<div dir="ltr"><div><div><div><div><div>Hello everyone,<br></div><div><br>I met Atul Chitnis in 2001 as a 17-year old college student in LB/2001. ( Linux Bangalore 001, the precursor to FOSS.in )<br><br></div>I continued to interact with him online and offline, off and on since then. <br>
<br></div>A funny moment that I can recall - I was on a flight from Bangalore to Pune. He was sitting across the aisle. I was thinking of a geeky way to say 'hi' - so I tweeted "hey look to your right " - his reply was "it's time to switch off our electronic gadgets and squeeze my stomach into the economy class seat." <br>
<br></div>Amongst his talks "Lessons from German Potato Salad" at Linux Bangalore 2003 was the favorite talk of his that I attended. <br><br>He started off with "what on earth does an open source conference have to do with a potato salad? " - doing some sort of a self parody - and cracking up the audience and then gaining their attention in his keynote speech. His talk had actually nothing to do with a German Potato Salad as he himself said at the end of the talk. He wanted people to feel curios about the topic and attend the talk. The JN Tata Auditorium was standing-room-only. Atul did have his way.<br>
<br></div><div>( Thankfully the summary and the slides of his talk are still available at <a href="http://linux-bangalore.org/2003/schedules/talkdetails.php?talkcode=A202">http://linux-bangalore.org/2003/schedules/talkdetails.php?talkcode=A202</a> - do go through it.)<br>
<br></div><div>I also remember getting into heated debates with him on a myriad of topics ( from Nokia E series phones vs BlackBerry, to how much one should quote the previous email while replying to one )<br><br></div><div>
Atul was a contrarian, a fierce debater and one generally learnt something from him, even if proven wrong.<br><br></div><div>RIP, Atul. <br><br></div><a href="https://plus.google.com/103417733087699539389/posts/SZBG8mEXTBD">https://plus.google.com/103417733087699539389/posts/SZBG8mEXTBD</a><br>
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