coreleon🇮🇳⛵
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coreleon🇮🇳⛵
@coreleonio
| शिष्य | We spend too much time trying to win the game, and too little figuring out which game to play | सुखस्य मूलं धर्म: 🔱 धर्मस्य मूलं अर्थः |



Indian streets looked more or less like this in 300 BCE. This is some 80% accurate. A residential quarters of nagarikas during the Mauryan empire. Many many years of searching endlessly and 100s of hours of brainstorming and looking for obscure references, atlast.

Now that bail is granted, it is time to make Francis Xavier a nationally known figure like Babur.







Infinite series were developed first in India -- Why Navier-Stokes Should Be Called Madhava-Stokes youtu.be/VnyT37rB_Zc?si… via @YouTube



i’ve outsourced my circadian rhythm to anthropic’s & openai’s rate limiter.

For the last three years, a startup in Bangalore has been obsessed with a pursuit that typically invites raised eyebrows, naked skepticism, and accusations of stealing from sci-fi: @dognosis is training dogs to detect cancer. And until you've spent time at their facility - a former pomegranate farm in the outskirts of Bangalore - perhaps skepticism is the rational response. But Dognosis isn't betting on some pie-in-the-sky idea or some charming novelty act, they're betting on evolution. @akadogluk and @Itamar_Bitan based their company on the fact that the dog's nose - a product of fifteen millennia of co-evolution with humans - can detect the faint chemical trace of cancer in your breath at a resolution that our machines, algorithms, and laboratory tests have never come close to matching. We've known this fact for decades. We've consistently failed to do anything meaningful with that knowledge. The missing link has been figuring out what the dog's nose knows, and applying it in a standardised, scalable, and clinically validated way. Dognosis is building this missing piece of the equation i.e. the translation layer that allows the dog's nose to speak a language medicine can understand, enabling us to harness an ancient biological intelligence and plug it into our modern medical infrastructure. Maybe you've read the paragraphs above and retained your skepticism. That's fair. But this past Friday, the Journal of Clinical Oncology - the world's most influential cancer journal - opted to make life much harder for the skeptics. On Friday, the JCO published Dognosis' landmark study on breath-based multi-cancer detection - the largest of its kind ever conducted - showing that a team of trained dogs, equipped with sensors and AI, could detect multiple cancers from breath alone at 90%+ accuracy - including at Stage I, when it matters most - for $2 a test. According to Akash, it proved "that everything we’ve known about the dogs is true". Needless to say, it's a genuine milestone for Indian healthcare, health-tech, deep-tech, and, uh, dog-tech, that deserves far more attention than it's gotten so far. To help change that, we were lucky to have Akash stop by the Tigerfeathers editorial desk this past week to unpack the Dognosis journey - helping us understand what they're building, how they're doing it, why it matters, and what comes next. From where we're sitting, Dognosis is an n-of-1 Indian startup with an n-of-1 story that everyone in the Indian tech ecosystem should be aware of. If you've been intrigued by what you've read so far and you're keen to go deeper, dive into our piece here👇 tigerfeathers.in/p/dognosis-unl…

If you have time to watch just one meaningful story today, watch this one on Kautilya. Beautifully done. India's 300 BCE Theorem That Predates Nash. youtu.be/Q-N_PM2wTw4?si… via @YouTube

Open letter to Indians in America. -- Dear brothers and sisters from Bharat: Like I did 37 years ago, you arrived in America with no money but with a good education and cultural heritage from Bharat. You achieved outstanding success. America was good to us. For that we must remain grateful - gratitude is our Bharatiya way. Yet today, a significant number of Americans, may be not the majority but not too far from it either, believe that Indians "take away" American jobs and our success in America was unfairly earned. You may think the next election will fix this, but your choice would be between people who hate our Bharatiya civilisation and people who hate civilisation itself. That is the "hard right" vs "woke left" battle. You are mere bystanders to that conflict. Meanwhile there is one thing that is true now and will be true in the future: the respect Indians command world-wide will substantially depend on the fortunes of India herself. If India remains poor, the woke left will give us moral lectures with pity and the hard right, different moral lectures with scorn ("hellhole") and we must not confuse either with respect. Respect in today's world, along with prosperity and security, comes from one source: a nation's technological prowess. India produces sufficient brain power to achieve that prowess but alas we exported so much of that talent, particularly to America. As we develop that prowess in India, our civilisational strength will assert itself. As difficult as it is for many of you to contemplate this, please come back home. Bharat Mata needs your talent. Our vast youthful population needs the technology leadership you gained over the years to guide them towards prosperity. Let's do it with a missionary zeal. Respectfully Sridhar Vembu










