Rohit

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Rohit

Rohit

@rohity9771

Developer, Equity Investor.. Sports |Chess |Football |F1

Katılım Ocak 2020
1.7K Takip Edilen105 Takipçiler
Dan
Dan@DanDr1s·
Every time @OpenAI's Codex has a so-called "usage reset," a lot of people, including me, don't actually get it. Is this intentional, or is it meant as a marketing strategy to encourage more people to sign up? I don't really understand.
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Tibo@thsottiaux

Thank you to the 7M active users who are now using Codex and ChatGPT Work. We have added a banked reset to everyone's account to celebrate the milestone. You can apply the reset in the desktop app or on web and it will replenish the weekly usage for you. Have fun out there.

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Ramesh RB
Ramesh RB@Rameshchess·
Why not add new, more extended- rapid tournaments instead of tinkering with existing standard time control events? Aim seems to be to reduce chess to an instinctive emotional reaction measuring activity . How can deep ideas be found, analysed, evaluated, implemented if not given any time to think? Reforms (regressive) for the sake of appearing to do something new is not a reform.
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Tibo@thsottiaux·
Tomorrow might be 8M active user celebration day. Just saying
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Tibo@thsottiaux·
Build your dreams
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Tibo@thsottiaux·
ChatGPT Work presents
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Rohit
Rohit@rohity9771·
@testingcatalog how to get this, I don't see.. i'm out of usage
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Tibo@thsottiaux·
Thank you to the 7M active users who are now using Codex and ChatGPT Work. We have added a banked reset to everyone's account to celebrate the milestone. You can apply the reset in the desktop app or on web and it will replenish the weekly usage for you. Have fun out there.
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Rohit
Rohit@rohity9771·
@cjzafir followed this approach on plus plan and my weekly usage is done 🙄
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CJ Zafir
CJ Zafir@cjzafir·
Guys, I built Codex-Orchestration plugin (open source) - Bring any model inside Codex (Fable 5 etc) - Assign them any roles (advisor, writer, designer etc) - Build custom workflows (Fable 5 + Sol high to plan, etc) - 40% less limit hit, 2x faster implementation I used Fable 5 High x GPT 5.6 Sol Extra High to fix all code issues that Opus & GPT 5.5 always struggled in just 30 minutes. Here's how you can install Codex-Orchestration plugin. Paste this prompt in codex: "Install Codex Orchestration: codex plugin marketplace add Cjbuilds/Codex-Orchestration codex plugin add codex-orchestration@codex-orchestration Verify the installation, then tell me to start a new task. In the new task, help me assign models to roles—such as advisor, executor, researcher, or reviewer—and configure the order in which they should work. Preview all changes before applying them." How to use Codex Orchestration: > Install the plugin. > Start a new Codex task. > Assign models to roles and describe the workflow. (Give Codex your task or Goal.) Example setup: @ codex-orchestration advisor: Claude Fable 5 High, Executor: GPT-5.6 Luna Extra High. Example workflow: “Create the plan with the root model. Send it to Fable 5 for critique. Let the root accept only valid suggestions. Send independent implementation slices to Luna executors. Then integrate, test, and verify everything with the root.” You can use the repo, modify it and use it however you like. Attached below. Enjoy
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Seeed Studio
Seeed Studio@seeedstudio·
👀 Wanna see Sticky on your fridge? It's an e‑paper note screen you add with your voice. Runs weather, clock, photos & more. 📺Check the preview 👇
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Malay Krishna
Malay Krishna@Malay4Product·
I taught JEE physics for years. That paper breaks strong kids in three hours. This exam is five hours of theory and five hours of lab work, and these five did close to perfect scores on it. Let me tell you what actually happened. The International Physics Olympiad is the world championship of school physics. It was the 56th edition. Held in Bucaramanga, Colombia, from July 5 to 12. 381 students. More than 85 countries. Every one of them the best physics student their country could find. India sent five kids. All five came back with gold. Their names are Kanishk Jain from Pune. Riddhesh Anant Bendale from Indore. Rishit Garg from Dwarka in Delhi. Shresth Suraiya from Mumbai. Svarit Joshi from Ahmedabad. We know a hundred cricketers by their nickname and not one of these boys. :) That clean sweep put India at joint World Number One. Tied with China, Russia, Kazakhstan, South Korea and Taiwan. Those are countries that pour serious money and national pride into science education. We are standing level with them. Now here is what the exam actually was. Two papers. Each five hours long. The theory paper had three problems. One on the thermodynamics of paramagnetic cooling. One on the photoionisation of ozone. One on the dynamics of electron positron pairs. The experimental paper was another five hours in a lab, working through heat transfer and thermodynamic processes in fluids. That means you get given equipment you have never seen, and you have to design your own experiment, take your own readings, handle the errors, and reach a real answer. Not multiple choice. No shortcuts. No pattern recognition. You either understand physics or you sit there for five hours. HBCSE says the Indian students were near perfect on theory and excellent on the practical too. Now, this was India's 27th appearance at the IPhO. Across all those years, about 44 percent of Indian students have won gold, 41 percent silver, 10 percent bronze. In the last ten years, every single Indian student has come home with a medal. 62 percent gold, 38 percent silver. Not one kid has gone and come back empty handed in a decade. Five golds in one year has happened only twice. This year, and in 2018. So who built this. The programme is run by HBCSE, the Homi Bhabha Centre for Science Education. It sits under TIFR, which sits under the Department of Atomic Energy. They run the whole funnel. A national exam, then a national olympiad, then a brutal selection and training camp, and out of everyone in the country, five kids get on a plane. The team was led by Professor Anwesh Mazumdar of HBCSE-TIFR and Dr Leena Joshi from St Xavier's College, Mumbai. The scientific observers were Professor Ananda Dasgupta from IISER Kolkata and Nisha Kelkar from Gogate-Joglekar College in Ratnagiri. Yes. Ratnagiri. A college in a small coastal town in Maharashtra. This is public education doing something the private coaching industry could never do on its own. The coaching industry is very good at one thing. Teaching you to solve a known problem fast. That is what JEE and NEET reward, and I say that with love because I was part of that world. But an olympiad paper does not have a known type. There is no shortcut chapter. There is no formula sheet that saves you. You have to sit with a problem you have never seen and think. That is a completely different muscle. And a government funded centre has been quietly building it in Indian teenagers for 27 years. So yes, be proud. Loudly. HBCSE also shared that around 64 percent of India's olympiad medallists go on to do a PhD. But only about 32 percent of medallists end up settling in India. I do not say that to spoil the moment. These kids owe the country nothing. They earned every option they have. But it should tell us something. We are excellent at finding this talent. We are excellent at training it. We are still not great at giving it somewhere worth staying. Congratulations Kanishk, Riddhesh, Rishit, Shresth and Svarit. This is one of the best things an Indian did this year and most of the country will never hear about it.
DAE India@DAEIndia

🇮🇳 India Tops the World at the 56th International Physics Olympiad 2026! 🥇🥇🥇🥇🥇India's young physicists deliver an extraordinary performance at #IPhO2026 in Colombia. All five members of the Indian team win Gold Medals. 1/3 @PMOIndia @DrJitendraSingh @HBCSE_TIFR @TIFRScience

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Ananth Rupanagudi
Ananth Rupanagudi@AnanthOnTrack·
An Indian scientist at Harvard discovered ATP (Adenosine Triphosphate). Then he helped create the first chemotherapy drug and the first tetracycline antibiotic. Harvard still refused him tenure. A bowling alley would not let him bowl. He died at 53, without an obituary. His medicines save tens of millions of lives every year. Most American doctors who prescribe them have no idea what his name was. His name was Yellapragada Subbarow (Subba Rao). He was born in 1895 in Bhimavaram, India. His father was a Sanskrit scholar who died from tropical sprue. Tropical sprue is an acquired malabsorptive disorder found in tropical regions, characterized by chronic diarrhea, weight loss, and severe nutritional deficiencies. It is most commonly associated with deficiencies in vitamin B12 and folic acid, resulting in anemia, fatigue, and glossitis. The same disease killed two of his brothers. As a child, Subbarow watched them fade away and decided he would spend his life fighting disease. He failed his school exams twice. Passed on the third attempt. His future father-in-law paid for his medical school books. Subbarow married his daughter and repaid the debt. In October 1922, he arrived in Boston with borrowed money and broken English. He was 27. He entered Harvard Medical School and joined the biochemistry PhD program. He began working under a senior researcher named Cyrus Fiske. Long hours. Little pay. But he was at Harvard, and he did not care. In 1925, they developed the Fiske-SubbaRow assay, a method for measuring phosphorus in body fluids. It is still used today in kidney failure testing, vitamin D testing, and prostate cancer work. It became one of the most cited methods in biochemistry history. Then they found something even bigger in 1926 - ATP - Adenosine triphosphate. The energy molecule that powers every cell in every living thing on Earth. That discovery changed biochemistry. It also proved that the 1922 Nobel laureate had been wrong about how muscles worked. Muscles did not run on glycogen. They ran on ATP. Subbarow earned his PhD in 1930. He stayed at Harvard for another decade. Paper after paper. Discovery after discovery. And every year, Harvard refused to promote him. The biochemistry department had never given tenure to a foreigner. They were not going to begin with an Indian. His colleagues took him fishing. Played tennis with him. Came to dinner at his home. Then voted against him year after year. Outside the laboratory, he met the same wall. He bought an airplane and learned to fly because he loved flying. Once, he tried to go bowling. The local alley refused him entry. The sign said it was “open only to the Caucasian race.” Then Fiske turned against him. The senior researcher began blocking Subbarow’s discoveries out of jealousy. Some of Subbarow’s work had to be rediscovered years later by other scientists because Fiske kept his findings hidden. May 1940. Harvard denied him tenure for the last time. After 17 years of groundbreaking work, he walked away. Lederle Laboratories in New York hired him as Associate Director of Research. By the end of the year, he was Director. In the next eight years, he changed medicine. He developed diethylcarbamazine, an oral medicine that killed the tropical worms crippling American soldiers in the Pacific. The World Health Organization still uses it. He isolated folic acid from liver and worked out how to produce it on a large scale. Today, folic acid in pregnancy prevents birth defects in tens of millions of pregnancies every year. The same family of diseases that killed his father and brothers became preventable because of him. Then Dr. Sidney Farber called from Boston with an idea: maybe a drug that blocked folic acid in cancer cells could kill childhood leukemia. Subbarow’s team created the drug. They called it Aminopterin. In December 1947, Farber gave it to an eight-year-old boy dying from leukemia. Within weeks, the cancer cells began to disappear. It was the first chemotherapy drug in history. The first time anyone had put cancer into remission using a pill. Subbarow’s team later refined it into Amethopterin, now known as methotrexate. It became a gold standard treatment for leukemia, lymphoma, breast cancer, and lung cancer. Then rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, and Crohn’s disease. The World Health Organization lists it as an essential medicine. Tens of millions of people use it every year. In 1948, his lab produced Aureomycin. The first tetracycline antibiotic - a broad-spectrum one that killed typhus, cholera, pneumonia, and many bacteria that penicillin could not touch. It opened the door to the whole tetracycline family: doxycycline, minocycline, and drugs still used today against plague, malaria, anthrax, and drug-resistant infections. He was 53 years old. He had created medicines that would save tens of millions of lives. August 8, 1948. Yellapragada Subbarow suffered a heart attack at his home in New York and died. No American newspaper gave him a front-page obituary. No university held a memorial. The Nobel Committee never honoured him. His own colleague George Hitchings later won a 1988 Nobel Prize for work built directly on Subbarow’s foundation. Subbarow was not even nominated. In 1950, Argosy magazine published a feature about him titled “Miracle Man of the Miracle Drugs.” It began with a line that still hits hard. “You’ve probably never heard of Dr. Yellapragada Subbarow. Yet because he lived, you may be alive and are well today. Because he lived, you may live longer.” Most Americans had not heard of him in 1950. Most still have not. Harvard has never officially honoured him. American medical schools mostly do not teach his name. The Nobel Committee that honoured Hitchings for work built on his foundation never corrected the record. Every methotrexate prescription written today remains silent about the man behind it. India remembers. The government issued a postage stamp for his 100th birthday. His childhood home became a museum. Indian medical schools teach his name. But the country that denied him tenure, refused to let him bowl, and allowed him to die unknown - the same country that uses his drugs every day - still mostly does not know him. Here is the truth. If someone you know has ever taken methotrexate for cancer or an autoimmune disease. If someone you love has taken folic acid during pregnancy. If you have ever been prescribed doxycycline for an infection. That was him. Yellapragada Subbarow. Born 1895. Died 1948. Saved tens of millions of lives, while a country he loved barely knows what it owes him. Please remember his name and let your near and dear know about this little-known scientific legend born on this soil but never got the true recognition that he deserved. A story you need to know. A story all of us need to know. #Medicine #Unknownlegends @centerofright @KiranKS
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Lone Wolf Ratnakar
Lone Wolf Ratnakar@SadaaShree·
Maharaja Ranjit Singh's capture of Lahore on July 7, 1799 is an important date in Sikh history, as it laid the foundation for the first ever Sikh Empire. Till then the Sikhs were mostly scattered in warring misls. Thread.
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Revolutionary Monk
Revolutionary Monk@RevolutionMonk·
Anuja (23), a student, was found hanging in her rental home—head cleanly shorn, feet still touching the floor. She was living with her live-in partner Khaleel, who was already married with kids. The case was closed as “natural suicide.” Shakeel walked free. Nanda Vinod, a BA English student, hanged herself after a video call with Abdul Shuhaib. He had threatened to leak her intimate photos and has not yet been convicted. Reshma Ravi (27) was stabbed over 20 times by her boyfriend Noushad in a Kochi hotel room. He tortured her and recorded it on his phone. These are just a few cases. Left-liberal women’s rights warriors won’t lift a finger when the culprit belongs to the “protected” community. This cycle will continue. The real culprits are the brainwashed girls, their families, and the ecosystem that enables it in the name of secularism.
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Revolutionary Monk@RevolutionMonk

Savariya Basanth, a 21-year-old MBBS student from Kerala, was murdered by a fellow Kerala student, Sadarul Annan, in Uzbekistan. Her parents allege that the accused, Sadarul Anam, repeatedly pressured her to convert, backed by statements from fellow students to investigators. Her family received her body, bearing horrific injuries and bruises from head to toe. I don’t have even an iota of sympathy for her. Is this the first or even the second such case? If this had happened 15 years ago, I would have felt sorry for her. But not today. How many documented cases have we seen in the last 15 years? Anuja, Sona and countless more. All were reported by the media, with details splashed across social media. Warned again and again—yet they still befriend them and let them get close. They chose this. They don’t deserve your sympathy or support. #KeralaStory

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Devang Daya
Devang Daya@DayaDevang·
Met these two little angels at the Ganga Ghat in Rishikesh, just outside Yog Niketan Sanskriti. Sanjiv and Rajiv were working hard, selling flowers, diyas, and fruits to devotees. I asked them why they were working instead of playing. Their answer touched my heart. "We're saving money to buy our school uniforms," they said. I then asked them what they wanted to become when they grew up. Without hesitation, both replied, "We want to join the Indian Army." When I asked why, they said they wanted to protect their two mothers; their mother by birth and their *Matrubhumi*, Maa Bharati. It's children like these who make me deeply optimistic about India's future. May God bless them with every opportunity they deserve. If you're ever in Rishikesh and happen to meet Sanjiv and Rajiv, do support them. Every little act of kindness can make a big difference.
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Arjun
Arjun@arjuns__·
@rohity9771 @GullyLabs If we could only overdeliver on one thing at this price, what should it be?
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Arjun
Arjun@arjuns__·
friday funday - what would you like to see us doing more @GullyLabs - what has landed, what has not for you. drop any comments / feedback below and I will get back to you. also if you have any questions AMA below (picture unrelated)
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Lone Wolf Ratnakar
Lone Wolf Ratnakar@SadaaShree·
LinkedIn Champs will offer their Gyaan on everything under the sun from the state of the universe to Messi to the Union Budget to Middle East geopolitics. But some how when it comes to topics like the Nashik TCS HR conversion case or the recent abuse of toddlers in that Cap Gemini day care center, all that Gyaan goes missing.
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Maithili
Maithili@SuvarnBharat·
Irony is she is arrested for converting people who believed in Krishna..slow claps for the judge in the court
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