) gave a

warm welcome to all the eminent guests. Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh congratulated all the graduates for successfully

completing their degree and entering the world of professionals.

The programme commenced with Academic Procession with band followed by the welcome address of the

Chairperson and presenting the degree and awards of excellence. It ended with National Anthem at 07:30PM.

Setting new trends in the field of achievements our students “Ms. Chitra, Ms. Meenakshi Dangi, Ms. Aena, Ms. Promila

and Mr. Vinay Panwar received not only recognized the

students for their academic performance but praised their contribution to the Institute throughout their academic

years. was awarded to Ms. Meenakshi Dangi. For overall performance in all

the fields the was given to Mr. Amit Saroha.

“Chairman Gold Medal of Excellence Award”.

“Shri Balwant Gold Medal of Excellence”

“Chanderwati Student of the Year Award”

The Institute

Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh lighting the lamp

16

Convocati

on -

2011

His Excellency Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana addressing the students

His Excellency Shri Jagannath PahadiaHon’ble Governor of Haryana lighting the lamp

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Sh. H.S. Chahal, Vice-Chancellor, DCRUST, Murthal awarding the Degree to the class of 2006-10

His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana presenting Chanderwati Student of the Year Award to Mr. Amit Siroha, Class of 2006-10

From left to right, Dr. R.K. Sharma, Director, SBIT, Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice-Chairman, SBIT, Ms. Suhsil, Chairperson, SBIT, His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana, Sh. H.S. Chahal, Vice-Chancellor, DCRUST, Murthal,

Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh, Board Member, SBIT, Mr. Rajeev Sharma, Commissioner, Rohtak Zone17

Convocatio

n - 2

011

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Students of class of 2006-10 celebrating their happiness after receiving the Degree at the Convocation in SBIT

Page 18: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Sh. H.S. Chahal, Vice-Chancellor, DCRUST, Murthal awarding the Degree to the class of 2006-10

His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana presenting Chanderwati Student of the Year Award to Mr. Amit Siroha, Class of 2006-10

From left to right, Dr. R.K. Sharma, Director, SBIT, Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice-Chairman, SBIT, Ms. Suhsil, Chairperson, SBIT, His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of Haryana, Sh. H.S. Chahal, Vice-Chancellor, DCRUST, Murthal,

Padamshree Dr. Pritam Singh, Board Member, SBIT, Mr. Rajeev Sharma, Commissioner, Rohtak Zone17

Convocatio

n - 2

011

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Students of class of 2006-10 celebrating their happiness after receiving the Degree at the Convocation in SBIT

Page 19: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

Ms. Sushil, Presenting the momento to His Excellency Shri Jagannath Pahadia, Hon’ble Governor of HaryanaChairperson, SBIT

SBIT shining at the night of its first Convocation 2011

Page 20: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

20

Shapin

g C

are

ers

- 2

011

It was yet another spectacular display of talent when the Engineer’s Day celebration took place in SBIT for the first time

ever, with full panache on 15 September 2011. In India, this day is celebrated in the honor of Sir M Visvesvaraya (1861-

1962), who was internationally recognized for his genius in harnessing water resources in the southern parts of India.

Engineer’s Day was celebrated with great enthusiasm and zeal. Various activities were incorporated to enhance the

physical and intellectual growth of the students. LAN Gaming, Rangoli, Engineer’s words, Cricket and many more

activities were lined up for the students. The whole institute seemed to be buzzing around with fun and frolic

throughout the day, but that was not all and the icing on the cake was launch of IEEE Student Chapter.

The occasion was graced by a number of distinguished guests including Prof. (Dr) V R Singh, Secretary, IEEE India

Council and Chairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMRS, Mr. Prashant Vashishtha, Global Head-Capability Support,

Nokia Siemens Networks, Prof. (Dr) N S Gill, Head, Department of Computer Science & Applications and Director,

University Computer Centre, MDU Rohtak. .

2nd Annual Career Counseling SummitShaping Careers 2011

SBIT organized its 2nd Annual Career Counseling Summit - Shaping Careers 2011 on 2 & 3 September 2011 in the campus. For two days the SBIT campus came alive with discussion and expertise sessions with the greatest of the great maestros in the field of education and consultants to interact and guide the students to seek the best after their baccalaureate. Shaping Careers 2011 attracted renowned speakers from every corner of India.

The events of the day unfolded with the arrival of the Chief Guest Mr. Pankaj Bansal, CEO & Co-founder PeopleStrong. He is also the member of Academic Advisory Council of SBIT & SBIM. Mr. Naveen Chopra, Chairman, The Chopras was the Guest of Honor.

First session was the eye opener for the students on how they can put their best foot forward. Mr. Philippe Cadene and Ms. Golda Malhotra from French Embassy briefed the students about higher studies opportunity and overseas jobs opportunity, followed by the session on Jobs in Govt. Sector which was taken by Dr. Vivek Srivastav, Air India.

Second day started with session of Sumit Beniwal & Kshitij Sharma from AquSkill. The session was on Entrepreneur and it was wonderful to see the student’s response. The next session was focused only for Electronics Engineers. There was panel discussion where the panel members were Mr. Gaurav from Luminous, Mr. Vikram from Bulo learning and Mr. Tarun Bhalla from Building Blocks.

This event was organized in collaboration with The Chopras, Co-cubes, HCL and French Embassy

21

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eer’s D

ay - 2

011

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Page 21: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

20

Shapin

g C

are

ers

- 2

011

It was yet another spectacular display of talent when the Engineer’s Day celebration took place in SBIT for the first time

ever, with full panache on 15 September 2011. In India, this day is celebrated in the honor of Sir M Visvesvaraya (1861-

1962), who was internationally recognized for his genius in harnessing water resources in the southern parts of India.

Engineer’s Day was celebrated with great enthusiasm and zeal. Various activities were incorporated to enhance the

physical and intellectual growth of the students. LAN Gaming, Rangoli, Engineer’s words, Cricket and many more

activities were lined up for the students. The whole institute seemed to be buzzing around with fun and frolic

throughout the day, but that was not all and the icing on the cake was launch of IEEE Student Chapter.

The occasion was graced by a number of distinguished guests including Prof. (Dr) V R Singh, Secretary, IEEE India

Council and Chairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMRS, Mr. Prashant Vashishtha, Global Head-Capability Support,

Nokia Siemens Networks, Prof. (Dr) N S Gill, Head, Department of Computer Science & Applications and Director,

University Computer Centre, MDU Rohtak. .

2nd Annual Career Counseling SummitShaping Careers 2011

SBIT organized its 2nd Annual Career Counseling Summit - Shaping Careers 2011 on 2 & 3 September 2011 in the campus. For two days the SBIT campus came alive with discussion and expertise sessions with the greatest of the great maestros in the field of education and consultants to interact and guide the students to seek the best after their baccalaureate. Shaping Careers 2011 attracted renowned speakers from every corner of India.

The events of the day unfolded with the arrival of the Chief Guest Mr. Pankaj Bansal, CEO & Co-founder PeopleStrong. He is also the member of Academic Advisory Council of SBIT & SBIM. Mr. Naveen Chopra, Chairman, The Chopras was the Guest of Honor.

First session was the eye opener for the students on how they can put their best foot forward. Mr. Philippe Cadene and Ms. Golda Malhotra from French Embassy briefed the students about higher studies opportunity and overseas jobs opportunity, followed by the session on Jobs in Govt. Sector which was taken by Dr. Vivek Srivastav, Air India.

Second day started with session of Sumit Beniwal & Kshitij Sharma from AquSkill. The session was on Entrepreneur and it was wonderful to see the student’s response. The next session was focused only for Electronics Engineers. There was panel discussion where the panel members were Mr. Gaurav from Luminous, Mr. Vikram from Bulo learning and Mr. Tarun Bhalla from Building Blocks.

This event was organized in collaboration with The Chopras, Co-cubes, HCL and French Embassy

21

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eer’s D

ay - 2

011

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22

IEEE S

tudent

Bra

nch L

aunch

On 23 September 2011 SBIT launched the student chapter of Computer Society of India (CSI). In the

launching ceremony, Mr R K Vyas, Regional Vice President, Reigon I, CSI awarded the certificate to Ms.

Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT enabling the Institution to be enrolled as student chapter of the CSI fraternity.

Prof. M N Hoda, Regional Student Coordinator, CSI was also present at the function. He expressed his delight and

congratulated for the membership awarded to the college.

It is surely the hall-mark and an achievement to be proud of. Ms Sushil along with Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman

pondered to requirement of the student chapter and would enable the students and the faculty members to cultivate a

spirit of learning, while maintaining an effective linkage between technical institution, industry & the society.

Principal of SBIT, Dr. Manoj Kumar, initially addressed the gathering as he commented that it foster research as a

function complementary to teaching. The students are proud to be a part of the programme to rejoice the consistent

growth & considered its remarkable trend to bring across the benefit to formulate the specific goals and

responsibilities of technical education.

CSI Membership Benefits

• Eligibility for nomination of Best Student Branch Award

• Additional 10 copies of CSI Communications to the institution & log-in privilege to the students on CSI

knowledge portal with access to distinguished speaker list

• Attachment to a Regional Student Coordinator & National Student Coordinator for assistance with resource

persons for various events and chapter support to organize seminars / workshops / tutorials / competitions /

Expo

• Invitation for all Regional/State/National student conventions/conferences and competitions

• Concessional rates for CSI Conferences and Tutorials for student members

• Opportunity for students to interact with industry professionals and chalk out a career path

• Eligibility to publish articles in CSI communications and journal for student members

• Eligibility to be nominated for the best Student paper in CSI communications

• Eligibility for CSI funded minor projects (for College Students)

• CSI Certification and training programs at discounted rates for students

• Permission to conduct events under CSI banner

23

CSI S

tudent C

hapte

r Launch

15 September was a historic day in SBIT. On this day IEEE student branch was launched at SBIT.

Prof. (Dr) V R Singh, Secretary, IEEE India Council and Chairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMBS handed over the

student branch certificate to Ms. Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIT and explained the benefits of IEEE memberships.

With opening of student branch, SBIT students will have exclusive benefits like exclusive access to the latest and best

research, news, television programs, and educational resources needed to expand their expertise and stay current,

part of the world’s largest community of technology professionals-a network of communication and learning where

innovators share what works, what does not, and what is needed now, IEEE member digital library - access to one

million IEEE documents, proceedings of the IEEE etc.

About IEEE

IEEE is the world’s largest professional association dedicated to advancing technological innovation and excellence for

the benefit of humanity. IEEE and its members inspire a global community through IEEE’s highly cited publications,

conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities. IEEE creates an environment where

members collaborate on world changing technologies - from computing and sustainable energy systems, to aerospace,

communications, robotics, healthcare, and more. The strategic plan of IEEE is driven by an envisioned future that

realizes the full potential of the role IEEE plays in advancing technology for humanity.

IEEE Membership Benefits

IEEE members can access information on local events and activities by logging in to myIEEE, the members' personalized

gateway to IEEE membership. In addition, members can also:

• Access individual Society memberships and subscriptions

• Connect with local IEEE Sections and volunteer leadership

• IEEE Mini-Grants for University Student Design Projects

• IEEE Student Competitions - from programming to humanitarian to robotics, IEEE membership allows you to

compete against your peers and have fun simultaneously

• IEEE Scholarships, Awards, and Fellowships - enhance your career through a multitude of offerings

• IEEE Potentials Magazine - filled with technical articles and career information, this publication is created

just for students

• Microsoft Software for Students - in conjunction with Microsoft, IEEE offers a wide selection of

development software to student members

• Read the latest news from IEEE, IEEE Spectrum, IEEE Standards News, and The Institute.

• Professional Networking

• Various International Certification Program

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Page 23: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

22

IEEE S

tudent

Bra

nch L

aunch

On 23 September 2011 SBIT launched the student chapter of Computer Society of India (CSI). In the

launching ceremony, Mr R K Vyas, Regional Vice President, Reigon I, CSI awarded the certificate to Ms.

Sushil, Chairperson, SBIT enabling the Institution to be enrolled as student chapter of the CSI fraternity.

Prof. M N Hoda, Regional Student Coordinator, CSI was also present at the function. He expressed his delight and

congratulated for the membership awarded to the college.

It is surely the hall-mark and an achievement to be proud of. Ms Sushil along with Mr. Rajesh Yadav, Vice Chairman

pondered to requirement of the student chapter and would enable the students and the faculty members to cultivate a

spirit of learning, while maintaining an effective linkage between technical institution, industry & the society.

Principal of SBIT, Dr. Manoj Kumar, initially addressed the gathering as he commented that it foster research as a

function complementary to teaching. The students are proud to be a part of the programme to rejoice the consistent

growth & considered its remarkable trend to bring across the benefit to formulate the specific goals and

responsibilities of technical education.

CSI Membership Benefits

• Eligibility for nomination of Best Student Branch Award

• Additional 10 copies of CSI Communications to the institution & log-in privilege to the students on CSI

knowledge portal with access to distinguished speaker list

• Attachment to a Regional Student Coordinator & National Student Coordinator for assistance with resource

persons for various events and chapter support to organize seminars / workshops / tutorials / competitions /

Expo

• Invitation for all Regional/State/National student conventions/conferences and competitions

• Concessional rates for CSI Conferences and Tutorials for student members

• Opportunity for students to interact with industry professionals and chalk out a career path

• Eligibility to publish articles in CSI communications and journal for student members

• Eligibility to be nominated for the best Student paper in CSI communications

• Eligibility for CSI funded minor projects (for College Students)

• CSI Certification and training programs at discounted rates for students

• Permission to conduct events under CSI banner

23

CSI S

tudent C

hapte

r Launch

15 September was a historic day in SBIT. On this day IEEE student branch was launched at SBIT.

Prof. (Dr) V R Singh, Secretary, IEEE India Council and Chairperson, IEEE Delhi Section IMS/EMBS handed over the

student branch certificate to Ms. Sushil Yadav, Chairperson, SBIT and explained the benefits of IEEE memberships.

With opening of student branch, SBIT students will have exclusive benefits like exclusive access to the latest and best

research, news, television programs, and educational resources needed to expand their expertise and stay current,

part of the world’s largest community of technology professionals-a network of communication and learning where

innovators share what works, what does not, and what is needed now, IEEE member digital library - access to one

million IEEE documents, proceedings of the IEEE etc.

About IEEE

IEEE is the world’s largest professional association dedicated to advancing technological innovation and excellence for

the benefit of humanity. IEEE and its members inspire a global community through IEEE’s highly cited publications,

conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities. IEEE creates an environment where

members collaborate on world changing technologies - from computing and sustainable energy systems, to aerospace,

communications, robotics, healthcare, and more. The strategic plan of IEEE is driven by an envisioned future that

realizes the full potential of the role IEEE plays in advancing technology for humanity.

IEEE Membership Benefits

IEEE members can access information on local events and activities by logging in to myIEEE, the members' personalized

gateway to IEEE membership. In addition, members can also:

• Access individual Society memberships and subscriptions

• Connect with local IEEE Sections and volunteer leadership

• IEEE Mini-Grants for University Student Design Projects

• IEEE Student Competitions - from programming to humanitarian to robotics, IEEE membership allows you to

compete against your peers and have fun simultaneously

• IEEE Scholarships, Awards, and Fellowships - enhance your career through a multitude of offerings

• IEEE Potentials Magazine - filled with technical articles and career information, this publication is created

just for students

• Microsoft Software for Students - in conjunction with Microsoft, IEEE offers a wide selection of

development software to student members

• Read the latest news from IEEE, IEEE Spectrum, IEEE Standards News, and The Institute.

• Professional Networking

• Various International Certification Program

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Page 24: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

24

Clu

bs@

sbit

SBIT added a new feather to its cap and as the motto says, aspire, evolve, lead;

These clubs initiated a lot of activities along with the academic

excellence of the students. The Institute introduced the clubs for overall development of the students,

allowing them to work on their interests and extra-curricular activities.

The club activities are conducted every week in the campus.

Personality derives from the Greek word ‘Personae’, which means the skills that others perceive within

themselves. The club works for the personality development of the students and has been named

“Essence”. It is the most crucial bit of ones personality which holds a person in his/her perspective. The club

enables students to improve their confidence, public speaking skills. Several activities inculcate the art of

walking and carrying oneself to achieve their respective goals.

President Srishti Agarwal

Secretary Ankit Biala

Members Cheshta Uppal, Nishant Garg, Mohit Raj Shukhla, Vaibhav Rana

“Koshish” has been set up to help those who are deprived of the basic needs of life. This club includes keen

members to work for the under-privileged and help them to understand the nuances of life which indeed is

a noble cause. The club promises to work at its best for the welfare of the people. Koshish means effort that

relatively means to step up and initiate betterment for imparting normal standard of living or rights.

President Yatika Girdhar

Secretary Priyanka Dudeja

Members R Sirisha, Prerna Bisht, Hitesh Singh, Prakhar Srivastava

Creativity is the foundation of human thinking and will always be at the highest end of the value chain,

“Kalakriti” has been set up for the students to showcase their talents and skills. Traditional activities like

rangoli making, poster designing help the students to polish their creativity.

President Shalu

Secretary Anurag

Members Anurag Sharma, Vikas Kumar, Anish Mehta, Laveena Sharma

Students formed 7 clubs in different areas.

25

Clu

bs@

sbit

From Cricket to hockey, snooker to rughby, football to chess…

Today, the world is painted blue as our Indian sportsmen are excelling and proving their mettle throughout

the world.

At college level, we recognise the fact that it takes intelligent scrutiny to spot out that fearless spark and

dynamic vision in the young ones that produce World Champions.

“Dynamos” the sports club has been set up to provide students having their strong footprints in sports and

strengthen their bones and also generate a spirit of camaraderie and healthy competition to the students.

President Deepak Shokeen

Secretary Ashok

Members Satyavrat Yadav, Anil Kumar, Santosh Kumar, Mayank Kakkar

Science and spiritualism seek the same divine blessings for doing good to humanity, Techquest the

technical club of SBIT has been formed by the young budding genius engineers’ for the development of the

technical skills of the other students. The club activities include interesting games and many intellect

aspects for the intellectual integrity and creative skills of the young engineers.

President Nikhil Joshi

Secretary Lakshay Sharma

Members Rahul Singh, Akshay Rohilla, Himanshu Oberoi, Megha Gandhi

The Management club is an effective resource for student aspiring to be successful manager in their on

profession. The various activities are carried out to improve their decision making skill, preparing them for

group cohesiveness and other skill in their concerned field.

President Nidhi Chouhan

Secretary Amardeep

Members Shiv Kumar, Shelja, Cheena Saini, Amit Goswami, Aishwarya Behl, Palak

This is a club for those want to take part in several cultural activities and wants to enjoy the Institute life and

want to enhance their singing, dancing, acting skills. Cultural club includes all the cultural activities like

music, dance , dramatics, fashion parade and many more. The name of the club is SPUNK.

President Nishant Bhatia

Secretary Tanuj Chopra

Members Aanchal Joshi, Harmanjeet Singh, Shagun Malik, Phalguni Batra

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24

Clu

bs@

sbit

SBIT added a new feather to its cap and as the motto says, aspire, evolve, lead;

These clubs initiated a lot of activities along with the academic

excellence of the students. The Institute introduced the clubs for overall development of the students,

allowing them to work on their interests and extra-curricular activities.

The club activities are conducted every week in the campus.

Personality derives from the Greek word ‘Personae’, which means the skills that others perceive within

themselves. The club works for the personality development of the students and has been named

“Essence”. It is the most crucial bit of ones personality which holds a person in his/her perspective. The club

enables students to improve their confidence, public speaking skills. Several activities inculcate the art of

walking and carrying oneself to achieve their respective goals.

President Srishti Agarwal

Secretary Ankit Biala

Members Cheshta Uppal, Nishant Garg, Mohit Raj Shukhla, Vaibhav Rana

“Koshish” has been set up to help those who are deprived of the basic needs of life. This club includes keen

members to work for the under-privileged and help them to understand the nuances of life which indeed is

a noble cause. The club promises to work at its best for the welfare of the people. Koshish means effort that

relatively means to step up and initiate betterment for imparting normal standard of living or rights.

President Yatika Girdhar

Secretary Priyanka Dudeja

Members R Sirisha, Prerna Bisht, Hitesh Singh, Prakhar Srivastava

Creativity is the foundation of human thinking and will always be at the highest end of the value chain,

“Kalakriti” has been set up for the students to showcase their talents and skills. Traditional activities like

rangoli making, poster designing help the students to polish their creativity.

President Shalu

Secretary Anurag

Members Anurag Sharma, Vikas Kumar, Anish Mehta, Laveena Sharma

Students formed 7 clubs in different areas.

25

Clu

bs@

sbit

From Cricket to hockey, snooker to rughby, football to chess…

Today, the world is painted blue as our Indian sportsmen are excelling and proving their mettle throughout

the world.

At college level, we recognise the fact that it takes intelligent scrutiny to spot out that fearless spark and

dynamic vision in the young ones that produce World Champions.

“Dynamos” the sports club has been set up to provide students having their strong footprints in sports and

strengthen their bones and also generate a spirit of camaraderie and healthy competition to the students.

President Deepak Shokeen

Secretary Ashok

Members Satyavrat Yadav, Anil Kumar, Santosh Kumar, Mayank Kakkar

Science and spiritualism seek the same divine blessings for doing good to humanity, Techquest the

technical club of SBIT has been formed by the young budding genius engineers’ for the development of the

technical skills of the other students. The club activities include interesting games and many intellect

aspects for the intellectual integrity and creative skills of the young engineers.

President Nikhil Joshi

Secretary Lakshay Sharma

Members Rahul Singh, Akshay Rohilla, Himanshu Oberoi, Megha Gandhi

The Management club is an effective resource for student aspiring to be successful manager in their on

profession. The various activities are carried out to improve their decision making skill, preparing them for

group cohesiveness and other skill in their concerned field.

President Nidhi Chouhan

Secretary Amardeep

Members Shiv Kumar, Shelja, Cheena Saini, Amit Goswami, Aishwarya Behl, Palak

This is a club for those want to take part in several cultural activities and wants to enjoy the Institute life and

want to enhance their singing, dancing, acting skills. Cultural club includes all the cultural activities like

music, dance , dramatics, fashion parade and many more. The name of the club is SPUNK.

President Nishant Bhatia

Secretary Tanuj Chopra

Members Aanchal Joshi, Harmanjeet Singh, Shagun Malik, Phalguni Batra

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26

Resu

ltWith the efforts of highly qualified, experienced and dedicated team of faculty the students always have

been able to present excellent results and bring laurels to the institute by acquiring positions at the

university level. The institue is highly acclaimed for providing conducive and congenial academic

atmosphere which motivate the students to show fruitful results. The SBIT Students consistently

receives meritorious positions in the university.

Name :

Branch :

Vinav Bansal

IT VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Gaurav Mahendru

ME VII SemName :

Branch :

Vineeta sharma

CSE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Kanika Chugh

CSE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Monika Rani

ECE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shilpa

IT V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Srishti Aggarwal

IT V Sem Name :

Branch :

Teena Madan

CSE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sugandha

CSE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Parveen Kumar

ECE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Priya Ranjan

ECE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Isha Malhotra

ECE III Sem Name :

Branch :

Deshraj Yadav

ME V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rakesh Kumar

CSE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Lakshay Sharma

CSE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Reshu Goyal

IT III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Mohit Gupta

ME III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rajat Sharma

CSE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shivangi Sharma

CSE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Saurabh Bhatt

ECE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Padmakar Remuka

MCA V SemName :

Branch :

Shiv Kumar

BBA I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rahul Kumar

BBA III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Neeraj Kumar

BBA V Sem

Name :

Branch :

PRASANN

MBA III SemName :

Branch :

Toshit

ECE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Anurag

IT I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Yash Mittal

ME I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Dazy

MBA I Sem

To

pp

ers

of

De

ce

mb

er

20

10

3rd Position in University

12th Position in University

3rd Position in University

13th Position in University

5th Position in University13th Position in University

12th Position in University

27

Resu

lt

To

pp

ers o

f May 2

01

1

Name :

Branch :

Chetna Goel

CSE-A VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Anu Bhutani

CSE-B VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Mukta

ECE VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Vinav Bansal

IT VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Gaurav Mahendru

ME VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Divya Bedi

CSE-A VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Deshraj

ME VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Reshu Goel

IT IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Charu Jain

CSE-B VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Chandani Nanda

CSE-A IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Harvinder

ME IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Parveen Kumar

ECE VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sweta Rana

CSE-B IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rajat Sharma

CSE-A II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shilpa

IT-A V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Preeti Wadhwa

ECE-A IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Aanchal Joshi

CSE-B II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Srishti Aggarwal

IT-B VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sidharth Jain

ECE-B IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Saurav Bhatt

ECE-A II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Toshit Kumar

ECE-B II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Narender Singh

IT II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Yash Mittal

ME II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sahil Gupta

BBA VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Prasann

MBA IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Dazy

MBA II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sachin Kumar

BBA IV Sem

7th Position in University

7th Position in University

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Page 27: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

26

Resu

lt

With the efforts of highly qualified, experienced and dedicated team of faculty the students always have

been able to present excellent results and bring laurels to the institute by acquiring positions at the

university level. The institue is highly acclaimed for providing conducive and congenial academic

atmosphere which motivate the students to show fruitful results. The SBIT Students consistently

receives meritorious positions in the university.

Name :

Branch :

Vinav Bansal

IT VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Gaurav Mahendru

ME VII SemName :

Branch :

Vineeta sharma

CSE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Kanika Chugh

CSE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Monika Rani

ECE VII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shilpa

IT V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Srishti Aggarwal

IT V Sem Name :

Branch :

Teena Madan

CSE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sugandha

CSE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Parveen Kumar

ECE V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Priya Ranjan

ECE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Isha Malhotra

ECE III Sem Name :

Branch :

Deshraj Yadav

ME V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rakesh Kumar

CSE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Lakshay Sharma

CSE III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Reshu Goyal

IT III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Mohit Gupta

ME III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rajat Sharma

CSE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shivangi Sharma

CSE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Saurabh Bhatt

ECE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Padmakar Remuka

MCA V SemName :

Branch :

Shiv Kumar

BBA I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rahul Kumar

BBA III Sem

Name :

Branch :

Neeraj Kumar

BBA V Sem

Name :

Branch :

PRASANN

MBA III SemName :

Branch :

Toshit

ECE I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Anurag

IT I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Yash Mittal

ME I Sem

Name :

Branch :

Dazy

MBA I Sem

To

pp

ers

of

De

ce

mb

er

20

10

3rd Position in University

12th Position in University

3rd Position in University

13th Position in University

5th Position in University13th Position in University

12th Position in University

27

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lt

To

pp

ers o

f May 2

01

1Name :

Branch :

Chetna Goel

CSE-A VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Anu Bhutani

CSE-B VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Mukta

ECE VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Vinav Bansal

IT VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Gaurav Mahendru

ME VIII Sem

Name :

Branch :

Divya Bedi

CSE-A VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Deshraj

ME VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Reshu Goel

IT IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Charu Jain

CSE-B VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Chandani Nanda

CSE-A IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Harvinder

ME IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Parveen Kumar

ECE VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sweta Rana

CSE-B IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Rajat Sharma

CSE-A II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Shilpa

IT-A V Sem

Name :

Branch :

Preeti Wadhwa

ECE-A IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Aanchal Joshi

CSE-B II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Srishti Aggarwal

IT-B VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sidharth Jain

ECE-B IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Saurav Bhatt

ECE-A II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Toshit Kumar

ECE-B II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Narender Singh

IT II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Yash Mittal

ME II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sahil Gupta

BBA VI Sem

Name :

Branch :

Prasann

MBA IV Sem

Name :

Branch :

Dazy

MBA II Sem

Name :

Branch :

Sachin Kumar

BBA IV Sem

7th Position in University

7th Position in University

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Page 28: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

28

Let your failure transform your life

Social networking sites – A boon or a bane…?

In life, failure is unavoidable--in fact, an essential aspect of living for life. Given that you have to live with failure

as part and parcel of life, you might as well let your failure transform your life, instead of letting it ruin your life.

In this world, everybody wants success, not failure, and everybody is striving to succeed, to win; indeed, to

many, life is all about winning, not losing. As a matter of fact, many of us think that if we don't win, we lose, and that if

we don't get what we want (not what we need) from life, we have failed ourselves miserably. But this is not what life is

all about. Life is about living out your experience--whether it is your success or failure--to find out who you are, and

what you need, and thus transforming yourself as you plod along the arduous life journey. Life is not about winning or

losing: it is about how you experience what life has to offer.

Fortunately or unfortunately, our society is saturated with books and instructional tools on self-improvement, and

pursuit of success and happiness. We have all the weapons made available to us to fight failure and to guarantee

success. Yet, we all fail one way or another. Because of the abundant resources available to fight failure, when we fail,

we become less forgiving of our failure or of ourselves. The rampancy of mental depression is a strong testament to the

inability to accept failure in our society.

All in all, to survive, we must learn coping with failure in our lives--this holds the key to the art of living well.

Coping up the failure means understanding the notion of failure itself. Did we really fail? Or have we failed only to reach

our too idealistic and unrealistic goals? Why did we fail? Was our failure due to circumstances, lack of effort, or simply

doing all the wrong things? Understanding the nature of our failure is enlightening and illuminating.

Coping with failure means coming to terms with the notion that we have failed, and yet we "should" not allow

ourselves to fail again.

Positive thinking, ironically enough, may only numb or mask our feelings of disappointment and disillusionment. We

may also use other different strategies to distract our disappointment, such as binge eating on comfort food, taking

drugs or alcohol, going on a shopping spree, or blaming ourselves and others for our failure. These strategies may or

may not work for us. Ultimately, we may come to believe that we have failed ourselves in one way or another.

Do not be let down by any failure in your life. Instead, let your failure transform your life. This transformation means

changing your perception of winning and your ego self. In life, we often associate birth with happiness and success, and

death with sadness and failure. Transformation means your realization that life is a series of cycles of birth and death--

or rather of success and failure. Once you grasp the significance of success and failure in human life, you may have a

different perspective of your own failure, and may even learn the art of coping with failure. Transformation means

embracing both success and failure--and not just welcoming success and rejecting failure.

In Christianity, it is through human failure that we appreciate our dependence on God: "My grace is sufficient for you,

for my power is made perfect in weakness." (2 Corinthians 12:9); in Buddhism, it is through human failure that we are

awakened to the futility of our craving for success.

Yes, failure can transform you in a positive way if you perceive and comprehend its true nature.

Ankit Biala

CSE III Year

Social networking is the grouping of individuals into specific groups like small rural communities or a neighbourhood

subdivision. Although social networking is possible in person especially in the workplace, universities and high schools,

but it is most popular online. This is because unlike most high schools, colleges or workplaces, the internet is filled with

millions of individuals who are looking to meet other people to gather and share first-hand information and

experiences about any number of topics from Golfing, gardening, developing friendships and professional alliances.

When it comes to online social networking, websites are commonly used. These websites are known as social sites.

Social networking websites function like an online community of internet users. Depending on the website in question,

many of these online community members share common interests in hobbies, religion or politics. Once you are

granted access to a social networking website you can begin to socialize. This socialization may include reading the

profile pages of other members and possibly even contacting them.

The friends that you can make are just one of the many benefits to social networking online. Another one of those

benefits includes diversity because the internet gives individuals from all around the world access to social networking

sites. This means that although you are in the United States, you could develop an online friendship with someone in

Art

icle

sDenmark. Not only will you make new friends, but you just might learn a thing or two about new cultures or new

languages and learning is always a good thing.

Limitations of Online Social Networks:

Orkut is a student social network that combines to some extent privacy and the ability to socialize in an initially

collegiate environment. For example, finding the person that lives in your dorm that sat next you in class and took notes

when you fell asleep, but you don’t know on a personal basis. That is just a simple positive example of how a social

network can help. However the use of Facebook is limited by its interface and its corporate model.

Orkut will never provide information directly to end user, at least not anymore. All information must occur through

some form of Facebook interface that visits their site or a portal through their web page. At the beginning, before it

became a business ran by professionals, Facebook used to have the option to export all your friends’ numbers, emails

and contact information to a file that you could import to Outlook and send to your cell phone, to have it all in one

place. No more need to stop and look at a computer to find that number. Once it became a corporation however that

feature was removed because it limited the use of Facebook as a revenue generating entity no ads displayed, less

profit. This is the major fallacy of online social networks.

Divya Bedi

CSE IV Year

Ever since the tourism boom in India, local environmentalist groups are clamoring about the threat that a rapidly

expanding tourist industry poses to the country's heritage and environment.

The Bane

This begs the question, which is harming the country's heritage and environment in reality, the locals or the tourists. Is

it the tourists who are pilfering the country's heritage and making a mockery of environmental regulations? Or should

we actually credit it to our own insensitive citizens and officials, who don't give a hoot about the heritage or the

environment - if it means they can make a few extra bucks!

Tourists move around, explore, shop, and then go back; they don't poach, deforest, pollute the rivers, misuse the land,

or flout the environmental regulations of the country - they actually have more entertaining things to do with their

limited time in a foreign land!

Rarely, does a tourist deface a heritage structure, it's usually the local urchin’s graffiti 'Raju loves Meena' that is seen on

the structures, and not 'Jim loves Jenny'.

The Boon

Fact 1: Tourism is India's largest industry; it brings in 15% of foreign exchange income; employs 9% of our population;

significantly contributes to the GDP - as reported by several surveys - in short it's a boon for India.

Fact 2: Tourism offers global exposure; fresh perspectives and new trade avenues.

Fact 3: Revolutionary tourism practices enforced by the World Travel & Tourism Council and other such institutions are

promoting geo and eco tourism practices that inspire respect for other cultures and environmental diversities. All that

is left for us to do is to ensure that we ourselves and our officials respect and follow these practices.

India - Incredible India

India is a land of many cultures and tourism has increased the appreciation and understanding of the cultural melting

pot of: passions, colors and spices that make India unique. Tourism in fact, creates a bridge of tolerance and acceptance

among varied: races, ethnicities, nationalities and faiths, which promote peace and prosperity - and not the

destruction of ecology.

As a great man once said "Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow mindedness and many of our people need it

sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in

one little corner of the earth all one's life time."

Ms. Vibha Sharma

Lecturer

Indian Tourism - Bane Or Boon

29

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Page 29: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

28

Let your failure transform your life

Social networking sites – A boon or a bane…?

In life, failure is unavoidable--in fact, an essential aspect of living for life. Given that you have to live with failure

as part and parcel of life, you might as well let your failure transform your life, instead of letting it ruin your life.

In this world, everybody wants success, not failure, and everybody is striving to succeed, to win; indeed, to

many, life is all about winning, not losing. As a matter of fact, many of us think that if we don't win, we lose, and that if

we don't get what we want (not what we need) from life, we have failed ourselves miserably. But this is not what life is

all about. Life is about living out your experience--whether it is your success or failure--to find out who you are, and

what you need, and thus transforming yourself as you plod along the arduous life journey. Life is not about winning or

losing: it is about how you experience what life has to offer.

Fortunately or unfortunately, our society is saturated with books and instructional tools on self-improvement, and

pursuit of success and happiness. We have all the weapons made available to us to fight failure and to guarantee

success. Yet, we all fail one way or another. Because of the abundant resources available to fight failure, when we fail,

we become less forgiving of our failure or of ourselves. The rampancy of mental depression is a strong testament to the

inability to accept failure in our society.

All in all, to survive, we must learn coping with failure in our lives--this holds the key to the art of living well.

Coping up the failure means understanding the notion of failure itself. Did we really fail? Or have we failed only to reach

our too idealistic and unrealistic goals? Why did we fail? Was our failure due to circumstances, lack of effort, or simply

doing all the wrong things? Understanding the nature of our failure is enlightening and illuminating.

Coping with failure means coming to terms with the notion that we have failed, and yet we "should" not allow

ourselves to fail again.

Positive thinking, ironically enough, may only numb or mask our feelings of disappointment and disillusionment. We

may also use other different strategies to distract our disappointment, such as binge eating on comfort food, taking

drugs or alcohol, going on a shopping spree, or blaming ourselves and others for our failure. These strategies may or

may not work for us. Ultimately, we may come to believe that we have failed ourselves in one way or another.

Do not be let down by any failure in your life. Instead, let your failure transform your life. This transformation means

changing your perception of winning and your ego self. In life, we often associate birth with happiness and success, and

death with sadness and failure. Transformation means your realization that life is a series of cycles of birth and death--

or rather of success and failure. Once you grasp the significance of success and failure in human life, you may have a

different perspective of your own failure, and may even learn the art of coping with failure. Transformation means

embracing both success and failure--and not just welcoming success and rejecting failure.

In Christianity, it is through human failure that we appreciate our dependence on God: "My grace is sufficient for you,

for my power is made perfect in weakness." (2 Corinthians 12:9); in Buddhism, it is through human failure that we are

awakened to the futility of our craving for success.

Yes, failure can transform you in a positive way if you perceive and comprehend its true nature.

Ankit Biala

CSE III Year

Social networking is the grouping of individuals into specific groups like small rural communities or a neighbourhood

subdivision. Although social networking is possible in person especially in the workplace, universities and high schools,

but it is most popular online. This is because unlike most high schools, colleges or workplaces, the internet is filled with

millions of individuals who are looking to meet other people to gather and share first-hand information and

experiences about any number of topics from Golfing, gardening, developing friendships and professional alliances.

When it comes to online social networking, websites are commonly used. These websites are known as social sites.

Social networking websites function like an online community of internet users. Depending on the website in question,

many of these online community members share common interests in hobbies, religion or politics. Once you are

granted access to a social networking website you can begin to socialize. This socialization may include reading the

profile pages of other members and possibly even contacting them.

The friends that you can make are just one of the many benefits to social networking online. Another one of those

benefits includes diversity because the internet gives individuals from all around the world access to social networking

sites. This means that although you are in the United States, you could develop an online friendship with someone in

Art

icle

s

Denmark. Not only will you make new friends, but you just might learn a thing or two about new cultures or new

languages and learning is always a good thing.

Limitations of Online Social Networks:

Orkut is a student social network that combines to some extent privacy and the ability to socialize in an initially

collegiate environment. For example, finding the person that lives in your dorm that sat next you in class and took notes

when you fell asleep, but you don’t know on a personal basis. That is just a simple positive example of how a social

network can help. However the use of Facebook is limited by its interface and its corporate model.

Orkut will never provide information directly to end user, at least not anymore. All information must occur through

some form of Facebook interface that visits their site or a portal through their web page. At the beginning, before it

became a business ran by professionals, Facebook used to have the option to export all your friends’ numbers, emails

and contact information to a file that you could import to Outlook and send to your cell phone, to have it all in one

place. No more need to stop and look at a computer to find that number. Once it became a corporation however that

feature was removed because it limited the use of Facebook as a revenue generating entity no ads displayed, less

profit. This is the major fallacy of online social networks.

Divya Bedi

CSE IV Year

Ever since the tourism boom in India, local environmentalist groups are clamoring about the threat that a rapidly

expanding tourist industry poses to the country's heritage and environment.

The Bane

This begs the question, which is harming the country's heritage and environment in reality, the locals or the tourists. Is

it the tourists who are pilfering the country's heritage and making a mockery of environmental regulations? Or should

we actually credit it to our own insensitive citizens and officials, who don't give a hoot about the heritage or the

environment - if it means they can make a few extra bucks!

Tourists move around, explore, shop, and then go back; they don't poach, deforest, pollute the rivers, misuse the land,

or flout the environmental regulations of the country - they actually have more entertaining things to do with their

limited time in a foreign land!

Rarely, does a tourist deface a heritage structure, it's usually the local urchin’s graffiti 'Raju loves Meena' that is seen on

the structures, and not 'Jim loves Jenny'.

The Boon

Fact 1: Tourism is India's largest industry; it brings in 15% of foreign exchange income; employs 9% of our population;

significantly contributes to the GDP - as reported by several surveys - in short it's a boon for India.

Fact 2: Tourism offers global exposure; fresh perspectives and new trade avenues.

Fact 3: Revolutionary tourism practices enforced by the World Travel & Tourism Council and other such institutions are

promoting geo and eco tourism practices that inspire respect for other cultures and environmental diversities. All that

is left for us to do is to ensure that we ourselves and our officials respect and follow these practices.

India - Incredible India

India is a land of many cultures and tourism has increased the appreciation and understanding of the cultural melting

pot of: passions, colors and spices that make India unique. Tourism in fact, creates a bridge of tolerance and acceptance

among varied: races, ethnicities, nationalities and faiths, which promote peace and prosperity - and not the

destruction of ecology.

As a great man once said "Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow mindedness and many of our people need it

sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in

one little corner of the earth all one's life time."

Ms. Vibha Sharma

Lecturer

Indian Tourism - Bane Or Boon

29

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Page 30: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

30

Team Building & Leadership 5 Lessons from Nature

Wireless Power Supply

Lesson 1 - The Importance of Achieving Goals

As each goose flaps its wings it creates “UPLIFT" for the birds that follow. By flying in a 'V' formation the whole

flock adds 71 percent extra to the flying range.

Outcome: When we have a sense of community and focus, we create trust and can help each other to achieve our

goals.

Lesson 2 - The Importance of Team Work

When a goose falls out of formation it suddenly feels the drag and resistance of flying alone. It quickly moves back to

take advantage of the lifting power of the birds in front.

Outcome: If we had as much sense as the geese we would stay in formation with those headed where we want to go.

We are willing to accept their help and give our help to others.

Lesson 3 - The Importance of Sharing

When a goose tries of flying up front it drops back into formation and another goose flies to the point position.

Outcome: It pays to take turns doing the hard tasks. We should respect and protect each other's unique arrangement

of skills, capabilities, talents and resources.

Lesson 4 - The Importance of Empathy and Understanding

When a goose gets sick, two geese drop out of formation and follow it down to the ground to help and protect it.

Outcome: If we have as much sense as geese we will stand by each other in difficult times, as well as when we are

strong.

Lesson 5 - The Importance of Encouragement

Geese flying in formation 'HONK' to encourage those up front to keep up with their speed.

Outcome: We need to make sure that our honking is encouraging. In groups and teams where there is encouragement,

productivity is much greater. 'Individual empowerment results from quality honking'.

Sandeep Dahiya

BBA III Year

Scientists in the US have created what they believe to be the world’s first safest wireless power supply, a system which

can be adapted for electricity powered appliance at the home.

The power supply works by using the concept of resonance, which allows the efficient transmission of energy between

items which resonate at the same frequency. They have liked the theory to that of an opera singer smashing a glass of

wine with their voice - the glass will only smash if the liquid is filled to a level which ensures both the singers voice and

the glass resonate on the same frequency. A simple copper antenna designed to have long-lived resonance could

transfer energy to a laptop with its own antenna resonating at the same frequency. The computer would be truly

wireless. Any energy not diverted into a gadget or appliance is simply reabsorbed. Wireless power supply technologies

at present can be divided into three groups according to their principle of operation. The first non-contact technology

achieving widespread adoption in many portable terminals is electromagnetic induction. Two coils are brought close

to each other and when current is passed through one, the generated magnetic flux causes electromotive force to be

generated in the other. Another technology very close to commercial use makes use of the fact that energy can be

transmitted and received directly as radio waves. This is fundamentally the same principle of operation as used in the

crystal sets of a century ago, with alternating current (AC) radio waves converted into direct current (DC) without

amplification. Recent improvements in efficiency have made it possible to consider this technology for commercial

applications. The third principle is electromagnetic resonance. Resonance technology is extensively utilized in

electronics, but this specific application uses only the electric or magnetic field, instead of electromagnetic waves,

current, etc. A group under Asst Prof Marin Soljacic, Physics Dept, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) of the

US, was the first in the world to announce its potential for use as a power supply technology, in November 2006.

Kartikay Tandon

ECE IV Year

Art

icle

sKey Advantages of Using Database Management System in Your

Organization

GREEN Technology- What is it??

A database management system is software that allows the organizations to create, modify as well as retrieve

their databases. It allows you to manage your of customer database in the most effective manner possible.

Key advantages of database management systems include:

ü Proper integration of data: An effective data management system makes sure to relate the data present on different terminals in such a way that all the terminal users remain linked with each other. The terminal users can easily share, edit, modify, retrieve or delete the entire data.

ü Decrease in data duplication: The presence of integrated data on multiple locations decreases the probability of data duplication to a great extent. In this way the data remains accurate and updated.

ü Easily understandable data: Advanced user database management software makes sure that the entire data is stored in an extremely easy format so that the users do not face any sort of difficulty in handling the same. Such software helps the users in managing databases as per their specific needs.

ü Etreme data validity: By incorporating database management system an organization augments the accuracy of its data as such systems offer multiple checks to make sure that the data entered is valid, accurate and up-to-date.

ü Itense data security: An organization can make sure that only relevant users are acquainted with the method of operating management software. Thus you can prevent your sensitive data from getting into the wrong hands. Extreme flexibility: As the data and the programs are not dependant on each other, no database programs need to be modified or altered while adding or deleting unrelated data from the organization's database.

ü Rapid handling of complex requests: Such software integrate the data into a single stream, which allows rapid handling of complex requests. Information requests fail to receive fast response when the data is located in disconnected, non-integrated files. Most organizations believe that faster response results in better customer service.

ü Reasonable user training cost: Employees often feel quite comfortable while learning easy systems. Even the

training cost as well as the total time consumed is shorter and the investment results in elevated productivity. Isha Bhabhuta

IT IV Year

The term "technology" refers to the use of knowledge for practical use. The field of “green technology” encompasses a

continuously evolving group of methods and materials, from techniques for generating energy to non-toxic cleaning

products. The present expectation is that this field will bring innovation and changes in daily life of similar magnitude to

the "information technology" explosion over the last two decades. In these early stages, it is impossible to predict what

"green technology" may eventually encompass. Environmental technology (abbreviated as envirotech) or green technology (abbreviated as greentech) or clean

technology (abbreviated as cleantech) is the application of one or more of environmental science, green chemistry,

environmental monitoring and electronic devices to monitor, model and conserve the natural environment and

resources, and to curb the negative impacts of human involvement. Sustainable development is the core of

environmental technologies. The term environmental technologies are also used to describe a class of electronic

devices that can promote sustainable management of resources. Green Technology encompasses a continuously evolving group of methods or materials, from techniques for

generating energy to non-toxic cleaning products. It is that innovation which reduces waste by changing patterns of

production and consumption. It is also defined as environmental healing technology, which reduces environmental

damages created by the products and technologies for peoples' conveniences. Most of the businesses may not be very

excited to “go green” by reducing emissions since their motto is to make money not to save the planet. The global

strategy should be to help businesses do both.The goals that inform developments in this rapidly growing field include:Sustainability - meeting the needs of society in ways that can continue indefinitely into the future without damaging or

depleting natural resources. In short, meeting present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to

meet their own needs."Cradle to cradle" design - ending the "cradle to grave" cycle of manufactured products, by creating products that can

be fully reclaimed or re-used. Source reduction - reducing waste and pollution by changing patterns of production and consumption.Innovation - developing alternatives to technologies - whether fossil fuel or chemical intensive agriculture - that have

been demonstrated to damage health and the environment. 31

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Page 31: SBIT Insight Newsletter Vol 4 Issue 1 Sep 2011

30

Team Building & Leadership 5 Lessons from Nature

Wireless Power Supply

Lesson 1 - The Importance of Achieving Goals

As each goose flaps its wings it creates “UPLIFT" for the birds that follow. By flying in a 'V' formation the whole

flock adds 71 percent extra to the flying range.

Outcome: When we have a sense of community and focus, we create trust and can help each other to achieve our

goals.

Lesson 2 - The Importance of Team Work

When a goose falls out of formation it suddenly feels the drag and resistance of flying alone. It quickly moves back to

take advantage of the lifting power of the birds in front.

Outcome: If we had as much sense as the geese we would stay in formation with those headed where we want to go.

We are willing to accept their help and give our help to others.

Lesson 3 - The Importance of Sharing

When a goose tries of flying up front it drops back into formation and another goose flies to the point position.

Outcome: It pays to take turns doing the hard tasks. We should respect and protect each other's unique arrangement

of skills, capabilities, talents and resources.

Lesson 4 - The Importance of Empathy and Understanding

When a goose gets sick, two geese drop out of formation and follow it down to the ground to help and protect it.

Outcome: If we have as much sense as geese we will stand by each other in difficult times, as well as when we are

strong.

Lesson 5 - The Importance of Encouragement

Geese flying in formation 'HONK' to encourage those up front to keep up with their speed.

Outcome: We need to make sure that our honking is encouraging. In groups and teams where there is encouragement,

productivity is much greater. 'Individual empowerment results from quality honking'.

Sandeep Dahiya

BBA III Year

Scientists in the US have created what they believe to be the world’s first safest wireless power supply, a system which

can be adapted for electricity powered appliance at the home.

The power supply works by using the concept of resonance, which allows the efficient transmission of energy between

items which resonate at the same frequency. They have liked the theory to that of an opera singer smashing a glass of

wine with their voice - the glass will only smash if the liquid is filled to a level which ensures both the singers voice and

the glass resonate on the same frequency. A simple copper antenna designed to have long-lived resonance could

transfer energy to a laptop with its own antenna resonating at the same frequency. The computer would be truly

wireless. Any energy not diverted into a gadget or appliance is simply reabsorbed. Wireless power supply technologies

at present can be divided into three groups according to their principle of operation. The first non-contact technology

achieving widespread adoption in many portable terminals is electromagnetic induction. Two coils are brought close

to each other and when current is passed through one, the generated magnetic flux causes electromotive force to be

generated in the other. Another technology very close to commercial use makes use of the fact that energy can be

transmitted and received directly as radio waves. This is fundamentally the same principle of operation as used in the

crystal sets of a century ago, with alternating current (AC) radio waves converted into direct current (DC) without

amplification. Recent improvements in efficiency have made it possible to consider this technology for commercial

applications. The third principle is electromagnetic resonance. Resonance technology is extensively utilized in

electronics, but this specific application uses only the electric or magnetic field, instead of electromagnetic waves,

current, etc. A group under Asst Prof Marin Soljacic, Physics Dept, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) of the

US, was the first in the world to announce its potential for use as a power supply technology, in November 2006.

Kartikay Tandon

ECE IV Year

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Key Advantages of Using Database Management System in Your

Organization

GREEN Technology- What is it??

A database management system is software that allows the organizations to create, modify as well as retrieve

their databases. It allows you to manage your of customer database in the most effective manner possible.

Key advantages of database management systems include:

ü Proper integration of data: An effective data management system makes sure to relate the data present on different terminals in such a way that all the terminal users remain linked with each other. The terminal users can easily share, edit, modify, retrieve or delete the entire data.

ü Decrease in data duplication: The presence of integrated data on multiple locations decreases the probability of data duplication to a great extent. In this way the data remains accurate and updated.

ü Easily understandable data: Advanced user database management software makes sure that the entire data is stored in an extremely easy format so that the users do not face any sort of difficulty in handling the same. Such software helps the users in managing databases as per their specific needs.

ü Etreme data validity: By incorporating database management system an organization augments the accuracy of its data as such systems offer multiple checks to make sure that the data entered is valid, accurate and up-to-date.

ü Itense data security: An organization can make sure that only relevant users are acquainted with the method of operating management software. Thus you can prevent your sensitive data from getting into the wrong hands. Extreme flexibility: As the data and the programs are not dependant on each other, no database programs need to be modified or altered while adding or deleting unrelated data from the organization's database.

ü Rapid handling of complex requests: Such software integrate the data into a single stream, which allows rapid handling of complex requests. Information requests fail to receive fast response when the data is located in disconnected, non-integrated files. Most organizations believe that faster response results in better customer service.

ü Reasonable user training cost: Employees often feel quite comfortable while learning easy systems. Even the

training cost as well as the total time consumed is shorter and the investment results in elevated productivity. Isha Bhabhuta

IT IV Year

The term "technology" refers to the use of knowledge for practical use. The field of “green technology” encompasses a

continuously evolving group of methods and materials, from techniques for generating energy to non-toxic cleaning

products. The present expectation is that this field will bring innovation and changes in daily life of similar magnitude to

the "information technology" explosion over the last two decades. In these early stages, it is impossible to predict what

"green technology" may eventually encompass. Environmental technology (abbreviated as envirotech) or green technology (abbreviated as greentech) or clean

technology (abbreviated as cleantech) is the application of one or more of environmental science, green chemistry,

environmental monitoring and electronic devices to monitor, model and conserve the natural environment and

resources, and to curb the negative impacts of human involvement. Sustainable development is the core of

environmental technologies. The term environmental technologies are also used to describe a class of electronic

devices that can promote sustainable management of resources. Green Technology encompasses a continuously evolving group of methods or materials, from techniques for

generating energy to non-toxic cleaning products. It is that innovation which reduces waste by changing patterns of

production and consumption. It is also defined as environmental healing technology, which reduces environmental

damages created by the products and technologies for peoples' conveniences. Most of the businesses may not be very

excited to “go green” by reducing emissions since their motto is to make money not to save the planet. The global

strategy should be to help businesses do both.The goals that inform developments in this rapidly growing field include:Sustainability - meeting the needs of society in ways that can continue indefinitely into the future without damaging or

depleting natural resources. In short, meeting present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to

meet their own needs."Cradle to cradle" design - ending the "cradle to grave" cycle of manufactured products, by creating products that can

be fully reclaimed or re-used. Source reduction - reducing waste and pollution by changing patterns of production and consumption.Innovation - developing alternatives to technologies - whether fossil fuel or chemical intensive agriculture - that have

been demonstrated to damage health and the environment. 31

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32

Viability - creating a center of economic activity around technologies and products that benefit the

environment, speeding their implementation and creating new careers that truly protect the planet.

Examples of green technology subject areas:Energy: Perhaps the most urgent issue for green technology, this includes the development of alternative fuels,

new means of generating energy and energy efficiency.Green building: Green building encompasses everything from the choice of building materials to where a building is

located.Environmentally preferred purchasing: This government innovation involves the search for products whose contents

and methods of production have the smallest possible impact on the environment, and mandates that these be the

preferred products for government purchasing.Green chemistry: The invention, design and application of chemical products and processes to reduce or to eliminate

the use and generation of hazardous substances.Green nanotechnology: Nanotechnology involves the manipulation of materials at the scale of the nanometer, one

billionth of a meter. Some scientists believe that mastery of this subject is forthcoming that will transform the way that

everything in the world is manufactured. "Green nanotechnology" is the application of green chemistry and green

engineering principles to this field.

Some more examples are: Bio-filtration, Biosphere Technology, Bioremediation, Composting toilet, Desalination,

Doubly fed electric machine, Energy Conservation, Energy Saving Modules, Environmental Devices, Hydroelectricity,

Hydrogen fuel cell, Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion, Solar power, Thermal de-polymerization, Wind power, battery-

powered cars.Ashvani Kumar

Lecturer, CSE & IT Department

Intel is preparing a revolution in processor technology. Sandy Bridge is the code name of the project but the new

processors will be called 2nd generation Core i7, i5 and i3 processors. Intel processors are subdivided by performance

i.e., not all i7s are equal. Intel is not going to change the fastest processors at first. For a while, we are going to see faster

processors at the same price. The new processors use a new 32 nanometer technology (the current is 45 nanometer.) A

processor is made of millions of transistors; these transistors have a rectangular shape so if we change one of its sides is

going to fulfill a smaller area. Intel has reduced that side to 32 nanometers. With a simple calculation we can see that

this implies we can have double number of transistors.

Using this new Turbo Boost technology, Intel has opted to introduce a GPU, graphics processor unit, inside the CPU.

This means that every processor will have its own graphics card.

The change that will happen with this technology is the smaller transistors. A smaller transistor’s area drives to less

power consumption. So this makes this processor an excellent choice for environment where battery life is an issue. A modern processor has more than one core on the CPU. Sometimes the programs we are running are not using all

CPUs so stopping some of them doesn’t make a change on the performance. When we do that we can increase the

speed of the running processors leaving to a better performance. This is something that present processors do but Intel

has realized that it can maintain this Turbo mode for more time.

The new chipset will be there so new motherboard will be required. The same RAM DDR3 will be used in this. At least

for now, Intel is preparing the following models:

K, Special for using over clocking features.S, normal processors.T, Low-power processors that have relatively lower clock-speeds as compared to standard models.M, Mobile.QM, Quad core mobile processors.XM, Extreme quad core for using over clocking features.

Mukesh NarulaHead, Corporate Excellence Programme

Sandy Bridge Processor from Intel®

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Volume 4 | Issue I | September 2011

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Shri Balwant Insti tute of TechnologyNCR Delhi, Sonepat

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