Pranay Paul 🇮🇳

129.9K posts

Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 banner
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳

Pranay Paul 🇮🇳

@programmer_00P

Proud INDIAN first 🇮🇳🙏🏼 Fascinated by Space, Tech, & Geopolitics. Constantly Amazed by the Mysteries of the Universe and the Search for Intelligent Life.

Kolkata, India Bergabung Ocak 2012
5.7K Mengikuti770 Pengikut
Tweet Disematkan
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳@programmer_00P·
True, the Seven Wonders are celebrated globally, but our architectural marvels reflect a legacy of unparalleled craftsmanship and cultural depth. From the intricate carvings of Khajuraho to the engineering brilliance of the Brihadeeswarar Temple, our heritage stands tall as a testament to timeless innovation and artistry. It’s time we celebrate these wonders with the pride they deserve! 🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳🇮🇳
𝐑𝖎𝖌𝖍𝖙𝖊𝖔𝖚𝐬 𝐌𝖆𝐲𝖆𝖓𝐤 𝐑𝖆𝐣𝖕𝖚𝖙@MayankRighteous

Why we give so much importance to the Seven wonders? Our architecture Marvels are much beyond all these .

English
0
0
7
3.6K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
sush
sush@2sush·
you can hate AI, but it’s not going anywhere.
English
17
2
24
663
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
Addy Osmani
Addy Osmani@addyosmani·
AI doesn't replace taste. It multiplies whatever taste you already have.
English
79
38
286
22.4K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
Vivek Galatage
Vivek Galatage@vivekgalatage·
A lot of the online media we consume is around audio and video; and that too through a browser. If you are interested in video technology and FFMpeg operations, refer to this amazing resource github.com/leandromoreira…
Vivek Galatage tweet media
English
0
19
114
3.3K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
Loveena🕉️
Loveena🕉️@loveena_joshi06·
Real growth starts when you're tired of your own shit.
English
2
1
17
171
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
The Rocket Media
The Rocket Media@TheRocketMediaX·
Meet Shivkumar Kalyanaraman ! (Man leading R&D transformation of India) > An Indian R&D scientist and engineer > IIT-JEE Rank 3, B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Madras > PhD in Computer Science from Ohio State > Became Professor at RPI, guided 17 PhD students & led multiple projects > Spent a decade at IBM Research India in key roles > Joined Microsoft India as CTO (Energy & Mobility) > IEEE Fellow, INAE Fellow, ACM Distinguished Scientist- a rare triple > After serving in multiple senior corporate leadership roles > He returned to India and joined as CEO of ANRF Today, as CEO of ANRF, he is playing a crucial role in shaping India’s R&D landscape for the next decade- democratising research with SARAL AI and catalysing collaboration across stakeholders (government, academia, industry, startups, foundations, CSR, international bodies, and more)
The Rocket Media tweet media
English
17
177
1.1K
45.9K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
Narendra Modi
Narendra Modi@narendramodi·
मां ब्रह्मचारिणी के चरणों में कोटि-कोटि नमन! देवी मां सभी भक्तों पर अपनी कृपा बनाए रखें। दधाना करपद्माभ्यामक्षमालाकमण्डलू। देवी प्रसीदतु मयि ब्रह्मचारिण्यनुत्तमा॥
हिन्दी
892
3.2K
15.8K
935.6K
Nandini
Nandini@N_and_ni·
Koshish toh tum puri karo Kuch na kuch pakka hojayega 🤌 She is best
हिन्दी
41
177
1.4K
26.2K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳@programmer_00P·
Shikhar@shekhu04

Meet Rajeev Motwani (Every time you Google something, a boy from Jammu made that possible) > An Indian computer scientist born in Jammu, 1962 > Grew up in a military family that moved city to city, never settled anywhere > As a child he wanted to become a mathematician > His parents pushed him towards computers instead > Best decision they ever made > B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Kanpur, 1983 > PhD from UC Berkeley under Richard Karp, a Turing Award winner > Joined Stanford as a professor straight after > Founded MIDAS, one of the most influential research groups in Silicon Valley history > In 1998 two PhD students named Larry Page and Sergey Brin walked into his office > He saw potential in their idea when nobody else did > Co-authored the original PageRank paper with them > Helped them build what became Google > Also mentored the early team at PayPal > Won the Gödel Prize in 2001, the highest honour in theoretical computer science > Passed away on June 5, 2009 at just 47 years old IIT Kanpur named an entire building after him Sergey Brin said "Whenever you use a piece of technology, there is a good chance a little bit of Rajeev Motwani is behind it." A boy who just wanted to study mathematics ended up building the foundation Google stands on. He never chased credit. He just kept opening doors for other people And the whole world walked through them without ever knowing his name

QAM
0
0
0
2
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳@programmer_00P·
Shikhar@shekhu04

Meet Rajeev Motwani (Every time you Google something, a boy from Jammu made that possible) > An Indian computer scientist born in Jammu, 1962 > Grew up in a military family that moved city to city, never settled anywhere > As a child he wanted to become a mathematician > His parents pushed him towards computers instead > Best decision they ever made > B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Kanpur, 1983 > PhD from UC Berkeley under Richard Karp, a Turing Award winner > Joined Stanford as a professor straight after > Founded MIDAS, one of the most influential research groups in Silicon Valley history > In 1998 two PhD students named Larry Page and Sergey Brin walked into his office > He saw potential in their idea when nobody else did > Co-authored the original PageRank paper with them > Helped them build what became Google > Also mentored the early team at PayPal > Won the Gödel Prize in 2001, the highest honour in theoretical computer science > Passed away on June 5, 2009 at just 47 years old IIT Kanpur named an entire building after him Sergey Brin said "Whenever you use a piece of technology, there is a good chance a little bit of Rajeev Motwani is behind it." A boy who just wanted to study mathematics ended up building the foundation Google stands on. He never chased credit. He just kept opening doors for other people And the whole world walked through them without ever knowing his name

0
0
0
9
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
Shikhar
Shikhar@shekhu04·
Meet Rajeev Motwani (Every time you Google something, a boy from Jammu made that possible) > An Indian computer scientist born in Jammu, 1962 > Grew up in a military family that moved city to city, never settled anywhere > As a child he wanted to become a mathematician > His parents pushed him towards computers instead > Best decision they ever made > B.Tech in Computer Science from IIT Kanpur, 1983 > PhD from UC Berkeley under Richard Karp, a Turing Award winner > Joined Stanford as a professor straight after > Founded MIDAS, one of the most influential research groups in Silicon Valley history > In 1998 two PhD students named Larry Page and Sergey Brin walked into his office > He saw potential in their idea when nobody else did > Co-authored the original PageRank paper with them > Helped them build what became Google > Also mentored the early team at PayPal > Won the Gödel Prize in 2001, the highest honour in theoretical computer science > Passed away on June 5, 2009 at just 47 years old IIT Kanpur named an entire building after him Sergey Brin said "Whenever you use a piece of technology, there is a good chance a little bit of Rajeev Motwani is behind it." A boy who just wanted to study mathematics ended up building the foundation Google stands on. He never chased credit. He just kept opening doors for other people And the whole world walked through them without ever knowing his name
Shikhar tweet mediaShikhar tweet media
English
62
483
2.5K
108.8K
Pranay Paul 🇮🇳 me-retweet
मालिनी अवस्थी Malini Awasthi
Ofcourse yes! All of us know this! Indian knowledge system has been well aware of this all along! क्षीरसागर, Ksheersagar is where The cosmic care taker Vishnu resides!
Amazing Physics@amazing_physics

A cosmic ocean exists where no human has ever sailed. Astronomers have detected a water cloud 12 billion light-years away, holding an astonishing 140 trillion times the water in all of Earth’s oceans combined. It is a discovery so vast that it stretches the imagination, challenging our sense of scale and reminding us how tiny our world truly is. This cloud, seen in the early universe, hints at a time when galaxies were forming and black holes were already shaping their surroundings. The sheer quantity of water suggests that the ingredients for life are not confined to our solar system — they exist in unimaginable abundance, waiting silently in the cosmos. Scientists are stunned not only by the scale but also by the implications. Water, essential to life as we know it, appears in massive quantities even in the distant past, meaning that the universe may have been capable of supporting habitable conditions far earlier than previously imagined. Every observation opens a new window into the chemistry of the early cosmos. Looking at such a cloud evokes both wonder and humility. The enormity of space, the age of light reaching our telescopes, and the invisible forces shaping galaxies remind us that discovery often comes cloaked in awe. This water cloud is a monument to the mysteries that remain, whispering of worlds and possibilities we have yet to encounter. And so we are left with a quiet reflection: billions of light-years away, water flows in quantities beyond comprehension, reminding us that the universe is filled with secrets that continue to stretch the limits of human curiosity.

English
4
128
473
10.4K