Darshan S Gill

2K posts

Darshan S Gill banner
Darshan S Gill

Darshan S Gill

@dsgint

Only love can save the world... bigots & hatemongers stay faaaar away! Arsenal COYG!

Katılım Ağustos 2021
69 Takip Edilen36 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@BhagwantMann ਬਹੁਤ ਬਹੁਤ ਵਧਾਈਆਂ, ਛੋਟੇ ਵੀਰ ਭਗਵੰਤ! ਹੁਣ ਬਹੁਤ ਉਮੀਦਾਂ ਨੇ ਤੁਹਾਡੀ ਸਰਕਾਰ ਤੋਂ ਕਿ ਪੰਜਾਬ ਵਿੱਚ ਅਤੀ ਲੋੜੀਂਦਾ ਬਦਲਾਅ ਆਵੇਗਾ। We need urgent reforms especially in administration & judiciary. Make sure you appoint highly-qualified and competent people at ALL levels top to bottom! 🙏
1
0
6
0
Gurpreet Garry Walia
Gurpreet Garry Walia@garrywalia_·
UNCLE: Indira Gandhi told people not to buy gold in 1967. I have proof Journalist : Show it. UNCLE: it’s in my phone pan your camera on phone Journalist : The Hindu is not published in Hindi. UNCLE: I translated/ converted it on Google Journalist : I fact-checked it. It is fake. UNCLE: You are not a neutral journalist 😂
English
150
1.2K
4.5K
125.3K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Saurabh shukla
Saurabh shukla@Saurabh_Unmute·
How Does Iran Treat Its Minorities? Around 30,000 Jews live in Iran. More than 350,000 Christians also live there. Why is there a train station named after Mother Mary in the Islamic Republic of Iran? Our Ground Report.
English
193
2.2K
8.9K
233.2K
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@DailyAFC Never heard this ignorant clown or any of his United flock say anything sensible.
English
0
0
0
27
DailyAFC
DailyAFC@DailyAFC·
🗣️ Peter Schmeichel: “What really makes me angry is that Arsenal would never be top of the league if that was a free-kick. It takes VAR five minutes, that in itself puts so much doubt. The decision today, it’s just so wrong on so many levels.” ❌🧐
English
980
43
614
341.7K
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@Arsenal Our players look as if they’ve got lead in their legs. Absolutely lethargic and clueless.
English
0
0
1
104
Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
The second half gets going at the London Stadium ▶️ Let's keep bringing the fight, Gunners 👊 ⚒️ 0-0 ⚪️ (46)
English
296
153
1.3K
147.7K
Fabrizio Romano
Fabrizio Romano@FabrizioRomano·
🔵⚡️Man City make it three against Brentford! Who’s been your Man of the Match?
Fabrizio Romano tweet media
English
1.4K
2.1K
35.5K
1.9M
B Mello
B Mello@bmello1990·
@EduardoHagn Tell me you’ve never played the game without telling me. This is a contact sport not every single contact especially inadvertent is a foul or a penalty.
English
2
0
0
2K
Eduardo Hagn
Eduardo Hagn@EduardoHagn·
Look at this. Insane penalty.
English
198
490
5.9K
322.1K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Rants&Roasts
Rants&Roasts@Sydusm·
India is on a new quest. And it feels like progress. The industrialist who once built something real, who actually understood risk and reward, has figured out a simpler way to exist. And grow. Bow early, smile at the right rallies, donate handsomely, show up when called, cheer for the visionary and your empire stays intact. Loans get cleared. Defaults are forgiven and forgotten. Rivals develop strange problems. It costs nothing except a small tradeoff of intelligence. The bureaucrat who once believed that merit was the only ladder has found a much faster one. You don't need to perform. You don't need to deliver. You take the fast elevator. Be available, aligned, and enthusiastic about the right things at the right time. For the right wing. The posting comes. The seniority follows. Hardly anyone makes a noise. All good. The young man who was promised jobs and received nothing has found that there is work after all. Break something for the right people and there will be no case against you. Do it with enough noise and there might even be a future in it. A party ticket - who knows. Vandalism has indeed become a career option for a generation that was given no other. The professor who spent a lifetime building arguments has learned that silence is the safer course. No controversy means no phone calls at night, no transfer orders, no sudden reviews of funding. The institution breathes easier. So does the pension and post retirement placements. The judge has learned that certain verdicts age better than others. Retirement is long and post retirement life can be very comfortable if you were quietly useful to the right people at the right moments. Nothing dramatic. Just a lean here, a delay there, a particular reading of a particular clause, a few biased verdicts. Everyone is running the same calculation. How much intelligence can I surrender and what exactly do I get for it. And the answer keeps coming back favourable. So the experiment continues, station by station, person by person, institution by institution. This is not decay in the way we usually mean it. Decay suggests something unintended, beyond control. This is more deliberate than that. Everyone chose this. Everyone is still choosing it every single morning. India is not falling. India is on a very specific journey, one where the destination is absolute idiocy and the remarkable thing is how many rewards there are along the way. At every stop someone gets something. A contract, a posting, a verdict, a tenure, a ticket, a bail, an RS seat, a possibility to enter the washing machine. And so nobody gets off. The journey continues. And the distance from intelligence keeps growing, and it feels, to most people who are watching from the sidelines, like progress.
English
58
336
780
34K
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@kimmoFC Absolutely hilarious when commentators say “not enough in it to warrant a penalty”. So, the player has to be hit with a sledgehammer for a penalty to be given?
English
1
0
1
500
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@Knifesedge11 Why are so many saying we could lose to West Ham? I know they will want to win desperately but we will thrash them regardless. 100%
English
0
0
0
574
🔪🇵🇸
🔪🇵🇸@Knifesedge11·
What happens if City drop points again before Arsenal even play West Ham?
English
104
172
8.2K
504K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Abhijeet Dipke
Abhijeet Dipke@abhijeet_dipke·
MK Stalin- 1.02 lakh votes deleted in Kolathur constituency, he lost by 8,795. Mamata- 51,000 votes deleted in Bhabanipur seat, she lost by 15,000. Kejriwal - 38,000 votes deleted in New Delhi constituency & he lost by 4,000. (2025) Three prominent Chief Ministers of opposition were defeated by mass deletion of votes. If you still don’t see the pattern and believe they lost because of anti-incumbency then the joke is on you.
English
958
4.8K
16.8K
729.3K
Gooner Chris
Gooner Chris@ArsenalN7·
Thoughts on Myles Lewis-Skelly today? 💫
Gooner Chris tweet media
English
479
208
5K
139.6K
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@Arsenal We seem to be fooling around a bit in the second half, not really trying to score. We could do with more goals.
English
0
0
0
214
Arsenal
Arsenal@Arsenal·
Our final switch... ↩️ White 🔛 Mosquera 🔴 3-0 ⚪️ (83)
Arsenal tweet media
English
112
182
2.1K
109.3K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Gates Foundation India
Gates Foundation India@BMGFIndia·
Sahajan (moringa)—often called the miracle tree—is quietly transforming the health of mothers and children across India. But behind this change are Anganwadi didis, going door to door—sharing knowledge, building trust, and helping families understand the benefits of moringa. Watch the full video to know the story.
English
14
42
323
783.9K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Pratim D Gupta
Pratim D Gupta@peedeegee·
Most people go on The Tonight Show to plug a movie or show off a new suit. Diljit Dosanjh went on there to drop a 112-year-old historical checkmate with the casual shrug of a man who knows exactly who he is. When Jimmy Fallon asked about the Vancouver show, Diljit didn't just talk about the lights or the noise. He reminded the world that while the Punjabi spirit is global, the welcome mat wasn’t always rolled out. Back in 1914, the Canadian government was playing a rigged game. The Continuous Journey Regulation was simply a “No Indians Allowed” sign, disguised as a travel rule: you could only enter Canada if you came on a non-stop ship from your home country. Since no such ships existed from India, it was a legal trap. The SS Komagata Maru arrived with 376 souls—340 Sikhs, 24 Muslims, and 12 Hindus—who thought they were British subjects with rights. Instead, they were treated like a contagion. For two months, they sat in the harbour, just 2,000 metres from the shore, being denied even the basic dignity of food and water. The city didn’t just look away; they sent a tugboat full of armed men to force them out. Fast forward to Diljit standing in the centre of BC Place in Vancouver. While the ghosts of the 1914 exclusion act still linger in the salt air of the Burrard Inlet, Diljit turned that 2 km distance into the shortest, most triumphant walk in history. His witty repartee to Jimmy wasn't just a fun fact; it was a savage flex. “They did not allow us then. Now 55,000 people were there to celebrate us." Diljit didn't need to be angry to be impactful. He just used the facts as his backup dancers. From the 20 martyrs shot dead at Budge Budge to the roar of a sold-out stadium, the math finally adds up to justice. The "undesirables" of the past are now the icons of the present. History tried to write a “No Entry” sign. Diljit just signed his name over it.
Pratim D Gupta tweet media
English
66
212
2K
280.2K
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@_sayema You ruined my day, Sayema. This lowlife’s face is nauseating and abhorrent now. His name will now be figuratively used when political turncoats are spoken of.
English
0
0
0
112
Darshan S Gill
Darshan S Gill@dsgint·
@sabeer Imagine a girl being asked in an interview about her education and saying she studied at Galgotia. And the interviewer nodding “Aah, Girl got ya”.
English
0
0
0
45
Sabeer Bhatia
Sabeer Bhatia@sabeer·
Why would anyone send their kids to universities named “Lovely” or “Galgotia”? Education isn’t branding - it’s substance. If the name sounds like marketing, what does that say about what’s inside?
English
91
53
395
8.5K
Darshan S Gill retweetledi
Ihtesham Ali
Ihtesham Ali@ihtesham2005·
A Persian scholar finished a single math book in 9th century Baghdad that quietly became the foundation for every line of code running on Earth today. I started reading about him at midnight and could not believe how many things in my daily life trace back to one man. His name was Muhammad ibn Musa al-Khwarizmi. The book is called The Compendious Book on Calculation by Completion and Balancing. Every time you say the word algebra, you are saying his book title. Every time someone says the word algorithm, they are saying his name. Both English words come from him. Both are Latin transliterations of Arabic and of his own identity. The man did not just contribute to mathematics. He named it. Here is the part almost nobody tells you. Al-Khwarizmi was born around 780 CE in Khwarazm, in what is now Uzbekistan. He moved to Baghdad and worked at a research institution called the House of Wisdom, which during the Islamic Golden Age was the single most important center of learning on the planet. The caliph al-Mamun hired the best mathematicians, astronomers, and philosophers from across three continents and put them in one building with one job. Translate, study, and produce new knowledge. Al-Khwarizmi finished his book on algebra around 820 CE. The Arabic title contained the word al-jabr, which referred to one of the two operations he used to solve equations. When the book was translated into Latin in the 12th century, the Latin world did not have a word for what he had built. So they kept his Arabic word. Al-jabr became algebra. The discipline was named after a single Arabic word in the title of a single book by a single man. The deeper insight is what he actually changed about how humans think. Before al-Khwarizmi, mathematical problems were solved geometrically. You drew shapes. You measured them. You compared areas. The Greeks had built an entire mathematical tradition on visual proofs and physical constructions. It was beautiful and limited. You could not solve a problem you could not draw. Al-Khwarizmi did something nobody had done before him at this scale. He said you could solve any problem using abstract symbols and rules. You did not need a shape. You needed a procedure. You moved terms across the equation. You cancelled like terms on both sides. You isolated the unknown. He invented the idea that mathematics is a manipulation of symbols according to rules, not a study of physical figures. That single shift made everything that came afterward possible. Calculus. Differential equations. Linear algebra. Quantum mechanics. None of it works if math is locked inside geometry. He pulled it out. The second thing he did is the one that changed how the world counted forever. He took the Hindu numeral system from Indian mathematics, refined it, and wrote a book introducing it to the Arab world. That system included the concept of zero as a placeholder, and a positional notation where the value of a digit depends on its location. Roman numerals could not do complex calculation. Hindu-Arabic numerals could. When his book on numerals was translated into Latin as Algoritmi de numero Indorum, the word Algoritmi was just the Latin spelling of his own name. Europeans started calling the new method "doing algorism," then "running an algorithm." The word for the most important concept in computer science is literally his name in Latin. The third thing he did is the part that should haunt anyone who works in tech. His method of solving problems was systematic. Step one, do this. Step two, check that. Step three, if condition A, then do X, otherwise do Y. He wrote down procedures that could be followed by anyone, anywhere, who knew how to read. The procedure did not depend on intuition or genius. It worked because the steps worked. That is exactly what an algorithm is. A finite, deterministic procedure for solving a problem. He did not just give us the word. He gave us the entire concept of programming a thousand years before there was anything to program. When Alan Turing built the first abstract model of computation in 1936, when John von Neumann designed the first stored-program computer in 1945, when every engineer at Google, OpenAI, Anthropic, and DeepMind writes code in 2026, they are working in a paradigm that started with one man in Baghdad twelve centuries ago. The strangest part is what happens when you walk into any tech office in San Francisco or Bangalore or Lahore today. Engineers say the words algebra and algorithm hundreds of times a day. They do not know whose name they are saying. Almost nobody can spell al-Khwarizmi correctly on the first try. His original Arabic manuscript is preserved at Oxford. His book on Hindu numerals survives only in Latin translation. The Latin version was the textbook that taught medieval Europe how to count. The man who built the foundation of the AI revolution did not live to see a calculator. He died around 850 CE, a thousand years before the first electric current was sent through a wire. The civilization he built mathematics for collapsed. The library he wrote in burned. His own grave is unmarked. But every algorithm running on every machine on Earth right now still answers to his name.
Ihtesham Ali tweet media
English
328
4.5K
10.7K
405.4K
Kagaz ke fool🃏
Kagaz ke fool🃏@FrostAndShadoww·
Raghav Chadha is a typical Delhi boy who calls himself Punjabi but doesn’t have an ounce of Punjabiyat in him.
English
40
152
1.8K
44.2K