Drish

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Drish

Drish

@cakeoverlord

IIML '26 / Chennai / love reading about obscure things

India Katılım Ekim 2020
428 Takip Edilen29 Takipçiler
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han
han@heymorewords·
the best part about finding new music is getting to take a walk with it
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Drish@cakeoverlord·
My friend's wedding had two people stationed to cut mangoes and they weren't enough.
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ゴールデンブヒ
ゴールデンブヒ@goldenbuhi2020·
本日のお浸かり 皆さま、本日もおつかりさまです
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Trung Phan
Trung Phan@TrungTPhan·
Lee Kuan Yew: “Air conditioning was a most important invention for us, perhaps one of the signal inventions of history. It changed the nature of civilization by making development possible in the tropics. Without air conditioning you can work only in the cool early-morning hours or at dusk. The first thing I did upon becoming prime minister was to install air conditioners in buildings where the civil service worked. This was key to public efficiency."
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Patrick Collison@patrickc

I asked Claude about the air conditioning debate in Europe, and it really didn’t pull any punches.

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David Delahunty
David Delahunty@Delahuntagram·
Band-Aids in the design of animal rugs
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Khabar Lahariya
Khabar Lahariya@KhabarLahariya·
How much has changed in 24 years? When we look at the stories we report, not much. In May 2002, we began reporting on dowry deaths, wage theft, water scarcity, abandoned wives, corruption, crumbling schools and communal violence. In 2026, we are still reporting on dowry deaths, wage theft, water scarcity, corruption and violence against women, communal violence, and the list is long. The archive you are looking at brings together some of our earliest editions and some of our latest reporting. The newspaper was different then. It was printed in Bundeli, sold for ₹2.50, and delivered by women reporters on bicycles and on foot. But the stories remain stubbornly familiar. Twenty-four years later, what has changed is how we report. What has not changed is what needs reporting. Curated, Translated from Bundeli and Written by: Sejal Design: Saumya
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Drish@cakeoverlord·
Cross cultural pastry awareness has its day
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Wholesome Side of 𝕏
Wholesome Side of 𝕏@itsme_urstruly·
He knows how to pose when he's on the camera
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misa!
misa!@misak1nz·
all i seek is seeking me
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Drish@cakeoverlord·
Consider ordering a Mont Blanc if you see one. I've grown to love coffee and orange together.
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Drish@cakeoverlord·
The purple nyt connections category is ragebait
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Aseel Swaid
Aseel Swaid@aseelswaid9·
Rose Picking Season, Oman
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ethéra
ethéra@etheravibe·
A collection of Parisian doors.
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Drish@cakeoverlord·
What a nice read (I see many adaptations of this story)
Anish Moonka@anishmoonka

Nike spent ten years trying to break the 2-hour marathon. They named a project after it. They built special shoes. They paid the greatest marathoner alive to chase it. Yesterday, a Kenyan runner finally did it in 1:59:30, wearing Adidas. Sabastian Sawe used to be a pacemaker. A pacemaker is the kind of runner you hire to set the speed for the first few miles of a race and then drop out before the finish. In January 2022, Sawe got booked to do exactly that at a half-marathon in Spain. He'd never raced more than three miles in his life. He stayed in for the full 13 and won the whole thing. Adidas signed him not long after. Four years later, he became the first human ever to run an official marathon under 2 hours. Nike, meanwhile, started this whole project in 2016 with a public goal called "Breaking2." They paid for the shoes, the pacemakers, the science labs, and Eliud Kipchoge himself. Kipchoge ran 1:59:40 in Vienna in 2019, but the event was a closed-course exhibition with rotating pacemakers and a pace car projecting a green laser line onto the road. The sport's governing body never recognized it as a real race. It didn't count. Then Nike's running business cratered. Digital sales fell 26% in one quarter. Their share of footwear sold at Dick's Sporting Goods went from 39% to 32% in five months. On Running grew from $330 million to $1.8 billion between 2020 and 2025. Hoka nearly quadrupled. Roger Federer left Nike for On. Nike's board fired the CEO in October 2024. Adidas spent the same period building a better shoe. The new Adizero Adios Pro Evo 3 took three years to develop. It weighs 97 grams, about 3.4 ounces, lighter than a deck of cards. A Wall Street Journal-cited study found that wearing a shoe 3.5 ounces lighter saves a runner around 57 seconds across a marathon. Sawe beat the third-place finisher by 58 seconds. Adidas also did something Nike never did for Kipchoge. They wrote a $50,000 check to the official anti-doping body for track and field, asking it to test Sawe more aggressively than any other runner alive. He got tested 25 times in the two months before last year's Berlin Marathon, and Adidas signed up to fund this for the length of his contract. The logic: the moment Sawe ran a marathon this fast, the world was going to ask if he cheated, especially after his countrywoman Ruth Chepngetich got a 3-year doping ban in 2025. Adidas got out ahead of it. The shoe retails at $500 and is barely available. Adidas's Adizero shoes won half of all major marathon races in 2024. Yesterday in London, four of the top five finishers wore the same Adidas shoe. Yomif Kejelcha crossed the line 11 seconds after Sawe and also broke 2 hours. The top three runners all beat the previous world record. Nike's only response was an Instagram post. Three sentences long: "The clock has been reset. There is no finish line." That was their entire public reaction to losing a 10-year moonshot to their biggest rival.

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Drish@cakeoverlord·
Finished work today
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This is world
This is world@_10world·
windows MOROCCO
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Ramin Nasibov
Ramin Nasibov@RaminNasibov·
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ZXX
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helen warlow
helen warlow@HWarloww·
So brilliant. Back soon
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