Nesara G

1.4K posts

Nesara G

Nesara G

@gnesara

Katılım Mart 2010
176 Takip Edilen84 Takipçiler
Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@CivitasSameer @ganeshchetan @goodmanvijay Because of Ganesh sir, anand sir and others my parents and many many more ppl, kids could watch non Karnataka movies, tv shows in Kannada. We could see Kannada in metro, commercial shops etc. shame on you ppl who just do helaata online and no work
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Ganesh Chetan
Ganesh Chetan@ganeshchetan·
@goodmanvijay says hello. - ಮೆಟ್ರೋದಲ್ಲಿ ಹಿಂದಿ ತೊಲಗಿಸಿದ್ದು ನಾವೇ. ಬೋರ್ಡ್ ಗಳಲ್ಲಿ 60% ಕನ್ನಡ ಕಡ್ಡಾಯ ಮಾಡಿಸಿದ್ದು ನಾವೇ. ಈಗ ತೃತೀಯ ಭಾಷೆ ನೆಪದಲ್ಲಿ ಹಿಂದಿ ಹೇರಿಕೆ ತೊಲಗಿಸಿದ್ದು ನಾವೇ. ಇನ್ನೂ ತುಂಬಾ ಯೋಜನೆಗಳು ಇವೆ. ಕಾದು ನೋಡು. 😂😂😂
Sameer Rao@CivitasSameer

@ganeshchetan You are doing nothing. You don't read one classical kannada text also, don't support any kannada institutions and professors, you don't support poets, authors who want to publish. Frankly you are doing nothing for Kannada growth. Only gundagiri

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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@sg_tells @Anon182696 Why do expect tamilnadu people to talk to you in your language. You went there and they didn’t come to you. Either learn Tamil if you are planning to settle there or use translation/ ai translation will help you now. Don’t expect them to learn your language.
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SG@sg_tells·
My concern is that our emotional attachment to Kannada should not cause our children to fall behind. Language is best acquired at a younger age. National integrity is also important. If you go to rural areas of Tamil Nadu, it is very difficult to communicate with the locals. They cannot speak anything except Tamil. I have faced this problem many times, even with people in urban areas of Tamil Nadu. I clearly see that many opportunities may be lost for our children in the future.
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SG@sg_tells·
When Marks Don’t Matter, Learning Doesn’t Matter: The Hidden Impact of Karnataka’s Language Policy: As a nation, shouldn’t we have a common language for communication? If so, which language should it be, if not Hindi? This does not mean that I am advocating for Hindi specifically. My point is that there should be one common language across the country that connects people emotionally and culturally. If English is suggested as that common language, it is not always effective in expressing our thoughts and emotions in a natural way. Therefore, in my opinion, India should have a common language for communication, preferably one of Indian origin. At the same time, an important question arises: did the government consult parents before removing Hindi from schools? It appears to be a one-sided decision, as many parents do not agree with it. Some argue that Hindi will still be taught until Class 9 and that students will write exams in Class 10, so there is no issue. But this misses a key point: when a subject is to be taught, it should be taught seriously and effectively. If Hindi marks are not counted in the final Class 10 percentage, students will not take it seriously. Naturally, teachers too may not give it due importance, since it does not impact the final results. When a subject is excluded from the total marks, it indirectly discourages learning. The real impact of this decision is clearly visible at the school level. Until now, government schools were teaching Hindi, but they will stop doing so. However, private schools continue to teach Hindi without any restriction. This creates an imbalance. Economically weaker parents, who depend on government schools for free education, now face a disadvantage. No parent wants their child to fall behind, and many believe that Hindi is important at the national level. As a result, such parents may feel compelled to send their children to private schools, which could eventually lead to the decline or even closure of some government schools. If the government truly believes in this policy, why not apply it uniformly? Why are private schools allowed to continue teaching Hindi? This inconsistency raises questions and makes the decision appear politically motivated rather than educationally justified. In the long run, students studying in private schools—where Hindi is still taught and taken seriously—will have more opportunities at the national level. Meanwhile, children from economically weaker backgrounds, who are limited to fewer language options, may lose out on these opportunities. This creates an unequal playing field. This leads to a fundamental question: what is the problem with learning an additional language? Why is there resistance or negativity towards it? Ironically, the language that poses a greater challenge to Kannada is not Hindi, but English. Yet, many so-called Kannada activists remain silent about the growing dominance of English. The reason is evident—their own children often study in elite English-medium schools. It is also worth noting that politicians who are proficient in Hindi tend to have better opportunities in national-level politics. This highlights the practical advantages of knowing multiple languages. Ultimately, the concern is about the future of our children. Those from economically weaker sections risk losing their competitive edge due to such policies. Instead of limiting opportunities, we should aim to equip all students equally with the skills they need to succeed. #Hindi #kannadafirst
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@vasantshetty81 Hearing such a response from one’s son or daughter brings pure joy and deep emotional happiness to a parent. Thank you Vasanth for sharing this.
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@ganeshchetan In between these shows they promote unhealthy things using advertising like supari, pan masala, unhealthy drinks, processed food. Good that online gaming/betting stoped which caused lot of financial and health issues to individuals and families
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Ganesh Chetan
Ganesh Chetan@ganeshchetan·
Three months Big Boss Three months IPL - Six months in a year they distract the youth with inane things and the establishment does whatever it wants.
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Dr Prisha Sargam
Dr Prisha Sargam@PrishaSargam·
The inspiring true story behind the viral Bengaluru couple’s adoption journey, touching and motivating lakhs of people.
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Alok Jain ⚡
Alok Jain ⚡@WeekendInvestng·
My next vacation is getting costlier by the hour 🥹
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Vasant Shetty | Building Mundhe Banni
Families today sit together but connect with no one. Parents scroll. Children scroll. Even the few moments meant for each other are swallowed by screens. Now imagine two techies from Mysuru who looked at this and said, this cannot be our future. Tanushri was a software engineer who worked at HP and Logica. Shashishekhar (@mankuthimma) was a manager at Cisco with a stable career and a clear path ahead. Yet both felt a quiet discomfort. Families were drifting even when they were physically close. They remembered the games we played as children. Chowkabara. Adu Huli. Pagade. Navakankari. Games that encourages everyone to sit together. Talk. Laugh. Argue. Compete. Bond. These were not just games. They were cultural memory. So in 2019, before the pandemic hit, Tanushri began experimenting with the idea of reviving these traditional games in a modern form. She worked alone, learning everything by doing. Then in 2020, at the peak of his own career, Shashishekhar made a decision that most people would call irrational. He left his job at Cisco and joined his wife full time to build Roll The Dice. He built their first website, helped redesign every board, and committed to this idea with no safety net. They had no funding. No backing. Only obsession. During the pandemic years they worked endlessly. Tanushri attended every exhibition she could find in Bengaluru. Apartment fairs, small community events, weekend gatherings. Anyone who paused even for a moment was handed a game to try. People felt the passion first. Then they felt the nostalgia. And once they touched the games, something unlocked inside them. They refined. They redesigned. They survived on word of mouth. They listed on Amazon and reviews poured in. Still the biggest question remained. How do you turn cultural love into a real business. Then came SaShakti, a government supported program run by Catalyst for Women Entrepreneurs. It put them through six months of practical training in distribution, marketing, financial discipline, and the real thinking needed to scale. They were mentored by Sanjay Anandram who later connected them to my long time friend and guide Ravishankar. By 2022/23, they had the clarity and the structure they needed. They applied to the government of Karnataka Elevate program and were selected in 2023. That grant helped them reduce production costs and also begin building an online platform that brings these same traditional games into the digital world. Today Roll The Dice has reached nearly ten thousand families. They are still small in revenue but the foundation is strong and the ambition is real. Their dream is simple. To make these games the default choice for family bonding in a world that is drowning in noise, anxiety, and endless scrolling. I checked their website and it's beautiful, thoughtful. And it is needed. These are the ventures that protect our cultural memory and also give families something they have quietly lost. Time with each other. I spoke to the founders today and I hope to bring them soon on the @mundhebanni podcast. Because in a world that moves fast and forgets faster, it is people like this who decide what gets preserved. Do checkout their website: rollthedice.in
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Aditi
Aditi@aditiraaaj1·
what do these TWO colors remind u of?
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Ramachandra.M| ರಾಮಚಂದ್ರ.ಎಮ್
Hey guys, Need urgent help. Need A- blood for a friend’s dad in RR Nagar, Bengaluru. Praveen - 95356 30777 Pls amplify this message. Thanks in advance.
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@vasantshetty81 Great journey to learn and improve ourselves. Especially when it’s from average person studied in average college. Thanks vasanth for sharing
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Vasant Shetty | Building Mundhe Banni
He graduated in 2008, possibly one of the toughest years to graduate because of the global recession. He studied at Global Institute of Technology, which wasn’t one of the big-name colleges in Bengaluru, and jobs were scarce back then. But that situation actually nudged him toward entrepreneurship. He had a fascination for developing websites and would go around Basavanagudi and Malleshwara visiting small shops, asking if he could build a website for them. He was relentless and genuine. Some shop owners saw that sincerity and gave him a chance. He ended up building around over 250 websites, often charging as little as two thousand rupees. Out of that experience came a small prototype that caught the attention of Madhura Garments, who eventually acquired his product. Madhura Garments was a client of Ernst and Young, and through that connection, someone from E&Y got to know about his work and offered him a job. Vittal says he couldn’t even pronounce Ernst and Young back then and had no idea what the firm did, so he declined. The person who offered him the job became a friend though, and when that person later moved to KPMG, he invited Vittal to join him there. That’s how Vittal entered the world of consulting. At KPMG, he worked on project financing and investment management, picked up new skills, and gained confidence. He then joined Robert Bosch, where he got exposure to their venture funding arm. Bosch offered him opportunities in both the US and Germany, and he eventually relocated to Germany. There, he worked on costing, investment structuring, and large project implementations. In 2014, while traveling in the US, he met an American at a café who noticed the Robert Bosch badge on his shirt. They started chatting, and when the man asked what he did, Vittal explained that he worked on costing and investment structuring at Bosch. The American said he was trying to build a crowdfunding platform for ideas and asked if Vittal could offer some strategic advice and guidance. That short conversation became the turning point that introduced him to the world of crowdfunding. He helped the American set up the platform, advised him on strategy, and even made some money along the way. Through that journey, he realized that while crowdfunding was becoming popular in the US, people in Germany didn’t have easy access to such opportunities. He thought, why not build something for Germany, by Germans, for Germans? That idea became the foundation for his venture, which went on to become one of the fastest-growing startups in Germany. Eventually, it was acquired by a large German media and publishing group. Because of his ability to execute and build meaningful things, he later became an ambassador for German startups, representing the Indo-German entrepreneurial bridge. In 2020, he came back to India. While traveling through Karkala and Udupi, he noticed handmade dolls being sold on the roadside for just fifty rupees, while the same products sold for six hundred rupees in Bengaluru. That gap really struck him, and he decided to do something about it. That’s how Kreate was born. It’s a platform that helps artisans without GST registration sell their handmade products directly to customers. Today, Kreate has over twenty-eight thousand sellers and has generated over thirty-five million dollars in lifetime sales! Vittal also raised two million dollars in venture funding for the company, and Kreate now stands as a sustainable, profitable venture. In 2025, he launched Nucleo, a platform that helps investors verify startup data using company identification numbers and helps founders set up clean data rooms and cap tables. It makes the due diligence process faster, easier, and more transparent for both sides. Vittal’s story is a great example of what persistence and curiosity can create. From building websites for small shops in Basavanagudi to building one of Germany’s fastest-growing startups, and then coming back to empower Indian artisans, his journey is all about grit, reinvention, and purpose. I really enjoyed our conversation, Vittal. Looking forward to featuring your story soon on @mundhebanni
Vasant Shetty | Building Mundhe Banni tweet media
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@atherenergy Kannada ❤️💛 Karnataka Dhanyavadagalu Ather
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Ather Energy
Ather Energy@atherenergy·
This Kannada Rajyotsava, Ramesh Aravind unveils the Kannada Dashboard on our scooters, making us more local than ever!
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@sgowda79 What a loss to the state country and earth
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ಕನ್ನಡಿಗ ದೇವರಾಜ್
ದೊಡ್ಡಮಾವತ್ತೂರಿನ ಶ್ರೀಮಹಾದೇವಮ್ಮ ದೇವಸ್ಥಾನದ ಎದುರಿಗೆ ಭೂಷಣದಂತೆ ಲಕ್ಷಣವಾಗಿ ಬೃಹದಾಕಾರವಾಗಿ ಸುಂದರವಾಗಿ ದೇವಿಯ ವೃಕ್ಷದಂತೆ ಬಹುಉಪಕಾರಿಯಾಗಿದ್ದ ಅರಳೀಮರವನ್ನು ಅಕ್ಕಪಕ್ಕ ಜಾಗವಿದ್ದರೂ ರಸ್ತೆ ಅಭಿವೃದ್ಧಿ ಹೆಸರಿನಲ್ಲಿ ಮರವನ್ನು ನಾಶಮಾಡಿರುವ ಮಹಾನ್ ನಾಯಕರಿಗೆ ಸ್ವಲ್ಪವೂ ಹೊಟ್ಟೆ ಉರಿಯಲಿಲ್ಲವೇ ಅವರನ್ನು ಕಾಪಾಡು ತಾಯಿ😭
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Belagavi - ಬೆಳಗಾವಿ
ಇದು ಮಾತ್ರ ಬೆಂಕಿ 🔥🔥🔥 ಕನ್ನಡದಲ್ಲಿ ಮಾತನಾಡಲು ಪ್ರಯತ್ನಪಟ್ಟ ಇಂಡಿಗೋ Pilot ಅವರಿಗೆ ಧನ್ಯವಾದಗಳು. #belagavika #belagavi VC : pilotjaswanth
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Baahubali
Baahubali@BaahubaliMovie·
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@KreatelyMedia Great job by Rupesh Rajanna 👏🏾👏🏾 It’s Karnataka. Language of the land is Kannada. Just learn and become a kannadiga. Don’t be an outsider if you want to settle
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Nesara G
Nesara G@gnesara·
@ImSimhaa @PawanKalyan You have a good talent in acting, singing. Please just do it. Don’t support to anti Kannada twitter trolls like Sanatana
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Vasishta N Simha
Vasishta N Simha@ImSimhaa·
ಇದು ನಾ ಹಂಚಿಕೊಳ್ಳ ಬಯಸಿದ ವಿಷಯ! ಇದು actually ಚೆನ್ನಾಗಿರೋದು, ಸಮಾಜಕ್ಕೆ ಬೇಕಿರೋದು.. kudos to you dear @PawanKalyan sir❤️ & ಸಿದ್ಧಾಂತಗಳ ಹೇರಣೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ನಿರತತರಾಗಿ ನೊಂದು ಬೆಂದು ಬಳಲುತ್ತಿರುವ ಜೀವಗಳಿಗೆ ಮತ್ತು ಮರೆಯಲ್ಲಿ ಕೂತು ಬೊಬ್ಬಿರಿಯುವ comment ಶೂರರಿಗೆ ಒಳಿತಾಗಲೆಂದು ಪ್ರಾರ್ಥನೆ, ಅವರಿಗೆಂದೇ ಈ post ಸಮರ್ಪಣೆ🙏🏼
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ಕರ್ನಾಟಕ ರಾಷ್ಟ್ರ ಸಮಿತಿ ಪಕ್ಷ-KRS Party
ಯಲಹಂಕದ ವಿಮಾನ ನಿಲ್ದಾಣ ರಸ್ತೆಯಲ್ಲಿ. ಕನ್ನಡಿಗರೇ ಪ್ರಶ್ನೆ ಮಾಡುವ ಅಭ್ಯಾಸ ಬೆಳೆಸಿಕೊಳ್ಳಿ ಇನ್ನು ಮೇಲೆ, ನನಗ್ಯಾಕೆ ಬೇಕು ಅಂತಂದ್ರೆ, ನಾಳೆ ನಿಮಗೆ ಯಾರು ಇರೋದಿಲ್ಲ ಸಹಾಯ ಮಾಡಲು...
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Vije
Vije@vijeshetty·
Hassan Mayor in Karnataka took a class/harassed a street vendor, saying “why did you set up a shop without knowing Kannada” Can she/they do the same for any big five-star restaurants, pub etc.? Is there any rule in India as such?
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