Jai Shri Ram

15.1K posts

Jai Shri Ram

Jai Shri Ram

@svvisesh

Katılım Mayıs 2014
1.2K Takip Edilen104 Takipçiler
Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@Fintech03 Well the same can be done in many cold regions in the northern hemisphere.
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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Light in a fiber-optic cable travels at ~200000 km/sec. Antarctica is ~14000-15000 km from the major internet exchanges of the Northern Hemisphere. A round-trip signal from New York to an Antarctic server would take ~140-200 millisecs. In the age of 2026 HFT & AI-inference, 100+ ms is an eternity. Right now, Antarctica has zero submarine fiber cables, it is the only continent w/o any. Everything runs on satellite with 500-750+ ms latency & very low bandwidth. That is unusable for anything beyond basic research data uploads.
Cipher@Cipher_twt

If data centers require so much cooling, why don’t we build more of them in extremely cold places like Antarctica ??

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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
Wild
Jeremy@Jeremybtc

Anthropic accidentally leaked their entire source code yesterday. What happened next is one of the most insane stories in tech history. > Anthropic pushed a software update for Claude Code at 4AM. > A debugging file was accidentally bundled inside it. > That file contained 512,000 lines of their proprietary source code. > A researcher named Chaofan Shou spotted it within minutes and posted the download link on X. > 21 million people have seen the thread. > The entire codebase was downloaded, copied and mirrored across GitHub before Anthropic's team had even woken up. > Anthropic pulled the package and started firing DMCA takedowns at every repo hosting it. > That's when a Korean developer named Sigrid Jin woke up at 4AM to his phone blowing up. > He is the most active Claude Code user in the world with the Wall Street Journal reporting he personally used 25 billion tokens last year. > His girlfriend was worried he'd get sued just for having the code on his machine. > So he did what any engineer would do. > He rewrote the entire thing in Python from scratch before sunrise. > Called it claw-code and Pushed it to GitHub. > A Python rewrite is a new creative work. DMCA can't touch it. > The repo hit 30,000 stars faster than any repository in GitHub history. > He wasn't satisfied. He started rewriting it again in Rust. > It now has 49,000 stars and 56,000 forks. > Someone mirrored the original to a decentralised platform with one message, "will never be taken down." > The code is now permanent. Anthropic cannot get it back. Anthropic built a system called Undercover Mode specifically to stop Claude from leaking internal secrets. Then they leaked their own source code themselves. You cannot make this up.

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Jai Shri Ram retweetledi
Yo Yo Funny Singh
Yo Yo Funny Singh@moronhumor·
He roasted the Paxtani janta like no one else did 😂😂
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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@SayantikaSays LOL, have eaten even more modest version of food you posted in the pic, pure tambram veg food, no paneer all through my teens, yet was more muscular and fit than entire class full of meat eaters. Local gym was ready to fake my age to be able to enter in competitions with adults
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Sayantika
Sayantika@SayantikaSays·
Many of you are asking what to actually eat if not this? If you're a common man with no heavy workout or hardwork routine, simply follow this to make your Thali more nutritious 1) Vegetarian: Add few chunks of Boiled Soyabeans or Paneer Bhurji + Curd or Raita + Sprouts 2) Non-vegetarian: 2 boiled eggs + Sprouts + Curd or Raita Instead of swallowing 400g of boiled rice and 150g of potatoes, diversify the components and make your food lighter yet nutritious.
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Sayantika
Sayantika@SayantikaSays·
90% of the Indian families eat this food and pretend that they've eaten something very nutritious 🤡😭
Sayantika tweet mediaSayantika tweet media
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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@Fintech03 Sir, how did a supposedly foreign vegetable / fruit get a unique local Tamil name Takalli ?
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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
Vijay sir, this post had nothing to do with tomatoes & I was going to ignore it, but since you often take a dig at tradition, let me address it this time. Why do we use tomatoes in current times? For 2 things: Acidity & Umami (savory depth). Pre-16th century Indians used Vrikshāmla (Kokum), Kachampuli (Coorg vinegar), & Amchur (Dried Green Mango) to achieve the exact same pH balance. The tomato is actually a lazy substitute. It provides a flat acidity. Ancient Sanatani kitchens used a layered approach: Amla (Gooseberry) for astringent sourness, Fermented Curd for creamy acidity....etc. If we remove the tomato from a modern curry & replace it with Slow-cooked Kokum & Jaggery, we are not missing anything but we are restoring a 1000s yrs old flavor complexity that the tomato actually simplified & arguably ruined.
Vijay NiftyTracker@Vijay_NT

@Fintech03 without Tomatoes, what kinda food were the Sanatanis & the Kings eating in India, prior to the 16th Century ? .. 😄

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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@aravind Being too trusting about this apparent change of heart makes us gullible, no ?
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
This is why one should not get enraged too much and start asking for bans to make enemies out of everyone. All influencers, even who are rabidly anti-India, can be changed in their perception and made as ambassadors of India. The current govt knows it better than anyone else.
Laura Loomer@LauraLoomer

Honestly, as someone who has traveled a lot, India is the best country I have ever traveled to. It’s incredible. I will have been here for 9 days when I leave, and there is still so much to see and do. My experience has been amazing and India is portrayed negatively in the media as a place Amercians should avoid, but I realize a lot of that is completely made up. The people, food, culture and hospitality culture are just incredible. I have felt safe and comfortable the entire time I have been here and India will truly be the next big super power. This country has incredible potential and you have to see it yourself to understand because the media only makes it out to be 3rd world. That couldn’t be further from the truth. Indian people are the nicest people I have ever met. I am very grateful for my time in India. I have enjoyed it so much and I hope I can come back every year. Next time I want to visit South India. I have tried to do as much as possible these last 9 days but there is still so much to see and do. All good things come to an end. I’ll be back (hopefully soon). I love India. My misconceptions have been corrected. I have nothing but nice things to say. 🇮🇳

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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@tom_sasse I am assuming this is only for Oil, not LNG which India is highly exposed
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Tom Sasse
Tom Sasse@tom_sasse·
Our assessment of who is most vulnerable to the Iran energy shock:
Tom Sasse tweet media
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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@aravind @Airbound_Aero What exactly is the pitch here? Same day results for most clinical tests is available even in Tier 3 cities. Something unique to India.
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Aravind
Aravind@aravind·
Amazing to see. An Indian startup @Airbound_Aero from Bengaluru, calling themselves the "most audacious hardware company" is doing this:
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जय श्री राम।
Ajoje⚽⚖️@israel_ajoje

This one is a football accounting gem. I promise you will love it. In January 2023, Chelsea signed Mykhailo Mudryk from Shakhtar Donetsk for £88.5 million. The deal was jaw dropping on its own. But what really made the football world stop and stare was not the fee. It was the contract length. Eight and a half years. The longest contract in Premier League history at the time. Journalists questioned it. Rival clubs complained about it. And most fans had absolutely no idea what Chelsea were actually doing. But let me tell you. They were not being reckless. They were doing math. Very clever, very deliberate, very legal math. And the tool they were using is called amortisation. This is part of what football insiders consider during transfers. Are you with me? Good. Here is the simplest way to understand amortization. When a club signs a player, they spread the accounting of the cost of the transfer fee over the period of the contract signed by the player. So for example, when Harry Maguire signed for Manchester United in 2019 for £80 million on a six year deal, that did not show up as an £80 million expense in year one. It worked out as an annual amortisation cost of £13.3 million per year. That is the entire concept. Think of it the same way you think of a mortgage. You do not pay the full value of a house on the day you move in. You spread it. Football clubs do the exact same thing with players, and it is not a trick or a cheat. It is standard accounting practice used across every industry in the world. Check it. It's International Standard 38- used for accounting for intangible assets. The reason it matters so much in football is because of Financial Fair Play and Profitability and Sustainability Rules, which regulate how much clubs can lose in any given period. Amortisation costs are added to the profit and loss account each year, so the lower your annual amortisation figure, the healthier your books look. And here is where contract length becomes a weapon. Now let us do the math together. By using amortisation to complete Mudryk's transfer, Chelsea were able to record his £80 million fee as just £9.41 million per year for UEFA's FFP calculation. Had they signed Mudryk to a four year deal instead, his fee would have been recorded as £20 million per year. Same player. Same fee. More than double the annual accounting cost just by changing the contract length. That is the power of what Chelsea figured out. They did the same with Enzo Fernandez, signed for a then-British record of £106.8 million on an eight and a half year deal, which translated to an annual amortisation expense of approximately £13.4 million. And Moises Caicedo for £115 million on eight and a half years. And Wesley Fofana for £70 million on seven years. Repeat this across an entire squad and a billion pounds of spending starts to look manageable on paper. Did you get that? Now let's look at another part of amortization- the book value piece, because this changes how you think about every transfer you have ever watched. Book value is the difference between the transfer fee spent on a player minus what has already been amortised. For example, after two years, a £50 million player signed on a five year deal has a book value of £30 million. Any sale above £30 million is recorded as a profit. Anything below is a loss. This is why clubs can sell a player for what looks like a loss and still report a gain in their accounts. Take this example: a player is signed for £40 million on a five year contract. He is not a success and is sold two years later for £26 million. At the point of sale, his book value is £24 million, meaning the club actually books a £2 million profit on the deal. Fans see terrible business. The accountants see a gain. Same transaction, completely different reality. Manchester City lived this with Robinho. He was bought for £32.5 million on a four year deal in 2008, with annual amortisation of £8.1 million. He was sold after two years, leaving a book value of £16.3 million. City sold him for £18 million and claimed a £1.7 million profit on the sale. Supporters spent years calling it a disaster. The finance department called it a profit. There is one more trick worth knowing: contract extensions. If a player signs a new contract during their existing deal, the remaining unamortised value is spread over the length of the new contract. So if you bought a player for £60 million on a five year deal and after two years you extend his contract by three more years, the remaining £36 million book value is now spread across five new years instead of three. That reduces the annual amortisation cost and can reduce FFP losses by millions per year. Extending a contract is not always about keeping a player happy. Sometimes it is purely a financial decision dressed up as a vote of confidence. Back to Chelsea. Other clubs eventually complained loudly enough that UEFA had to act. UEFA amended its Financial Sustainability Regulations in July 2023, introducing a rule that limits the amortisation of player registrations to a maximum of five years, regardless of how long the contract actually runs. The Premier League followed in December 2023, when shareholders voted to apply the same five year maximum to all new or extended player contracts going forward. The loophole was closed. But crucially, the rule could not be applied retrospectively, meaning every player Chelsea signed on those long contracts before December 2023 continues to be amortised over the full contract length. Chelsea were already finished with their biggest spending windows by the time the door was shut. The timing was not a coincidence. As I conclude, always remember this- the contract is never just a contract. It is an accounting instrument. And the clubs that understand that are always three moves ahead of the ones that do not. I hope you enjoyed this. Tomorrow, by 7AM WAT, We get into the wage bill, and why a £50 million transfer can quietly become a £150 million commitment before you have blinked. Thanks for reading. My name is Ajoje. I am a FIFA Licensed Agent and International Sports Lawyer. I write on the Law and Business of Football, a lot. Repost and Follow if you want to read more posts like this.

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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@Fintech03 Or just make sure you have frothy filter kapi which will have negligible sloshing 😁 Of course the problem exists when carrying chai
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Parimal
Parimal@Fintech03·
There is a research paper on why it is difficult to walk with a coffee mug w/o spilling, & it even explores ways to reduce spills, including walking backwards & using the claw hand grip. A cylindrical coffee mug filled halfway has a natural sloshing frequency of about 4 Hz. When we walk, the oscillation of our hands also tends to hit roughly 4 Hz (especially the 2nd harmonic of our stride). This creates Parametric Excitation. The energy from our step pumps the liquid higher & higher with every step until it crests the rim, usually around the 7th/10th step. Author of the paper han tested several hacks to break this resonance: The Claw Grip: By holding the rim from the top with our fingers (the Claw), we increase the length of the pendulum b/w our shoulder & the liquid. This lowers the frequency of our hand's motion to about 1.7 Hz, safely away from the coffee’s 4 Hz danger zone. Walking Backwards: This forces the body into an unnatural, non-periodic motion. Cos our brain has to focus more on balance, it breaks the rhythmic 4 Hz stride, effectively de-tuning the system. It won him an Ig Nobel Prize :))
Oxford Mathematics@OxUniMaths

For some mathematicians, it's not just the coffee they drink, but the mug they drink it in.

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Jai Shri Ram
Jai Shri Ram@svvisesh·
@vikelkar they should instead give innovative addons like heated grills. Apne indore log uspe Bhute sik ke kha lenge lambi drive pe 🤣
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Vishal Kelkar
Vishal Kelkar@vikelkar·
@svvisesh Some German brands used to offer heated steering wheel too😂while porting components as-is without localising it to Indian conditions.
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Jai Shri Ram retweetledi
Abhishek Murarka 💹🐂
Abhishek Murarka 💹🐂@abhymurarka·
Ladies and gents, take note - Sachee Trivedi 🔥
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