భారత మహిళా పారిశ్రామికవేత్తలకు అంతర్జాతీయ అవార్డులు
అవసరాలే వ్యాపార ఆలోచనలకు పునాది. అనేక మందిని వేదిస్తున్న మధుమేహం, పర్యావరణాన్ని దెబ్బతీస్తున్న సాధారణ శానిటరీ నాప్కిన్స్కు సరైన ప్రత్యామ్నాయ ఉత్పత్తులు తయారు చేస్తూ ఇద్దరు భారత ఔత్సాహిక మహిళా పారిశ్రామికవేత్తలు అంతర్జాతీయ అవార్డులు సొంతం చేసుకున్నారు. స్టీవియా అనే...
read moreఆధార్తో మొబైల్ నెంబర్ అనుసంధానం మార్చి 31 వరకే
వినియోగదారులు తమ మొబైల్ నెంబర్లను మార్చి 31 నాటికి ఆధార్తో అనుసంధానం చేసుకోవాలని భారత్ సంచార్ నిగమ్ లిమిటెడ్ (బిఎస్ ఎన్ఎల్) తెలిపింది. సుప్రీం కోర్టు మార్గదర్శకాలకు అనుగుణంగా ఇప్పటికే మొబైల్ నెంబర్ అనుసంధాన ప్రక్రియను ప్రారంభించినట్లు పేర్కొంది....
read moreఈ కారు ధర రూ.9.50 కోట్లు
లగ్జరీ కార్ల తయారీ సంస్థ రోల్స్ రాయిస్ ఎనిమిదో తరం ఫాంటమ్ కారును మార్కెట్లోకి విడుదల చేసింది. ఈ కారు ధర 9.50 కోట్ల రూపాయలు. దీనికి 6.75 లీటర్ ట్విన్ టర్బోచార్జ్డ్ వి12 ఇంజన్ అమర్చారు. ఈ ఇంజన్ 563 హార్స్పవర్ శక్తిని, 900 ఎన్ఎం టార్క్ను అందిస్తుంది. 5.4...
read moreMicrosoft ends push notifications for Windows 7, 8 Phones
Microsoft has announced that it is ending support for all push notifications for Windows Phone 7.5 and Windows Phone 8.0 devices starting from Tuesday. "Windows Phone 7.5 and Windows Phone 8.0 have reached their end of support dates and thus services for these...
read moreCoal India To Lose Monopoly As India Opens Up Coal Mining To Private Firms
India will allow private and foreign companies to mine coal without any end-use or price restrictions as the government cleared new auction guidelines to boost supply of the fossil fuel that powers over three-quarters of the nation's electricity plants. The Cabinet...
read moreMaxion Wheels Holds Bhoomi Poojan to Celebrate New Passenger Car Aluminum Wheel Plant in Pune
the world's largest wheel manufacturer, today held a ground breaking ceremony (Bhoomi Poojan) on the future site of its 25,000 square meters plant in Khed City, Pune. Hundreds of guests, including company dignitaries, customers, suppliers and associates attended the...
read moreSBI posts Rs 2,416 crore loss for first time in nearly 19 years
India's largest bank, State Bank of India (SBI) on Friday reported a "disappointing" set of numbers for the three months through December, logging in a net loss of Rs 1,886.57 crore after a massive under-reporting of dud assets in the past fiscal and reverses in...
read moreUber agrees to pay Waymo $245 million equity to settle suit
Uber Technologies Inc. agreed to give Waymo about $245 million in closely held stock to cut short a trade-secret theft trial, ending a high-stakes conflict that already cost the ride-hailing giant its top driverless car engineer and threatened to further embarrass the...
read moreMahindra and Mahindra Reports Raise in Q3 2018 Profit
Mahindra and Mahindra reported Net Revenue of Rs 11,491 crores during the third quarter of 2018, up by 10.3 percent, as against Rs 10,420 crores during the third quarter of 2017. The company reported EBITDA of Rs 1,693 crores during the third quarter of 2018 up from...
read moreUnion Budget 2018: Key Highlights at a Glance
India is the world's fastest growing economy, said Finance Minister Arun Jaitley as he announced the Budget 2018 for the fiscal year 2018-19. Lauding the major moves to contain black money and encourage tax formalisation, he said that while GST ensured tax simplicity,...
read moreWhich came first: man or ape
I love the term ‘politically incorrect’, the word-collective expressing a requirement to adhere to certain norms of civility and respectability. It is also rather confuddling because of all people notorious for making statements, which are as far detached from reason as tea leaf reading is from science, most happen to be politicos and lawmakers, people who one expects to generally display a certain composure of sanity.
But then, given how sensibility is not a part of the definition of ‘politically correct’, I guess it’s only natural that the most classic gaffes come from the circles that ru(i)n our nation.
Recently we had a politician claim that Darwin had it all wrong, as man certainly didn’t evolve from apes. For proof, he reproduced hard facts, like folklore of the ‘someone once told a friend who told me’ variety. It’s hard to refute such gripping evidence. His empirical logic was that since none of our ancestors ever saw, or mentioned, an ape turn into a man, clearly the theory of evolution was flawed at a very basic level of assumption.
Remember, cannabis was all the legal rage back then, so if you haven’t seen an ape turn into a man even when stoned (and these are the same ancestors who recorded God’s shooting arrow that turned into snakes!), then surely no such thing ever happened. Darwin was clearly a fool who lost his mind observing birds on remote islands whereas this chap has, instead, completed some unspoken-of doctorate while also serving in the police force.
This is the same ex-commissioner who dissed any girl who decided to get married in a pair of jeans: popular claim is that his argument stemmed from sanskaar. I, however, believe that the conglomerate of top Indian wedding designers — from Sabyasachi to Valaya and Tahiliani — paid this chap to make sure that lehengas never go out of style.
But it’s not just him, and in case one thought that our apex bodies of law weren’t corruptible, or immune to illogic, not too long ago we had a judge claim that peacocks mate through tears. I laughed so hard that I cried but then I felt guilty and feckless, unsure whether I was enjoying an intimate moment in public, just like them dirty peacock slags.
I also simultaneously wondered if saas-bahu shows were nothing but prime time peacock porn, all those multiple tears flying about on the screen and what not. Further research on said judge’s part yielded facts like cow urine is utterly divine, so good for wrinkles and anti-ageing it remains a surprise that L’Oreal hasn’t set up camp at all our annual cattle fairs and monopolised the market for skincare.
I bet it was mostly on account of the alleged 330 million precise gods and goddesses living allegedly inside very single bovine body. Judge’s words, not mine. As a bachelor I’ve lived in Mumbai and, even to me, this sounded like a tight squeeze unless these are all gods of (very) small things. Nowadays, I approach newspapers like a child approaches a dying insect, with curiosity but also with fear. One never knows what novel jism of (mis)information will squirt out at you from the pages within, obfuscating the eye of reason and logic. As if the world is running out of stupid things to make fun of, the foremost citizens of our country offer up such prime beef for the world’s picking, it’s a social service that no one asked for.
For a country that built the Taj Mahal and the Stupas, gave the world the decimal system and performed the first cosmetic surgeries, these ministers and judges are the new wave of evolution.
A fetching example really, except that instead of exhibiting how man gradually yet continually evolved forth from apes, these chaps are proof that humans can (and do) regress into monkeys!
Xiaomi beats Samsung to the top of Indian smartphone market
Samsung has been displaced by Xiaomi from the top of the Indian smartphone market, as per a January 24, 2018 report by independent tech analyst Canalys. Having gradually depleted Samsung’s lead over the past eight financial quarters or so, Xiaomi now holds 27% of the market while Samsung follows closely at 25%.
The Chinese gadget-maker reportedly sold nearly 8.2 million units in the final quarter of 2017-18, while the South-Korean giant managed to ship just over 7.3 million units. This, despite Samsung having registered a 17% growth this year.
According to Canalys, Samsung has fallen behind in its low-cost product portfolio in the sub-₹15,000 segment. At the same time, Xiaomi’s growth in India was thought to be boosted by its strategy of localising autonomy in its Indian operations with respect to marketing.
While noting that “consumer demand for Samsung’s devices has been weak”, analyst Rushabh Doshi maintained that “it has far superior R&D, and a better hold on the supply chain due to its strong components business”.
Xiaomi’s formula will no doubt be emulated by Samsung, as well as other top-share manufacturers Lenovo, Vivo and Oppo in the coming days, and “as Xiaomi’s market share reaches saturation point in India, and the market continues to shrink in China, it must contend with slower growth for its smartphone business as it begins to expand in other countries”.