It was a beautiful Sunday evening when my friend decided to move to other side of Pune (Hinjewadi) for a living close to his work location. We started off with invigorated enthusiasm from languid bedding and travelling 30km reached the location glowing with lights plunging through windows of sky scrapers. All of us were transfixed at the structures standing tall and inhabiting thousands of software professionals. While we were prancing around the area, appreciating the development, we found few souls grieving with emaciated spirits floundering on foot paths. We had to approach them for navigation help and were stunned at their displayed apathy for new people. I slipped into my curiosity for reasons to this spiritual tragedy. For the last two decades our nation has seen the software service sector, thriving economic source with an unprecedented acceleration. Pune, one of the oldest cities of India has exhausted with its capacity to accommodate anymore new infrastructure for companies. This brought in real estate at the peripheries of city and is successful with newly approved projects and skyscrapers built around. Many thousands of software professionals started working at these projects. They travel from within the city to their project locations some by motorcycles, some by four-wheelers, and some by shared auto-rickshaws, and a few are privileged with company transport. Why is very thin trace of public transport observed in Pune? All thanks to the deplorable services available for the citizens of Pune. If someone compromises to manage with it, they are left to be disappointed with its discipline and cramming more than it capacity. So discouraged software personnel resorted to pollute the city with their motors and jammed the roads. s thousands of motors trying to pass through narrow lanes, a traffic jam is the most certain contingent. No bureaucracy seems to have observed this agony of software professionals who pay their taxes at best stalled for hours long mourning in their despondency. There seems to be nexus happened to decide this