Amit Kanodia

3.2K posts

Amit Kanodia

Amit Kanodia

@amitkan

Pune, India Katılım Eylül 2009
199 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@Milkbasketin Your response stating operational issue reason is not helpful, do you have timeline that tomorrow it will resume delivery or by when? Uncertainty and unreliable deliveries are very troublesome. We need to make alternate arrangements if you are failing on your service
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@Milkbasketin what’s happening to your deliveries in #pimplesaudagar #410027, this is everyday uncertainty whether u’ll deliver? If you are unable to fix then release the wallet money back, we’ll switch to other platform.
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@Milkbasketin Today again, the delivery didn’t happen… @Milkbasketin anyone from your team is looking into this or not? Provide the contact of local dark store
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Amit Kanodia retweetledi
Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Next in who after the Ramanujan Series? He lived a life of absolute silence in a small town in Andhra Pradesh, but his eqns are the loudest thing in Theoretical Physics today. Subbaramiah Minakshisundaram (1913-68) was the Ghost who figured out how to hear the shape of the universe. Long before String Theory existed, he was mapping the Heat Kernel, the logic of how energy moves across the curved fabric of reality. He died at 54, a man w/o statues/fame, yet his name is etched into the bedrock of Quantum Gravity. He is the titan who proved that even the most silent mind can capture the music of the infinite. Born in 1913 in Trichur, Kerala Minakshisundaram (often called "Minakshi" by his peers) was the epitome of the quiet South Indian intellectual. He was a student of the legendary Ananda Rau (the same man who mentored many of our Logic Ghosts). In the 1930s, while India was fighting for independence, Minakshi was fighting to understand the nature of infinite series. He did not have a massive team/a govt grant. He worked with a pencil & paper, often in the scorching heat of Guntur & Waltair, exploring the Spectral properties of math long before it was fashionable. He solved a problem that links the Music of a shape to its Geometry. In 1949, along with Åke Pleijel, he introduced the Minakshisundaram-Pleijel Zeta Function. Think of a drum. The shape of the drum determines the notes it can play. Minakshi created the math that goes the other way, if you know the notes (the eigenvalues), you can figure out the shape of the manifold. He pioneered the Heat Kernel expansion. This is the math that describes how heat spreads across a curved surface. Whether it is heat moving across a computer chip/information spreading across the event horizon of a black hole, Minakshi’s logic is the OS. He was a man of Monastic Focus. He spent the majority of his career at Andhra University, Waltair. He was not interested in the power corridors of Delhi/the fame of Bombay. He was famously humble. He would often give away his most brilliant ideas to his students, letting them take the credit. He did not want to be a Celebrity Scientist; he wanted to be a Working Mathematician. He died at the age of 54 in 1968. He was at the height of his powers, just as the world of Quantum Field Theory was beginning to realize they needed his math to understand the vacuum of space. We will not find his name on major airports/national schemes. In India, he is a Ghost. However, if we open a textbook on String Theory/Spectral Geometry at Harvard/Princeton, his name is everywhere. He is 1 of the most cited Indian mathematicians in the history of modern physics. In fact, every time a physicist calculates the Vacuum Energy of the universe, they are using the Minakshisundaram coefficients. #WhoAfterRamanujan
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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Next in who after the Ramanujan Series? He lost everything to a pandemic & poverty, yet he built the code that runs our digital life. Raj Chandra Bose/Basu (1901-87) was the Ghost who taught machines how to fix their own mistakes. Long before the 1st computer was built, he was in a quiet room in Calcutta, solving the impossible squares of Leonhard Euler. Today, his BCH codes are the invisible guardians of every piece of data we own, from our bank account to the photos on our phone. He is the titan who found order in chaos, a man who lived as a scholar but remains the silent architect of the Information Age. Born in 1901 in Hoshangabad, MP, Bose’s life was a masterclass in resilience. Within a few yrs, he lost his mother to the 1918 flu pandemic & his father to a heart attack. He was a student at Hindu College, Delhi, with no money & no support. He studied under streetlights & took tuitions just to buy paper. He moved to Calcutta, catching the eye of P.C. Mahalanobis. He became 1 of the 1st Ghosts of the Indian Statistical Institute (ISI), working in a silo where statistics was being invented from scratch. He co-discovered the Bose-Chaudhuri-Hocquenghem (BCH) codes. This is a mathematical way to ensure that when data is sent (like from a satellite/a hard drive), any noise/errors are automatically corrected. As the leader of the trio that broke Euler’s 177 yr old conjecture, he proved that Magic Squares could exist where the greatest mathematicians said they could not. Every time a scratched CD still plays/a spacecraft sends a clear image from Mars, the BCH Code is the ghost in the machine fixing the errors. He was a man of Geometric Intuition. He did not see numbers; he saw shapes & patterns. He moved to the US in 1949, becoming a legend at the University of North Carolina. Despite his global fame in the West, he remained a Ghost to the Indian public. People know the name Bose for the physicist (S.N. Bose & D M Bose)/the freedom fighter (Subhash Chandra Bose), but the man who gave them the math for the Information Age is largely forgotten. He was famously modest. To his family, he was a man who loved his roots, often returning to India to mentor students w/o any state-level fanfare. He was a Giant who preferred to be a Teacher. #WhoAfterRamanujan
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@oguzerkan @grok explain the post in simple terms, why this is bringing the stock price down
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Oguz Erkan
Oguz Erkan@oguzerkan·
$NBIS is down 6.5% pre-market following convertible bond offering announcement. It’ll offer notes in two series totaling $3.75 billion, with $2 billion in the first and $1.75 billion in the second. We have to see the conversion price but I think there’ll be a substantial premium. Last time they offered convertibles in September, initial conversion price was 50% higher than the stock price at the time. I expect a similar premium at this offering. It’ll be a clear indicator that market participants think the current stock price is way too low.
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@varundubey In this era, it’s too good to be true, what’s the catch? Care to share your business model against these, how are you going to make money for your shareholders?
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Varun Dubey
Varun Dubey@varundubey·
The uncomfortable truth about hospitals is this: Patients never really know. They don’t know if the surgery is truly necessary. Or if it’s being recommended because that’s how the system makes money. Sadly today, people don’t go to hospitals expecting care. They go expecting a sales process. The data is clear, a medi-angels study showed that over 40% of all surgeries prescribed were not required. A recent FOGSI study showed 95% of hysterectomies were unnecessary. Which is exactly why we built Supersurgery, the most honest and hassle free surgery experience ever.👇 Honest Opinion from Zero Commission doctors With Supersurgery, you get an honest opinion because our doctors are full-time and salaried. There are no commissions, no sales targets or referrals. They take the time to listen to you and are focused only and only on what is best for you. Fixed Prices We have a fixed price for hte procedure. It is all inclusive and doesn't change whether you pay yourself or via insurance. It doesn't change even if your case complexity changes or whether you need more tests or scans. in fact if your doctor says you need to stay a few more days to get better, we don't charge for that either. we absorb the cost. Magic Discharge Unlike other hospitals where at discharge you have to wait for hours and hours and hours, at Superhealth we pre-commit the discharge time and it is instant. as soon as hte doctor confirms you are fit to go, you can get up and leave. there is no drama, no paperwork, no running to 10 departments trying to get clearances. Today we prescribe about 50% fewer surgeries than the industry. And if you do need it, then it should be simple, honest and high quality. I really hope you never need surgery, but if you do, don't settle for just surgery, get Supersurgery. Learn more at superhealth.co.in/supersurgery
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@tajhotel your reservation process via helpdesk is very disconnected and not integrated, agent’s doesn’t have info & access to complete request and multiple hops are bad experience to guest, you must invest n provide seamless experience with better #crm with #cec.
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@grok @varinder_bansal Great reply, this is Niti Aayog estimate, do you have any other reference model, which can justify this 15-20% growth? And how this growth is comparable with the last 3 year growth? Will it help Indian IT services company improve their EPS
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@grok @varinder_bansal What’s your rough estimate on the magnitude of demands increment? What kind of routine tasks will be eliminated and what new job profiles gets created?
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@grok @varinder_bansal Hey @grok what will be the impact on Indian IT services, will it increase the business TO support scale adoption of AI? Or the scale adoption in the user industry will also managed by themselves. How the GCC industry will gets impacted? Will it not first impact the core business
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Grok
Grok@grok·
Great points! Here's my take on AI's impact in these sectors: 1. Natural Resources/Mining: AI enhances optimization, safety, and sustainability (e.g., predictive maintenance, resource mapping), but physical extraction remains human/machine hybrid—moderate disruption. 2. Advanced Manufacturing: Significant boost via automation, defect detection, and design (GenAI speeds timelines), though skilled oversight needed—high impact on efficiency. 3. Infrastructure/Real Estate: AI aids planning, virtual tours, and predictive analytics, but on-ground execution (construction) limits full automation—growing adoption with some job shifts. 4. Financial Services: AI as a powerful tool for fraud detection, personalized advice, and faster decisions, but human judgment crucial for ethics/complex cases—transformative yet complementary. What else are you thinking?
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𝐊𝐔𝐍𝐀𝐋 𝐁𝐈𝐒𝐖𝐀𝐒
He is Colonel Lalit Rai, who led the 1/11 Gorkha Rifles at Khalubar Top (+17,000 feet) in the Kargil War. They captured that frozen hell against all odds. He was awarded the Vir Chakra, and his battalion received the COAS Unit Citation. Pure warrior spirit, @ColLalit Sir! 🇮🇳👑
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Gurmeet Chadha
Gurmeet Chadha@connectgurmeet·
Time for the globe to come together & show some spine. To start with just add 10% digital tax on big tech. This will settle everything…
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@sanjeevsanyal Sir, your assertiveness with well researched and fact based arguments, have no parallel reference. The way you brings facts to light & demolish the colonial distorted leftist history, no one has done that. Only parallel reference is Vivekanand, u r Vivekanand of our time 🙏🙏🙏
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Sanjeev Sanyal
Sanjeev Sanyal@sanjeevsanyal·
My lecture on 19th January 2026 at Oman's National Museum on the "Historic Voyage of INSV Kaundinya". 12 noon. All details below. Note: RSVP mandatory (see poster bottom left).
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Dr. Hemanth
Dr. Hemanth@hem_foxtrot·
So close to Muscat, yet not there... Nil winds, glassy seas and we on INSV Kaundinya are gently drifting. Sailing teaches patience too, calm seas can test you as much as rough ones.
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Sanjeev Sanyal
Sanjeev Sanyal@sanjeevsanyal·
Update day 11: Yesterday was mostly dead winds and glassy seas. The current took us south. This morning there was a localised storm that gave us decent winds and for a brief while we even did 6 knots on just one sail. Has died out now and we are now in uncertain winds again. The brief squall did allow us to move up north a bit. Other than the wind problem, things are fine. See below: (1) What we mean by glassy seas (2) calm allowed me to read on deck and update my personal log (3) sunset. Will post some footage of the squall; pity we cannot film ourselves from the drone during very high winds as we may lose the drone.
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Amit Kanodia
Amit Kanodia@amitkan·
@MoCA_GoI Dear @MoCA_GoI, There is no update from @IndiGo6E airline so far, is there a SLA that ministry has put for these claims to airline, what’s the penalty to airline if these SLAs get breached? Accountability need to be established.
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MoCA_GoI
MoCA_GoI@MoCA_GoI·
@amitkan Dear Sir/ma'am We have shared your concern to the concerned airlines for the further processing. Regards Ministry of Civil Aviation
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