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Vritti | Major Passi

Vritti | Major Passi

@TechSadhak

Swayed by a whisper or a wave? That’s Vritti — a ripple 🌊 in our sea of thoughts. Bliss awaits us in its gaps. Veteran⇌BoardRoom⇌DeepTech~Sādhak ⁂ 🔗 @SutraZK

New Delhi India Katılım Nisan 2010
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Vritti | Major Passi@TechSadhak·
My Mother Ms Suraj Kumari has attained Moksha at the lotus feet of Prabhu Ram Aum Shanti Aum Sadgati Jai Gurudev 🙏🏻🕉️🪔
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
A black fungus feeds on radiation in Chernobyl. In the radioactive ruins of Chernobyl’s Reactor 4, scientists found an extraordinary black fungus, Cladosporium sphaerospermum, thriving in one of Earth’s most toxic environments. Rather than merely enduring radiation, this fungus seems to harness it through radiosynthesis—a process akin to photosynthesis but driven by gamma radiation, converting it into chemical energy. It’s among the rare organisms capable of this feat. Even more remarkable, when tested on the International Space Station, the fungus flourished, forming a biofilm that blocked up to 84% of cosmic radiation, hinting at its potential as a living radiation shield for astronauts. With radiation posing a major hurdle for deep-space missions to Mars and beyond, this self-regenerating biological layer could revolutionize spacecraft design by replacing heavy, bulky shielding. On Earth, researchers are exploring its use in bioremediation to detoxify radioactive sites too hazardous for humans, potentially transforming nuclear disaster recovery. As one scientist put it, “It’s like nature crafted a biological radiation shield.” From Chernobyl’s ruins to space, this humble fungus could help humanity thrive in the universe’s harshest environments.
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Eminent Intellectual
Eminent Intellectual@total_woke_·
10 examples of "there was no agenda in Bollywood" 😭 #Dhurandhar2 1/10
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Sama Hoole
Sama Hoole@SamaHoole·
In 1300, England's primary export was wool. Not wheat. Not timber. Not fish. Wool. The Cotswolds, the Yorkshire Dales, the Welsh uplands: these were not scenic backdrops. They were the engine. The sheep were the industry. The fleece funded the cathedrals. Literally: the wool merchants of the Cotswolds paid for most of them. The wool trade funded the Hundred Years War. The Lord Chancellor of England sat on a woolsack in the House of Lords from the fourteenth century. The woolsack is still there. The Hanseatic League built their northern European trade networks largely around English wool. Flemish weavers built the city of Bruges on it. The Italian banking system, the Medici included, was capitalised in part on wool trade credit. This was Doris. Not exactly Doris. Doris's ancestors, the medieval fell sheep that grazed the same uplands Doris grazes now, producing the same wool from the same grass in the same rain. The wool that built the economy that built the architecture that people now drive three hours from Manchester to look at. The sheep built it. We have made the wool economically worthless. It now costs more to shear Doris than the wool is worth at market. The farmer shears her anyway because not shearing a sheep in summer is a welfare issue. The Yorkshire mill that has been processing British wool since 1887 is not running at capacity. The outdoor clothing industry is 70% polyester. The polyester sheds microplastics every wash. The microplastics are in the Irish Sea. The Irish Sea is not the woolsack. The woolsack is still in the House of Lords. Doris is on the fell. Doris has more where that came from.
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Mr PitBull
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07·
May 16, 1963. Gordon Cooper was orbiting Earth alone inside a capsule barely big enough to turn around in, moving at 17,500 miles per hour. He had been up there for over a day. Then the warnings started. First a faulty sensor screaming that the ship was falling — it wasn't. He switched it off. Then something far worse: a short circuit knocked out the entire automated guidance system. The one that kept the capsule steady. The one that was supposed to bring him home. Without it, reentry was nearly impossible. Too shallow an angle and the capsule would bounce off the atmosphere back into space. Too steep and it would incinerate. The margin for error was razor thin — and every computer that was supposed to hit that margin was dead. Down on the ground, NASA engineers watched the telemetry in silence. They could see everything going wrong. They could fix nothing. Cooper didn't panic. He uncapped a grease pencil and drew lines directly on the inside of his window to track the horizon. He looked up at the stars he had spent months memorizing and used their positions to orient the ship by eye. Then he set his wristwatch. Because when you have no computers left, you become the computer. At exactly the right moment — calculated in his head, confirmed by the stars outside — he fired the retrorockets. The capsule shook. The sky turned to fire. For several minutes, no one on Earth could reach him as plasma swallowed the ship whole. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 hit the water just four miles from the recovery ship — the single most accurate splashdown in the entire Mercury program. The man with a wristwatch and a few pencil marks on a window had outperformed every automated system NASA had. We talk a lot about technology saving us. And it often does. But Cooper's story is a quiet reminder that behind every machine, there still has to be a human being who can look out the window, think clearly under pressure, and decide what to do next. The final backup was never the software. It was him.
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Foundation Father | M.A. Franklin
In 1895, a French social psychologist named Gustave Le Bon published a book so dangerous that it became the private playbook of dictators for the next century. Hitler quoted it. Mussolini kept it by his bedside. Edward Bernays used it to build modern propaganda. The book's name? "The Crowd." Its core claim: The moment people form a group, they become stupid. Not slightly dumber. Fundamentally, structurally incapable of rational thought. And the tactics he described for controlling them still work on you right now. 🧵 (thread)
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Amazing Physics
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.
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Maria Wirth
Maria Wirth@mariawirth1·
sometimes i wonder if those scientists read the Puranas and then come up with theories... like the age of the universe... from 6000 years scaled up to some 4.5 billion. (they probably mixed up the 4.32 billion lifespan of universe of which around 2 billion have passed according to Puranas) or how they discovered that there are above 8 million species on earth. ancient India said 84 lakhs (8.4 million) and yes, HUGE oceans are described, too.
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Sanjeev Newar | सञ्जीव नेवर
We do not need any new party. We need to realize that politics solves only 1% of our problems. What we need is social, cultural, valor, training resurgence. We need to make sure criminal mindsets are scared of us. We need to make sure we make Vedas our way of life - knowing that Vedas is all about warrior mindset. Politics will follow the path of social resurgence.
Smiling Buddha@Amigos_Sensi

@SanjeevSanskrit Sir v need a new hindu party. @BJP4India is useless,secular n no different than khangress. Lost hope in @RSSorg also?? Need a new front for Hindus n we can build it by crowd funding

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Isha Foundation
Isha Foundation@ishafoundation·
In March 2026, in response to a defamation case filed by Isha in 2024, the Delhi High Court issued an order directing media outlet Nakkheeran to remove all defamatory videos and articles it published against Isha Foundation and Sadhguru.  Tired rehashings of these salacious allegations, amplified by other malicious entities, have been repeatedly dismissed by the courts, police investigations and government enquiries. The latest order reaffirms what Isha has consistently maintained: that these allegations are untrue, and part of a motivated, long-running attempt to mislead the public and damage the reputation of Isha and Sadhguru.
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Rakesh Krishnan Simha
Rakesh Krishnan Simha@ByRakeshSimha·
PEW RESEARCH FINDINGS ▶️ Indian Americans are the highest-earning ethnic group in the United States, with a median household income of $151,200, nearly 80% higher than the national average of $83,700. ▶️ Indians make up just around 1.4% of the US population, but play a major role in entrepreneurship and tax contributions, accounting for nearly 6% of US tax revenues. Meanwhile, according to other research: ▶️ Pakistanis contribute more to terrorism than any other group in the US. ▶️ Bangladeshi immigrants rip off social welfare at a rate marginally higher than the projects.
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@i_am_a_sadhak
@i_am_a_sadhak@i_am_a_sadhak·
Q: Gurudev, I am a Muslim, can I also learn Sudarshan Kriya? Do I have to leave anything for that? @Gurudev Sri Sri Ravi Shankar ji - No, there is no need to leave anything at all. Few years back when I was in Pakistan, thousands of people had done the @ArtofLiving course there and are practicing Sudarshan Kriya. They have even established a center there. Around one lakh people have received training there and they are all very happy. When I went there, I didn’t feel that I am in Pakistan. They welcomed me with so much warmth and feelings. I am telling u, Sudarshan Kriya does not take u away from your religion but in fact it brings more depth to your prayers. It brings forth that inner happiness. Yoga and Sudarshan Kriya keeps u strong and healthy. That is why drop all doubts. In Iraq, Iran and in many other countries, people are doing Sudarshan Kriya and are enjoying the benefit of it. In many mosques in Africa also they are teaching the @ArtofLiving courses. In regards to religion, the world is facing a crisis today. It is primarily one of identification. People identify themselves with limited characteristics such as gender, race, religion and nationality, forgetting their basic identity as part of the entire existence. These limited identifications lead to conflict on both a global and personal level. Every individual is much more than the sum of these limited identifications. The highest identification we can make is that we are part of Divinity (pure energy or whatever u choose to call it). And secondly, we are human beings and members of the human family. In divine creation, the human race, as a whole, is united. Religion has three aspects: values, rituals and symbols. Moral and spiritual values are common to all traditions. The symbols and practices - those rituals and customs that form a way of life within a religion - distinguish one tradition from another and give each of them a unique charm. Symbols and practices are like the banana skin. The spiritual values - the quest for truth and awareness of our divinity - is the banana inside. However, in every tradition, most people have thrown away the banana and are holding onto the banana skin. Learn Sudarshan Kriya using this link bit.ly/Learn_Sudarsha… Follow @i_am_a_sadhak for more such amazing wisdom by Gurudev
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Anish Moonka
Anish Moonka@AnishA_Moonka·
Spring 1992. Steve Jobs stands in front of a room of MBA students at MIT, pitching a computer that almost nobody bought. The company was called NeXT. It sold about 50,000 machines in its entire existence. By every measure, it was a failure. The software inside it became the foundation of every Apple product ever made, and the platform on which the World Wide Web was invented. He's 37. He's been fired from Apple, the company he co-founded. He spends 70 minutes talking. He tells a room full of future consultants that consulting is a waste of talent. "Without owning something over an extended period of time, where one has to see one's recommendations through all action stages and accumulate scar tissue for the mistakes, one learns a fraction of what one can." He compares consulting to looking at a picture of a banana. "You might have a lot of pictures on your wall. You can say, I've worked in bananas, I've worked in peaches, I've worked in grapes. But you never really taste it." He says, "I think everybody lost" about being pushed out of Apple. "I think I lost. And I wanted to spend my life there. I think Apple lost. I think customers lost." Then: "Having said all that, so what? You go on. It's not as bad as a lot of things. Not as bad as losing your arm." He says hardware can never be a lasting competitive advantage. "Hardware churns every 18 months. You can make something one and a half or two times as good as your competitor, and it only lasts six months." But software, he says, is a different game. "You can make something five or even ten times as good as your competitors in software. And it's very, very hard to copy. I watched Microsoft take eight or nine years to catch up with the Mac." Then he makes a claim that almost nobody in the room would have believed: "Object-oriented technology is the biggest technical breakthrough I have seen since the early 80s with graphical user interfaces. And I think it's bigger actually." He was describing NeXTSTEP, the software his "failed" company had built. Object-oriented programming, in plain terms, means building software from reusable building blocks rather than writing everything from scratch. Jobs said developers could build apps on NeXTSTEP in about a third to a quarter of the time it took on other systems. Almost nobody cared. By industry standards, NeXT was a flop. But four years after this talk, Apple was nearly bankrupt. They bought NeXT for $427 million. Jobs came back. NeXTSTEP became Mac OS X in 2001. The same code became iOS when the iPhone launched in 2007. Every Mac, every iPhone, every iPad, every Apple Watch runs on what Jobs was selling while Sun was trying to put him out of business. One more thing. In 1990, at a physics lab in Switzerland, Tim Berners-Lee needed a computer to build a prototype for something he called the World Wide Web. He chose a NeXT. He built the first web browser and the first web server. The internet, as you know it, was born on a machine that couldn't find a market. When asked what he learned from being fired from Apple, Jobs pauses. Then he says, "I now take a longer-term view on people. When I see something not being done right, my first reaction isn't to go fix it. It's to say, we're building a team here, and we're going to do great stuff for the next decade, not just the next year." He was 37, running a company most people thought was dead, standing in a room full of MBA students. Apple is now worth $3.7 trillion. Every dollar of it runs on the thing he built when nobody was watching.
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
Google’s new quantum chip is so powerful it might be tapping into parallel universes. Google's groundbreaking quantum processor, Willow, has achieved the seemingly impossible: solving an extraordinarily complex computational problem in under five minutes—a feat that would require the world's most advanced supercomputer approximately 10 septillion years to complete (10²⁵). This mind-boggling performance has revived one of the most provocative ideas in physics: could quantum computers like Willow be performing calculations across vast numbers of parallel universes? Hartmut Neven, founder and lead of Google Quantum AI, believes the answer may be yes. He argues that Willow’s results align strikingly with the many-worlds (or multiverse) interpretation of quantum mechanics, in which every quantum measurement causes reality to branch into multiple, equally real parallel universes. In this view, a quantum computer doesn’t just calculate faster within our universe—it effectively distributes the workload across countless parallel realities simultaneously. The idea traces back to physicist David Deutsch, who, as early as the 1980s, suggested that the exponential power of quantum computation could only be fully explained if the machine is exploiting resources from many coexisting worlds. Yet the interpretation remains deeply divisive. Many physicists and quantum computing experts insist that no multiverse is required. Willow’s breakthrough, they argue, is fully explainable through standard quantum mechanics—leveraging superposition (qubits existing in multiple states at once), entanglement, and the mathematics of high-dimensional Hilbert spaces—all within a single universe. So what has Willow truly demonstrated? It has pushed quantum technology into a regime so extreme that it compels us to re-examine the deepest foundations of reality itself. Whether or not Willow is quietly borrowing power from alternate universes, one thing is clear: practical, large-scale quantum computing is no longer science fiction—and it is forcing us to confront profound questions about the nature of the cosmos, computation, and existence.
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Vritti | Major Passi@TechSadhak·
Karunanidhi was born in a house with a thatched roof into a family of temple musicians who used to play nadaswaram reed pipe instrument He was good drama story telling and career in politics helped him to create this huge empire which can easily compete with Ambanis
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सुमन्त
सुमन्त@sumantkabir·
हालात बता रहे हैं, #ईरान की मौजूदा हुकूमत #फिदाइन बन चुकी है। दरअसल, अमेरिका और इसराइल के साथ ईरान की जंग को कितना भी गौरान्वित किया जाए लेकिन हकीकत यही है, ईरान की बहुसंख्य जनता #इस्लामिक_कट्टरपंथी_हुकूमत के साथ नहीं है। यह विडंबना ही है, जो ईरान की बहुसंख्य जनता की अभिव्यक्ति सार्वजनिक पटल पर नहीं है। हम इस युद्ध को बस हुकूमतों के कारनामों और बयानों से देख पा रहे हैं। जिस हिसाब से ईरान, सऊदी, कतर, बहरीन, ओमान समेत खाड़ी के सभी #क्राउन_स्टेटस पर बौखला कर हमला कर रहा है, बताना चाहता है, #इस्लाम के बुनियादी उसूल के हिसाब से ये तमाम #सल्तनत, इस्लाम के खिलाफ है, और वही एक वास्तविक इस्लामिक मुल्क है। लेकिन एक ऐसा मुल्क, जिसकी जनता उसके साथ नहीं है। यह दीगर है, सऊदी के वर्तमान सुल्तान सलमान के अब्बाजान #अब्दुल्ला ने कभी कहा था, "...#ईरान एक सांप है, जिसकी गर्दन काट देनी चाहिए।" मुझे आशंका है, किसी भी समय ईरान और खाड़ी के क्राउन मुल्कों के बीच जारी यह लुका-छिपी का खेल सतह पर आ जाएगा और 1400 सालों से जारी #शिया_सुन्नी असहमति भयंकर खुरेंजी जंग में तब्दील होगी। इस जंग की आंच से #भारत भी बरी नहीं रहेगा। यह समय #भारत के #बहुसंख्य के लिए धैर्य व शांति का समय है। प्रतीक्षा कीजिए, जंग के वास्तविक किरदारों के खुलकर आने का। आपकी जरूरत भी नहीं पड़ेगी, खुद में निपटा लेंगे। बस! हमें ज्यादा #वाचाल नहीं होना है। #IranWar#Israël #saudi
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Vritti | Major Passi@TechSadhak·
@rishibagree Karunanidhi was born in a house with a thatched roof into a family of temple musicians who used to play nadaswaram reed pipe instrument He was good drama story telling and career in politics helped him to create this huge empire which can easily compete with Ambanis
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Rishi Bagree
Rishi Bagree@rishibagree·
Difference between Albert Einstein and DMK... Albert Einstein said everything is relative. DMK says relative is everything!!!
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