Swapnil Manish

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Swapnil Manish

Swapnil Manish

@swapstick

Co-founder - @FanozForFans | Co-founder - @BLoudST | Management Consultant - @Toptal | Sports fan | Loves reading non-fiction, politics and history

Mumbai Katılım Ekim 2009
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
(1/6) Unpopular opinion following the #IndiaPakistanCeasefire: India, Pakistan, and China should come together (without West involvement) & create an EU-type Eastern block based on ease of trade & currency exchange, smoother immigration, joint military might etc. Too optimistic?
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Anuradha Exwaized
Anuradha Exwaized@anuradhaxyz·
Can we dare challenge it all? Can we reset our thinking? Modern civilisations and India, basic human quests, society’s accepted templates and quite a few uncomfortable questions in between. This and more happened in my conversation with scholar and activist @_YogendraYadav. Coming soon.
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Anuradha Exwaized
Anuradha Exwaized@anuradhaxyz·
India isn’t for beginners. Dissected a few things about our everyday conduct with the fabulous @yashoazad ji, former IPS, Sp Dir Intelligence Bureau, and Central Information Commissioner in GoI. As always, charmed by his words and thoughts. I am putting something together on India and Indians. More on this soon. #TOQwithAnuradhaExwaized
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Gurkirat Singh Gill
Gurkirat Singh Gill@gurkiratsgill·
It's after a very very long time that I have read a long form cricket article, and coincidentally, it had to be from Sid Monga, who I genuinely admire so much. Because very few cricket writers in India, have the ability to weave the society and the sport together. espncricinfo.com/story/ipl-2026…
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
Taking nothing away from @PunjabKingsIPL's incredible chase but today's #DCvsPBKS encounter forced me to finally post: @BCCI is destroying cricket by preparing such pitches for #IPL. Who would want to be a bowler? And who would have the ability to bat in tests?
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
I wonder what @elonmusk (who's been quiet on this subject) has to say about the absolutely horrifying public statement by Trump. It's shameful to even call it a "negotiation" tactic. An American President who threatens to destroy a civilization needs to be impeached immediately.
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Karthik Balachandran
Karthik Balachandran@karthik2k2·
Those who saw’A Beautiful Mind’, would remember that John Nash’s doctoral thesis had just 26 pages and 2 references, yet it was instrumental in advancing “Game theory”. What if I told you there is a scientist whose achievement is so astounding that he is perhaps the only Indian to “create” an intersectional branch of science? What if I told you that every year, his name echoes across the hallowed halls of science in foreign lands, but most of our students haven't even heard of him? Aneesur Rahman was born in Hyderabad in British India in 1927. His father was a professor and a philanthropist. His family generously donated their property for the creation of Urdu Hall in Hyderabad. His maternal uncle was a professor too. Rahman had a natural flair for subjects that would terrify ‘normal’ students — maths and physics. After getting BSc in Mathematics, he went on to get Tripos in Mathematics and Physics at the prestigious Cambridge University in the UK. From there, he went to Louvaine University in Belgium and got DSc in Physics under Professor Mannenbeck. It’s here that Rahman met a Chinese student Yueh-Erh Li who was doing MD( called Dr Jady by friends). They fell in love and got married. He came back to teach in Osmania university along with his wife. Soon after, he developed interest in the structure of water molecule - especially the polarisation of the hydrogen atom. Unfortunately research in India was at infancy in those days and Dr Rahman realized he was a whale in a tiny pond. He had to move to the ocean. He joined the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. His foundational paper in 1964 birthed “molecular dynamics” , one of the two pillars on which a vast body of computational physics rests.(the other is Monte Carlo method). His equation made it possible to calculate the trajectory of large number of interacting atoms with ease. His work, like Ramanujan’s , was so ahead of his time - that even today, potential applications are being discovered. The Nobel prize in physics for 2013 went to Karplus, Levitt and Warshel whose work depended heavily on Dr Aneesur Rahman’s. Some say there is an inverse association between genius and compassion -Dr Rahman was a prominent exception. He was known not just for his intellect, but also kind nature and mentored many students all over the world. His quiet, unassuming nature made him a much loved professor — and he remained so, until he got Non Hodgkin’s lymphoma — a cancer that took him away from us prematurely, at the age of 59. Perhaps he might have got a Nobel, if only he had lived longer. American Physical Society honors him as the father of computational physics and has instituted an annual award in his name. As a doctor with little idea of theoretical physics, writing Dr Aneesur Rahman’s portrait has been difficult , because of the complex nature of his work that straddles so many areas of science : mathematics, physics, computer science and chemistry. His equations are mind boggling, even intimidating, but what I do understand is this : Dr Rahman didn't just have a beautiful mind, but also a beautiful heart.
Karthik Balachandran tweet media
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@ShivAroor What's your problem, Shiv? Politicians in other countries are known to go back to working (as a consultant etc) after stepping down as ministers in the govt. She's moving for that. Unlike many politicians in India, they don't create wealth/clout that can be passed on to next-gen
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Shiv Aroor
Shiv Aroor@ShivAroor·
lol, remember the ecosystem naagin dance for her during Covid?
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@cricbuzz Jason Holder became the 6th player to take 100+ wickets in each international format during the T20 WC. Breakup for current players: Afridi: 121 (Tests) | 135 (ODIs) | 136 (T20Is) Bumrah: 234 | 149 | 121 Holder: 162 | 159 | 108 Bumrah likely the first to triple-double 🤞
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@cricbuzz A triple-double (200+ wickets in all three international formats) would be very unique as Bumrah will likely become the first ever to do so (Shaheen Afridi may follow him). Ironically, T20Is may take the longest (expect Bumrah to play many more ODIs in the lead up to WC 2027)
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Cricbuzz
Cricbuzz@cricbuzz·
𝟭𝟬𝟬 𝘄𝗶𝗰𝗸𝗲𝘁𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝘁𝗵𝗿𝗲𝗲 𝗶𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗿𝗻𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝗮𝗹 𝗳𝗼𝗿𝗺𝗮𝘁𝘀 Lasith Malinga Tim Southee Shakib Al Hasan Shaheen Afridi Jasprit Bumrah 𝗕𝘂𝗺𝗿𝗮𝗵 𝗶𝘀 𝘁𝗵𝗲 𝘀𝗲𝗰𝗼𝗻𝗱 𝗜𝗻𝗱𝗶𝗮𝗻 𝘁𝗼 𝟭𝟬𝟬 𝘄𝗶𝗰𝗸𝗲𝘁𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗧𝟮𝟬𝗜𝘀 𝗮𝗳𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗔𝗿𝘀𝗵𝗱𝗲𝗲𝗽 𝗦𝗶𝗻𝗴𝗵 #INDvsSA #INDvSA #CricketTwitter
Cricbuzz tweet media
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@vikramsathaye Totally with you! I had similar emotions when watching Shane Warne or Wasim Akram bowl, esp during test matches. With Boom, irrespective of the format, every ball is an event.
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Vikram Sathaye
Vikram Sathaye@vikramsathaye·
For the last 4-5 years the most exciting thing for me in an India game is Bumrah bowling his overs . I get more excited watching it than the sixers by the batters ? Anyone shares this emotion ? :)
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Pratik
Pratik@CricPratikkk·
For starters, Strike rate as a parameter needs to be revamped. I don't want to know how much a batter would score in 100 balls in a 120 ball game. Make it runs per 6 balls. Run Rate, Req Run Rate, Economy all are 6 ball parameters.
Abhishek Mukherjee@ovshake42

In 2003, T20 inherited the Laws and cricketers from the longer formats. Unfortunately, it also inherited the pundits. They still praise T20 career runs, 50s, 100s, batting average, etc. These are, after all, excellent long-format batting parameters.

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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@sbikh @deepigoyal I have no real love for Raghav Chadha/AAP but this comment by Sanjeev is disappointing. Expected better from him than this personal attack & name-calling. By this logic ("Champagne Socialist.. crocodile tears"), privileged folks shouldn't take up issues of underprivileged.
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Sanjeev Bikhchandani
Very well written @deepigoyal Every word is true. It beggars belief that a Champagne Socialist who married a film star and had a designer wedding in Udaipur and a first wedding anniversary in Maldives has the audacity to then shed crocodile tears around alleged exploitation of gig workers. Aam Aadmi my foot
Deepinder Goyal@deepigoyal

Last one on this topic, and I have been holding this in myself for a while. For centuries, class divides kept the labor of the poor invisible to the rich. Factory workers toiled behind walls, farmers in distant fields, domestic help in backrooms. The wealthy consumed the fruits of that labor without ever seeing the faces or the fatigue behind it. No direct encounter, no personal guilt. The gig economy shattered that invisibility, at unprecedented scale. Suddenly, the poor aren't hidden away. They're at your doorstep: the delivery partner handing over your ₹1000+ biryani, late-night groceries, or quick-commerce essentials. You see them in the rain, heat, traffic, often on borrowed bikes, working 8–10 hours for earnings that give them sustenance. You see their exhaustion, their polite smile masking frustration with life in general. This is the first time in history at this scale that the working class and consuming class interact face-to-face, transaction after transaction. And that discomfort with our own selves is why we are uncomfortable about the gig economy. We want these people to look our part, so that the guilt we feel while taking orders from them feels less. We aren't just debating economics. We are confronting guilt. That ₹800 order might equal their entire day's earnings after fuel, bike rent, and app cuts. We tip awkwardly, or avoid eye contact, because the inequality is no longer abstract. It's personal. Pre-gig era, the rich could enjoy luxury without moral discomfort. Labor was out of sight. Now, every doorbell ring is a reminder of systemic inequality. That's why debates explode. It's not just policy. It's emotional reckoning. Some defend the system (“they choose it”), others demand change (“this isn't progress, its exploitation”). And here’s the uncomfortable twist: the unsaid ask of clumsy ‘solutions’ isn’t dignity. It is about returning to invisibility. Ban gig work and you don’t solve inequality. You remove livelihoods. These jobs don’t magically reappear as formal, protected employment the next day. They disappear, or they get pushed back into the informal economy where there are even fewer protections and even less accountability. Over-regulate it until the model breaks, and you achieve the same outcome through paperwork instead of slogans: the work evaporates, prices rise, demand collapses, and the people we claim to protect are the first to lose income. And then what happens? The rich get their old comfort back. Convenience returns without faces. Guilt dissolves. We go back to clean abstractions and moral posturing from a distance. The poor don’t become safer, they become invisible again: back in cash economies, back in backrooms, back in shadows where regulation rarely reaches and dignity isn’t even debated. The gig economy just exposed the reality of inequality to the people who previously had the luxury of not seeing it. The doorbell is not the problem. The question is what we do after opening the door. Visibility is the price of progress. We can either use this discomfort to build something better (which we keep doing continuously as delivery partners are our backbone), or we can ban and over-regulate our way back into ignorance. One of those choices improves lives. The other simply helps the consuming class feel virtuous in the dark.

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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@1DAVID92 So, no mention of Tendulkar's 20 international centuries against Australia?
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DAVID
DAVID@1DAVID92·
Most Tons vs One Team (All Formats)!!!! ◉ Virat Kohli : 16 Tons vs Australia ◉ Don Bradman : 19 Tons vs England ◉ Steve Smith : 16 Tons vs India ◉ Joe Root : 14 Tons vs India...seee more
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
What brilliant tactics by the #Aussies in the #Ashes2025! Alex Carey standing up to Boland & Neser (bowling at 135+) is breathtaking to see (so skillful, so brave). Aggressive option that has resulted in wickets - so disruptive. Now Labuschagne standing so close at 1st slip. Phew
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@SagasofBharat Wrong! The word secular may have been inserted by the Indira Gandhi govt in 1976 but the constitution was secular in spirit from the time of its drafting - confirmed by the Supreme Court in a 1994 ruling (S R Bommai vs Union of India) & reiterated in 2022. @grok pls confirm
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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@joelpollak "Radicals like Nehru"? I'm not sure where you got your history lessons from, Joel.
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Joel Pollak
Joel Pollak@joelpollak·
Mamdani’s victory speech was bitter and nasty. He quoted radicals like Debs and Nehru. This portends poorly for his ability to run the city, because urban governance depends on tolerance and consensus. He benefited from a divided opposition. He he’s unlikely to succeed in office.
CSPAN@cspan

New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani: "We have toppled a political dynasty. I wish Andrew Cuomo only the best in private life but let tonight be the final time I utter his name as we turn the page on a politics that abandons the many and answers only to the few."

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Swapnil Manish
Swapnil Manish@swapstick·
@realMaalouf The Oklahoma City Bombing of 1995 (that killed 170 people) was carried out by Timothy McVeigh, a white Christian. Going by the logic you used, will you disparage the race and religion of the current mayor of Oklahoma City, David Holt?
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Dr. Maalouf ‏
Dr. Maalouf ‏@realMaalouf·
How the hell does the city that experienced the biggest Islamic terrorist attack in history vote for a Muslim mayor?
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