Rohit (๐‘€ญ๐‘€‘๐‘€ณ๐‘€‡๐‘€ข)

2.4K posts

Rohit (๐‘€ญ๐‘€‘๐‘€ณ๐‘€‡๐‘€ข)

Rohit (๐‘€ญ๐‘€‘๐‘€ณ๐‘€‡๐‘€ข)

@RoSuPan

nobody special, trying to live a purposeful life. Anonymous account = block.

India/United States ๊ฐ€์ž…์ผ Aralฤฑk 2014
146 ํŒ”๋กœ์ž‰62 ํŒ”๋กœ์›Œ
Prakash Dadlani
Prakash Dadlani@prakdadlaniยท
India pays workers about โ‚น20K/month. China pays โ‚น55K/month. So we think: India is cheaper. But wait. China workers do 2โ€“5x more work. That means: 1 worker in China = 2-5 workers in India So per product, China can still be cheaper. Now look at Vietnam: - Pays around โ‚น17โ€“20K/month - Workers are faster than India - And goods come to India at low/zero duty So companies think: โ€œWhy make hereโ€ฆ when we can import?โ€ Now you see the real issue: India is not losing on wages. India is losing on speed and output. Cheap is not enough. You have to be fast.
Prakash Dadlani tweet media
English
220
199
1.2K
83.9K
Wie Dan๐Ÿƒ
Wie Dan๐Ÿƒ@LudditeHackerยท
Why do Indian Nationalists have such problems with Indo-European anyway? Even the most racist white supremacist doesn't appear to mind being an Indian's 7000th cousin 10,000 times removed
Avatans Kumar ๐Ÿ•‰@avatans

Thereโ€™s no record of a language called Proto-Indo-European. Itโ€™s an imaginary language. Read my review of JP Malloryโ€™s book on Indo European homeland. open.substack.com/pub/avatanskumโ€ฆ

English
46
14
495
31K
Rohit (๐‘€ญ๐‘€‘๐‘€ณ๐‘€‡๐‘€ข)
@Saatvata Doesnโ€™t exist, no evidence. Axiomatic model turned into temporal from biblical myths of Tower of Babel. Wave model doesnโ€™t need a root language for cognates to exist. And genetics has no correlation with languages and is more a marker of geographic distance between populations
English
0
0
0
11
เคšเฅ‡เคฆเคฟเคฐเคพเคกเฅเคฐเคฟเคชเฅเคชเคพเคฐเฅเคทเคฆเคƒ ๐ŸŸฉโฌœ๏ธโฌ›๏ธ
PIE simply means the common ancestor of all Indo-European language. If you deny the existence of PIE, you are denying the existence of Indo-European as a language family.
JD Saint Gilles@jaTAdhAr_I

@Saatvata But there *is no* record of PIE. And it *is* an imaginary language. Are you challenging that?

English
9
5
84
2.9K
yajnadevam
yajnadevam@yajnadevamยท
Note that Sattavati is a Prakrit form of Satyavati. I have noted multiple times that the language of the IA names in 1500-1200 BCE Mesopotamia had already become Prakrit. This is also echoed in the oldest Brahmi in India around 1400 BCE. The 1500 BCE rigveda date is untenable.
Archaeology Of ฤ€ryฤvarta@SSundar55252

Indo-Aryan woman on one of the oldest sealsโœจ A seal discovered at Nuzi, dated to around 1400โ€“1200 BC, is said to bear the name โ€œSatyavati,โ€ an Aryan woman. This is often taken as an indication of the spread of Sanskrit, and is also used to suggest the antiquity of Aryan culture

English
11
43
156
6.2K
Arfa Khanum Sherwani
Arfa Khanum Sherwani@khanumarfaยท
A new wave of targeting Muslims- not the paan vendor or street hawker this time, but the educated, skilled, employed. The aim is clear: make even the few whoโ€™ve secured jobs in this majoritarian system unemployable.
English
7.6K
1.3K
5.2K
2.5M
Mystic Sanatan
Mystic Sanatan@AbhayK70627ยท
@yajnadevam @ancientadarsh as Cuneiform is concerned, Writing a Sanskrit word in it is a Big task therefore they used simpler version for it like Sa-tu-รบ-at-ti or sa-ti-u-at-ti is also possible,
English
1
0
2
107
Rohit (๐‘€ญ๐‘€‘๐‘€ณ๐‘€‡๐‘€ข)
@Saatvata Itโ€™s obvious that thereโ€™s an ancestor language to Sanskrit, but thatโ€™s not PIE. No such language attestation. Unreliable reconstruction and certainly no way to locate it without some script which is unlikely to be found anytime soon.
English
0
0
0
181
เคšเฅ‡เคฆเคฟเคฐเคพเคกเฅเคฐเคฟเคชเฅเคชเคพเคฐเฅเคทเคฆเคƒ ๐ŸŸฉโฌœ๏ธโฌ›๏ธ
PIE was a real language that was likely spoken in the Pontic-Caspian steppe. It predates the advent of writing and is not attested, so linguists can only try to reconstruct it as best they can based on established sound changes, comparative evidence, etc. The reconstructions (there are multiple proposed models) are not perfect, but that is true of any reconstructed language. If you wish to critique Indo-European linguistics, you must therefore critique the methodology rather than argue that a "best-fit" is not a "perfect-fit," as linguists have already conceded that the model is not 100% accurate. Reconstruction methods often do work as expected. Even before the Gallehus Horn inscription was analyzed, linguists already predicted that early Germanic languages should have certain endings (like -az and -iz) which later disappeared in Old Norse. Likewise, even before the Hittite tablets were deciphered, Ferdinand de Saussure predicted that PIE had "coefficients sonantiques" that disappeared yet left "bruises" on the neighboring vowels.
Avatans Kumar ๐Ÿ•‰@avatans

Thereโ€™s no record of a language called Proto-Indo-European. Itโ€™s an imaginary language. Read my review of JP Malloryโ€™s book on Indo European homeland. open.substack.com/pub/avatanskumโ€ฆ

English
24
38
330
19.7K
yajnadevam
yajnadevam@yajnadevamยท
I used this to to prove the correctness of the indus script decipherment
Tech with Mak@techNmak

In 1948, a 32-year-old at Bell Labs published a paper nobody fully understood. Engineers found it too mathematical. Mathematicians found it too engineering-focused. One prominent mathematician reviewed it negatively. That paper - "A Mathematical Theory of Communication", became the founding document of the digital age. The man was Claude Shannon. Father of Information Theory. At 21, he wrote the most important master's thesis of the 20th century. Working at MIT on an early mechanical computer, Shannon noticed its relay switches had exactly two states - open or closed. He had just taken a philosophy course introducing Boolean algebra, which also operated on two values: true and false. Nobody had ever connected these two things. His 1937 thesis proved that Boolean algebra and electrical circuits are mathematically identical, and that any logical operation could be built from simple switches. Howard Gardner called it "possibly the most important, and also the most famous, master's thesis of the century." Every digital computer ever built traces back to this insight. At 29, he proved that perfect encryption exists. During WWII, Shannon worked on classified cryptography at Bell Labs. His work contributed to SIGSALY, the secure voice system used for confidential communications between Roosevelt and Churchill. In a classified 1945 memorandum, he mathematically proved the one-time pad provides perfect secrecy, unbreakable not just computationally, but provably, permanently, against an adversary with infinite power. When declassified in 1949, it transformed cryptography from an art into a science. It laid the foundations for DES, AES, and every modern encryption standard. At 32, he defined what information is. His 1948 paper introduced one equation: H = โˆ’ฮฃ p(x) log p(x) Shannon entropy. The average uncertainty in a probability distribution. The minimum bits required to encode a message. Three things followed: > He defined the bit - the fundamental unit of all information. His colleague John Tukey coined the name. > He proved the channel capacity theorem, every communication channel has a maximum rate of reliable transmission. You can approach it. You can never exceed it. > He unified telegraph, telephone, and radio into a single mathematical framework for the first time. Robert Lucky of Bell Labs called it the greatest work "in the annals of technological thought." Where his equation lives in AI today: Cross-entropy loss - the function training every classifier and language model, is derived directly from H. Decision tree splits use information gain, which is H applied to data. Perplexity, the standard LLM evaluation metric, is an exponentiation of cross-entropy. Every time a neural network trains, Shannon's formula runs inside it. He also built the first AI learning device. In 1950, Shannon built Theseus, a mechanical mouse that navigated a maze through trial and error, learned the correct path, and repeated it perfectly. Mazin Gilbert of Bell Labs said: "Theseus inspired the whole field of AI." That same year he published the first paper on programming a computer to play chess. He co-organized the 1956 Dartmouth Workshop, the founding event of AI as a field. The man: He rode a unicycle through Bell Labs hallways while juggling. He built a flame-throwing trumpet, a rocket-powered Frisbee, and Styrofoam shoes to walk on the lake behind his house. He called his home Entropy House. When asked what motivated him: "I was motivated by curiosity. Never by the desire for financial gain. I just wondered how things were put together." In 1985, he appeared unexpectedly at a conference in Brighton. The crowd mobbed him for autographs. Persuaded to speak at the banquet, he talked briefly, then pulled three balls from his pockets and juggled instead. One engineer said: "It was as if Newton had showed up at a physics conference." He died in 2001 after a decade with Alzheimer's, the cruel irony of information slowly leaving the mind of the man who defined what information was. Claude, the AI model, is named after Claude Shannon, the mathematician who laid the foundation for the digital world we rely on today.

English
3
21
158
5.4K
Aparajite
Aparajite@amshilparaghuยท
In Tamil Nadu, the temple chariots (ther) are really huge and the wooden wheels are super heavy. Since there are no brakes, brave people have to place wooden chocks under the wheels to stop them during the procession. Here, a young school girl is doing it so calmly and fearlessly. Salute to her bravery! ๐Ÿ™
English
30
99
491
17.2K
yajnadevam
yajnadevam@yajnadevamยท
@RoSuPan @arunkumar_web @aravind I would have loved to find Dravidian, but it would be closer to Tulu, the language of my hometown, not Tamil. It is mathematically impossible to decipher as anything other than the inscribed language.
English
1
0
6
81
Aravind
Aravind@aravindยท
IMO, the very fact that Indus Valley script hasn't been deciphered like the other two oldest civilizations of Sumer and Egypt shows that Indus Valley Civilization is much older than the other two. And it probably played a role in the rise of civilizations of the Levant.
English
90
619
4.8K
88.9K
Aryฤแนƒล›a
Aryฤแนƒล›a@arya_amshaยท
Hindus are natives to India AND the Aryan Migration Theory is true. Both things are true at the same time. Hinduism is native to India. Read my article on it.
Ravi Kumar@Ravi_Kumar3312

@arya_amsha stop this propoganda hindus are not outsiders from central asia this is damaging Sanatan is native to india 100% we have nothing to do with ireland etc sullas are invaders from outside bharat

English
23
12
139
11.4K