You and I live in the same city. How do you see our cities change over the years? What is your fantasy for Brand Bangalore?

_ Revathi V., Bangalore or Bengaluru (still confused)

Dear still-confused Revathi, the city of the future is more virtual and less real. A lot of us will be spending more time in a life that is virtual rather than real. A few of my fantasies on Brand Bangalore of the future:

We will finally have a new name. We will officially be “Bengaluru”. Never mind the fact that Mayawatiji's BSP, which will be the ruling party in the State by then (thanks to the lack of an alternative) will want to rename it something else altogether. The renaming debate is a perennial one.

Future Bangalore is a different city altogether. We are going to be a lasagne city if you look at us top-down. We are going to be a layered-roads city. Roads at different levels that help make the commute that much more bearable. Bangalore has been the first to experiment with roads made of recycled plastic. We will have more of these. Our potholes (they will still be around) will be filled with this plastic no sooner than they appear. Silicon will find a more functional use in our roads than in our cosmetic surgery parlours.

Commuting from one end of the city to another will take no longer than 32 minutes. This is going to be true at least across those stretches connected by Namma Metro, our own city lifeline. A fair number of our city techies will work from the Metro, thanks to its superior ambience than the one at the noisy home. Eight up-and-down journeys on the train, and the code is written, tested, packed and dispatched to the Project Manager. Time to get back home.

Bangalore will have the first pod-hotel. A hotel room in a pullout-drawer-of-sorts-establishment. A see-through pod-room equipped with the best. Just one thing will be at a premium: Size. Expect every pod-hotel to be fitted into a 2,400 sq. ft. space. A 40-room hotel. The creative ones will call it the ‘Coffin hotel'.

Night life in Bangalore would have gotten a bit too noisy. In any case our excise rules do not permit drinking and dancing in public places. You will, therefore, have the pure drinking places and the pure dancing places. No transgressing here. You decide. Most of our nightlife places will be ‘no-noise' places even. Wear a wi-fi headphone and dance the night away. No noise anywhere, except in your ears. Anyone looking at you will think you to be the lunatic you are. Imagine strobe lights, lasers and a silent party in full swing. The cops are happy. The dancers are happy. Bangalore has found its own creative solution to the party angst!

Bangalore will be more virtual than virtual. The largest number of tablet PCs will be in Bangalore. The city will be the capital of the touch-enabled device. We Bangaloreans will live more virtual lives than real. The largest number of Facebook users will be from Bangalore. We will make all our friends and enemies on FB. The largest numbers of Google+ users will be from Bangalore. A record number of circles with the most innovative names will happen from here. Lady Gaga, move over! The largest number of Twitter followers will follow @harishbijoor. Touché!

The snack food category is on the fast track. What's next? Is there a market overseas for Indian snack food?

_ Rajesh Thevar, Mumbai

Rajesh, I do believe the snack food category out of India can go places if it sticks to the knitting. Investing deeply in the health platform without tampering with the taste and the fun of the snack environment it lives in, is a must. If it is able to do this, it will thrive.

The snack food category is a forever category. As India and its brand image grows, Indian snack foods and foods and beverages will grow in franchise globally. A great way of understanding a country is by tasting its food and snacks. While food is difficult to access and is difficult to prepare in any condition, snack food that is packaged is easily accessible, easy to transport and easy to find on the retail shelves overseas. In many way, every pack of a Haldiram's bhujiya that is opened in Norway or Sweden or in Cincinnati is taking a piece of India out there. Food imperialism at play.

As interest in India grows, interest in Indian foods will grow as well. Food diplomacy and its time has come. Indian packaged foods have a lot to gain.

Baba Ramdev has not been able to make much of a success with his political entry, despite all his popularity. Why?

_ B. B. Joshipura, Lucknow

Joshipuraji, Baba Ramdev is respected as a Yoga guru, as a person who has brought healing to a whole lot of people. Transcribing and superimposing the same equity onto the realm of political activism is a long-haul task, and could be a mistake as well.

What works in one realm does not work in another. That is the sensitivity of branding that people need to understand. One cannot assume all popularity is divisible and that all popularity can be appropriated equally, once had.

Harish Bijoor is a business strategy specialist and CEO, Harish Bijoor Consults Inc.

askharishbijoor@gmail.com