Pathik

16.6K posts

Pathik

Pathik

@pathiknd

RT not endorsement

Gujarat Katılım Nisan 2013
498 Takip Edilen73 Takipçiler
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Malay Krishna
Malay Krishna@Malay4Product·
Let me explain what just happened today because it deserves so much recognition. GalaxEye is a Bengaluru startup founded in 2021 by IIT Madras engineers. Today they launched Mission Drishti on a SpaceX Falcon 9. It is India's largest privately built satellite at 190 kg. And it carries a technology that no commercial satellite has ever carried before. Normal satellites take photos of the Earth using optical cameras. Like your phone camera, but from 500 km up. The problem is obvious. Clouds. Night. Fog. Smoke. If any of these are in the way, the photo is useless. India has monsoon cover for 4 months a year. That is 4 months where optical satellites are partially or fully blind over large parts of the country. The alternative is SAR. Synthetic Aperture Radar. Instead of taking photos with light, it sends radar waves down and reads what bounces back. Radar goes through clouds, through darkness, through smoke. A SAR satellite can image a flooded village at 2 AM during a cyclone when no optical satellite can see anything. The problem with SAR is that the images look nothing like photos. They look like grainy black-and-white radar maps. A military analyst or a trained geospatial engineer can read them. A farmer, a disaster response team, or a city planner cannot. Until today, if you wanted both optical and SAR data for the same location, you needed two different satellites, passing over at different times, at different angles. Then someone had to manually align and fuse the two datasets. Expensive, slow, and the data never perfectly matched because the satellites saw the same spot minutes or hours apart. GalaxEye put both sensors on one satellite. Optical and SAR, fused into what they call OptoSAR. Three times more information than a single sensor. Processed onboard by an NVIDIA AI chip at 1.8 metre resolution. Now in practice, during the next cyclone hitting Odisha, one satellite pass gives you a clear image of which villages are flooded, which roads are cut, and which buildings are standing. Day or night. Cloud or clear. In near real-time. For defence, it means you can monitor a border area 24/7 regardless of weather. For agriculture, it means tracking crop health across an entire monsoon season without a single cloud gap. For infrastructure, it means monitoring construction progress on highways and bridges without waiting for a clear day. GalaxEye tested their SAR tech on ISRO's POEM orbital platform. The satellite was tested at ISRO facilities. IN-SPACe provided regulatory clearance. NSIL, ISRO's commercial arm, will distribute the imagery globally. And it launched on SpaceX because ISRO's PSLV doesn't have the right orbit slot for this mission. Yes, four IIT Madras graduates built a world-first satellite in 4 years in Bengaluru. Take a bow!
Tejasvi Surya@Tejasvi_Surya

A Bengaluru startup just did something no one in the world has ever done, put a satellite in orbit that sees through clouds, through the night, with optical sensor and SAR fused into one. Many many congratulations to the @Galaxeye team on the launch of Mission Drishti! This is exactly why PM Sri @narendramodi opened up the space sector, so young Indians could build an audacious future for the nation.

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Rajeev Mantri
Rajeev Mantri@RMantri·
This is the returns record of the Morgan Stanley emerging markets fund managed by Ruchir Sharma. Why is he being presented to us as some sort of brilliant analyst? In the investment business, a pathetic record like this would finish off the career of a person. As a friend in the hedge fund industry remarked privately on WhatsApp - Rahul Gandhi is Charlie Munger if Ruchir Sharma is a sound analyst. Do Rajdeep and others shove him into our faces because he is so bad, he makes Yogendra Yadav and other relentlessly wrong “political scientists” look reasonable? Who are the forces propping up this guy? Worth pondering.
Rajeev Mantri tweet media
Rajeev Mantri@RMantri

A decade ago, Ruchir Sharma was touting Turkey over India as the hottest investment destination. He went to the extent of asserting Turkey under Erdogan was a model modern Islamic country. We know how that played out. If there was a Nobel Prize for being wrong, he would win it. If there was a Gandhi Peace Prize for using weasel words, he would win it. Yet he is seen on TV, opining on everything under the sun, as if he is an Einstein. What a joke!

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Pathik@pathiknd·
@RMantri @sagorika_s Ruchir Sharma comes to India almost every year and every news platform takes his interview. Going on for 20 years. Seems more like a well connected person whom elites want to give platform.
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Krishnan
Krishnan@cvkrishnan·
CEA to CEOs: Reach into your pockets, invest more in India. “Companies, 2nd 3rd gen entrepreneurs choose to accumulate cash profits and probably setup family offices elsewhere, rather than investing in real assets ”. This has been the primary complaint of some of us and have only been shouted down by blind cheerleaders of these big biz houses.
Krishnan tweet media
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shiv_cybersurg
shiv_cybersurg@shiv_cybersurg·
Here is something learned today. The world's heaviest supertankers are 500,000 tonnes or more, and need water depth of 25-26 meters to berth. Guess what? India has ZERO 0⃣ ports that can take Ultra heavy tankers. Only the Rahul Gandhi fraand and Adani has a port (Mundra - those gujjus again!!) that takes tankers up to 350,000 tonnes, with a depth of about 20-21 meters Super heavy tankers bound for crude to India must unload at Singapore or in the Gulf and transfer to smaller tankers. For this reason a deep water port is a good idea in the A&N Islands.
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Kevin C. Smith, CFA
Kevin C. Smith, CFA@crescatkevin·
Free cash flow race to the bottom.
Kevin C. Smith, CFA tweet media
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Pathik@pathiknd·
@MinhazMerchant @IndianExpress Ruchir Sharma comes to India almost every year and every news platform takes his interview. Going on for 20 years. Seems more like a well connected person whom elites want to give platform.
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Nitin A. Gokhale
Nitin A. Gokhale@nitingokhale·
Time for those here and abroad who demanded India make public any battle damage in Op Sindoor, to seek from Pentagon the full details of its losses in West Asia. After all, America, in their view, is the gold standard of transparency and truth. Go on, show you believe in same standards of accountability.
Megatron@Megatron_ron

🇺🇸🇮🇷 Journalist Ana Kasparian says the Trump administration begged private satellite companies to hide images of destroyed US bases. The Pentagon was allegedly terrified the world will see how Iran completely humiliated the Trump's military.

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Sougat Chakraborty
Sougat Chakraborty@sougat18·
“Across 45 urban constituencies in the Greater Kolkata region, nearly 2.4 lakh incremental votes were polled in 2026. Of these, about 1.5 lakh were concentrated within the Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) area alone. But that is only part of the story. A staggering 19 lakh votes were deleted across this same block, with 8.5 lakh in the KMC alone. When you account for both deletions and incremental votes, the impact translates to roughly 47,500 votes per Assembly Constituency.”
Amit Malviya@amitmalviya

If you are wondering why the Trinamool and Mamata Banerjee are staging this drama, thronging strong rooms in Kolkata and levelling baseless allegations, here is what is really driving the anxiety: Across 45 urban constituencies in the Greater Kolkata region, nearly 2.4 lakh incremental votes were polled in 2026. Of these, about 1.5 lakh were concentrated within the Kolkata Municipal Corporation (KMC) area alone. But that is only part of the story. A staggering 19 lakh votes were deleted across this same block, with 8.5 lakh in the KMC alone. When you account for both deletions and incremental votes, the impact translates to roughly 47,500 votes per Assembly Constituency. This is not routine. It is a massive clean-up of the electoral rolls, along with spirited participation from voters. And that is precisely what is rattling the Trinamool. For years, their dominance in these urban pockets rested less on genuine public support and more on a carefully manufactured mandate. With bogus voting curtailed and inflated rolls corrected, that ecosystem has taken a hit. What you are witnessing now is not concern for democracy, it is discomfort with its restoration.

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Weather Monitor
Weather Monitor@WeatherMonitors·
7-year-old Ishank from Ranchi, India just set a world record by swimming 29km across the Palk Strait (Sri Lanka to India) in just 9 hours and 50 minutes. The youngest ever to conquer this route! (April 30, 2026)
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Aunindyo Chakravarty
Aunindyo Chakravarty@Aunindyo2023·
Sobha Singh was also a prosecution witness against Bhagat Singh and Batukeshwar Dutt in the Legislative Bombing Case of 1929. He was apparently the only person who saw Bhagat Singh and Dutt throw the bombs, although even the magistrate didn’t really believe him. Sobha Singh was later knighted by the British.
Himanish Ganjoo@himganj153

Sobha Singh, father of the writer Khushwant Singh, built most of New Delhi, including the North and South Blocks and Connaught Place. In fact, Block A of Connaught Place was named "Sujan Singh Block" after his father.

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Normal Guy
Normal Guy@Normal_2610·
On 28 April 2026, India signed its first-ever commercial coal contracts with UCG (underground coal gasification) rights. 4 mines, Reliance got 2 in AP, Axis Energy got 2 in Odisha. This is not R&D anymore, private capital is on the hook. What UCG actually does - Instead of mining coal out of the ground, you burn it underground by injecting oxygen and steam. What comes up is syngas - a mix of hydrogen, carbon monoxide, and methane. Syngas is not fuel, it's a chemical building block. You convert it into urea, ammonia, methanol, or synthetic diesel. Each of these replaces something India imports massively today. India tried UCG 6 times before and failed every time. The difference now is commercial contracts (not R&D pilots), 50% revenue share rebate, ₹8,500 Cr VGF, 12x budget jump to ₹3,525 Cr, EIA exemption for pilots, and Reliance actually having the capital and downstream chemistry to use the syngas. Plus China already does 80 MT, proving it works at scale. In more Detail Tomorrow Article ///
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Chenthil
Chenthil@jcrajan00·
Bloomberg says India's power grid is fragile. Here is what Bloomberg's headline missed. India's grid hit 271 GW peak demand this week. The projected peak for the entire year was 271 GW. We hit it in the first week of summer. And the grid held — no national blackout, no cascading failure. Solar generated 57 GW at midday peak. That is 21 percent of total demand met by a source that did not exist at scale 5 years ago. Coal plants ramped to 95 percent utilisation. Gas turbines filled the evening gap. Hydro reservoirs released at full capacity. The grid stress is real. Multiple states drew above their allocated share. Rajasthan imported 4 GW. Frequency dipped below 49.8 Hz twice. Coal stocks at 6 thermal plants dropped below 7 days. But here is the part the crisis narrative misses: India added 26 GW of generation capacity in FY26. More than any country except China. NTPC alone commissioned 5 new units. 18 GW of battery storage is under construction. The Leh-Ladakh HVDC corridor will add 13 GW of transfer capacity by 2028. The question is not whether India's grid can survive summer. It already did. The question is whether capacity addition can outpace demand growth that is running 4 years ahead of every forecast.
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Geeta Patel
Geeta Patel@geetappoo·
कल्पना करके देखिए कितना दिमाग लगाया होगा इसे बनाने में, किसी कंप्यूटर प्रोग्राम से कम नही
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News Algebra
News Algebra@NewsAlgebraIND·
Electrician uses fan regulator to control Tubelight brightness & stuns Internet. Peak Jugaad 😂🔥
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Stanly Johny
Stanly Johny@johnstanly·
I often cite contemporary Germany to my students as an example of a country that lacks strategic autonomy. Germany needs gas, and for years the cheapest source was Russia. It even built an undersea pipeline across the Baltic Sea to ensure a steady flow of Russian gas to power Europe’s largest economy. After the Ukraine war broke out, Germany joined the sanctions regime, reduced its dependence on Russian gas, and started arming Ukraine. Ukraine (maybe with help from CIA and Mi6) blew up the Nord Stream, Germany's most critical energy link. Not a word of protest. German economy fell into deep a recession. It started importing LNG from Qatar and the US to make up for the loss. Ukraine remains unresolved. trump returns to the White House. He is not keen on Nato. What is Germany doing? Insisting that U.S. troops should stay in Germany (and in wider Europe)! Merz was the first among European leaders who openly turned against Iran, even before his pal netanyahu and trump launched the war. He said in January that Iran's leadership had only a few days left. The war, which trump thought would be over in three days, lasted 40 days. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. Qatar's biggest gas complex was hit during the war, and its ability to export LNG is largely restricted. So look at Germany. It continues to back the country that blew up its pipeline. It doesn't want to import Russian gas. But it faces severe restrictions on importing LNG from Qatar, thanks to the war launched by the US, its patron saint and Israel, a close ally. What's left? North Sea pipelines from Norway and LNG from the US. Out of frustration, Merz says Iran is humiliating the U.S. And trump is now out to get him!
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Historianunkil
Historianunkil@SudsG5·
This is truly one of those quiet but paradigm shifting (apologies on using this cliched phrase) historical moments. India till the conquest of the Raj had a world beating, highly advanced steel production proto industry. The production of steel in India dates back to at least several centuries BCE. Indian metallurgists pioneered the crucible process, which allowed them to produce steel of a purity and carbon content that Europe would not replicate for nearly two millennia. Wootz Steel- Originating in South India (primarily present-day Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu), Wootz was created by heating black magnetite ore with carbon sources like bamboo and charred leaves in sealed clay crucibles (dat BASED TN, leading in industrial production even in 300 bce!!) This product was manufactured in proto industrial hubs and united by Shrenis (guilds) - coal production to iron ore manufacturing to the final product and then global exports. This steel was exported across Europe and the Middle East. It was the raw material for the legendary "Damascus swords" used during the Crusades blades so sharp they were said to slice through a silk handkerchief floating in the air. The quality was so high compared to anything Europe / Middle East produced even lead to the "Ulfberht mystery". While standard Viking swords were made of "pattern-welded" iron (twisting low-carbon iron bars together), a subset of about 170 swords found in Scandinavia and the Baltics, dating from 800 to 1000 CE, were made of nearly pure, high-carbon steel For decades, archaeologists were baffled by how Viking-age smiths could produce steel that wouldn't be seen in Europe again until the 18th century. Modern metallurgical analysis has revealed a direct chemical and technical bridge to the Indian Subcontinent: We were the OG arms suppliers to the world...not the importmaxxers we are today (sorry, could not resist this)
Indian Infra Report@Indianinfoguide

🚨India turns net exporter of finished steel in FY26. Italy, Vietnam, Belgium, the UAE, and Spain were ‌the biggest buyers of Indian finished steel.

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Rahul Shivshankar
Rahul Shivshankar@RShivshankar·
CHURN ALERT 24% JUMP IN VOTER TURNOUT IN BHABANIPUR WHERE MAMATA IS CONTESTING. 25% JUMP IN VOTER TURNOUT IN KOLKATA PORT FROM WHERE FIRAD HAKIM IS CONTESTING.
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