📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy

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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy

📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy

@theRevOpsGuy

time-traveler in a data stream @UseMultiplier | previously @revsure @hubiloconnect @whatfix @plivo | 📚 Now reading: how the world works

Bengaluru, India Katılım Ekim 2010
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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy
The rain brings the best out of nature. On today's walking trail: Am Indian Grey Hornbill and a Peacock. Not captured on the trail were Kingfishers, Egrets, Woodpeckers amongst other birds.
📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy tweet media📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy tweet media
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arin
arin@ArinVerma1910·
Senior dev watching junior use ChatGPT to fix the bug ChatGPT wrote
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Tanay Kothari
Tanay Kothari@tankots·
india just figured out what silicon valley has been spending billions to solve. and nobody in tech is paying attention. tell siri "i'm hungry." it doesn't order your favorite food. it asks you 20 follow-up questions. ai tools can't take a hint. india has been doing the opposite for generations. every time i'm in india, i call my driver with one word: "ajao." it means "come" in hindi. that's it. but that single word communicates everything: - pick me up (implicit) - from the café where you dropped me (he remembers) - i'm ready now (tone) - thank you (respect in how i said it) one word. no context needed. now compare that to how i'd ask in the us: "hi, can you please pick me up from the café on market street where you dropped me earlier? i'll be standing on the left side near the entrance." same request. 25x more words. this isn't unique to my driver. this is how all of india communicates. we're building wispr flow for this mindset. voice that understands context. that reads tone. that doesn't need you to over-explain. because in a country where "ajao" means everything, your voice ai should work the same way. we're not teaching india how to use voice ai. they're teaching us how to build it. launching fully in india this march.
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Parminder Singh
Parminder Singh@parrysingh·
Those of you who insisted I don’t watch the Netflix show before reading this - thank you, excellent call! Now for the book. Not a casual read - it demands your attention, but rewards you with a heady cocktail of science, imagination, and philosophy. I can’t quite pinpoint why, but you come out of this… slightly altered.
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Sidu Ponnappa
Sidu Ponnappa@ponnappa·
Stocking up the office library science fiction section
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Aditi Sharma
Aditi Sharma@airwarmedd·
I’m looking to connect with folks who have transitioned from marketing, sales and GTM to product management or people who work in communications. I want to understand their career trajectories and learn a thing or two. Tag folks or DM me their profile and I’ll connect with them!! Thankss 😋
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The Cinéprism
The Cinéprism@TheCineprism·
You know it’s a Guy Ritchie, so you watch it expecting style, energy, and chaos, and Young Sherlock absolutely delivers. The series opens with young Sherlock in prison for pickpocketing, instantly pulling you into a world of wit, mischief, and clever setups. Set in 1869, it mixes period charm with a punchy, modern soundtrack that keeps the pace electric. Sherlock’s brother Mycroft drags him into an adventure full of twisted mysteries, dark humor, and classic mystery detective intrigue, including a memorable stop at an insane asylum. Along the way, you see young Sherlock discovering his own brilliance, his sharp mind unraveling clues, and his signature cunning beginning to take shape. The dialogue is sharp, full of clever wordplay and banter, and the storytelling moves fast, with Ritchie’s signature visual flair making every scene feel cinematic. By the end of the episode, you’re hooked, watching a young mind evolve into the legendary detective we all know. Young Sherlock is stylish, witty, and a thrilling ride, exactly what you want from a Guy Ritchie mystery detective series.
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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy
@parrysingh No! That Netflix show was a disaster! This is a hard book but don't let any show break the possibilities your mind can come up with in the first read. The joy of discovery in a book reading is lost when you borrow visuals from someone's mind.
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Parminder Singh
Parminder Singh@parrysingh·
Ignore this if you’re not into sci-fi. I’ve just finished reading this. The other two in the trilogy are on my list. Reddit forums recommend watching the Netflix show before the books as it makes the plot more accessible. I did find some concepts complicated (even as a Physics major) Would you recommend the show before the books?
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The Curious Tales
The Curious Tales@thecurioustales·
I stared at this video for probably 10 minutes before I understood what I was actually looking at. That's 15,000 miles per hour, frozen in a plume of iridescent ice. But, my brain kept filing it under "rocket exhaust" because that's the only reference I had. Then I read the caption and something in my chest did something I still cannot name. That plume is propellant. Flash frozen the instant it left the engine and met a vacuum so cold that transformation is instantaneous and permanent. Those crystals will never melt. Nothing will ever touch them. They are suspended in a darkness so complete that the word darkness does not really cover it. I went down a rabbit hole on the trajectory after that and what genuinely floored me was learning the fuel was essentially spent long before Voyager reached interstellar space. The team calculated gravitational slingshots around Jupiter and Saturn years in advance, using the planets' own momentum to accelerate a spacecraft millions of miles away without burning a single extra drop of propellant. They stole speed from planets. With math. On computers weaker than a 1970s calculator by today's standards. The part I keep returning to is the iridescence in that plume. The colors appear because ice crystals of slightly different sizes bend light at slightly different angles, each wavelength scattering separately. It's diffraction. The same physical principle behind the double slit experiment, the same reason soap bubbles show color, the same wave behavior that broke quantum physics, is also responsible for the last beautiful thing Voyager left behind before permanent darkness. One equation dressed in every form the universe could find for it. We talk about space exploration like it's about what we might discover out there. I think it's really about what the attempt reveals about us down here. What do you think?
Curiosity@CuriosityonX

15,000 miles per hour, frozen in a plume of iridescent ice. > It’s not a cloud; it’s the physical remains of a machine escaping the pull of the only home we've ever known.

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Surbhi Jain
Surbhi Jain@surbhiskjain·
A major celebrity held an event at 11point club. His team is not making the payment (kept making some excuses) and now stopped picking calls.. what should we do ?
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BK
BK@BrianKnispel·
@Reudiga @litcapital You can click on the Grok icon in the upper right of any post and usually it will give great context/explanations
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litquidity
litquidity@litcapital·
One of the most expensive tweets of all time
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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy
@vipul2777 Exactly the case for govt. to step in and help. So many old folks like her would be in the need for state help. Individuals can only go so long to help cases that come to highlight. The whole point of governance is to assist citizens.
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Crime Master Gogo (PARODY) 🇮🇳
Saw this n I'm totally choked..Pls do amplify this n whoever meets her pls do help her by buying whatever she is selling n try to get her contact info for me..I really want to meet her n help her in whatever way she wants me to help her..Pls guys help me in finding her info 🙏🏼🥺
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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy
The first sign that I am aging fast came last weekend when my niece said "6 7” and then went on to explain what this meme is about.
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📊 Rajesh Bhattad | theRevOpsGuy
Life has many ways to keep you humble. Walked into a pediatric hospital today. A couple had brought their child for some checkup. The kid was the one holding them both by hand and helping them both navigate. Both the parents were blind.
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Arunn Bhagavathula చి లిపి
A funny incident happened just now. I parked my car under a tree and walked to a nearby office. After finishing my work, I came back and tried unlocking my car by inserting the key and turning it a couple of times… but the door just wouldn’t open. I was about to blame the key, the lock, and possibly the entire automobile industry… …when I suddenly noticed TWO guys calmly sitting in the front seats. For a second, my soul left my body. Are they ghosts? I automatically took a few steps back and then realised the truth: I wasn’t trying to get into my car at all. My actual car was parked right behind it. It was dark, there were no street lights and both cars looked identical in that “night-time confusion”! Left with no other option I gave a sheepish smile to the guy in the driver’s seat, did a quiet tactical retreat and walked to my car like nothing happened. 😄
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