vineet garg

8.5K posts

vineet garg

vineet garg

@vineetgarg2002

Bengaluru, India Katılım Mayıs 2010
107 Takip Edilen82 Takipçiler
vineet garg retweetledi
Elon Musk
Elon Musk@elonmusk·
Engineering is real magic
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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@volklub Ohhh I thought I was trying to convey that you put very high cost on your integrity which is very rare esp in social media age.
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Sunderdeep - Volklub
‘Gamechanger’ is the word. With just 15 km/h average speed and driven for 4:30 hours in heavy city traffic with AC, four on board, car has still returned 8.5 km / kw This simply means that Creta 51 kWh will return 400+ km range in heavy traffic with AC This is insane efficiency. Hyundai deserves a lot of credit here. Hyundai basically can anytime pull out their A game in EVs in passenger segment when time will demand that. I understand that some variants are expensive but 42 kWh Executive at 18.99 and Executive (O) 51 kWh at 19.99 is definitely ok if we consider Hyundai’s Network, reliable tech, practicality and efficiency. I repeat, the best part is, this car doesn’t feel like an EV, no nausea feeling, top grade glass area & easy to use interiors.
Sunderdeep - Volklub tweet media
Sunderdeep - Volklub@volklub

Parked my primary Diesel car inside to use Creta Electric for city tasks today 92% charged Will be travelling for 3-4 hours in heavy traffic, parked with AC on at some places. Typical realistic use for a long day. Family loves it so… Let’s see how it goes. Note: It feels satisfying & great when you charge at home. Feels like you have a lot of cash in your pocket. Same feeling.

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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@volklub Sirjee .. i always tell my team that if the cat wants to become a lion then it gives up on mice. You are the epitome of that proverb. God bless you.
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Sunderdeep - Volklub
Note: Car is provided by Hyundai India No money & dictation is involved. Hyundai has given the car just to experience. I have never charged any car brand till date to cover any event or review.
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Rāma Śēṣan Chandraśēkaran
How Jesus went from a local Judean carpenter crucified as a criminal by an imperial state to the most controversial God How Allah went from a local Bedouin desert deity worshipped by warring caravan looter tribes to the most controversial God I doubt whether these historians will adopt this same disrespecting tones for the other religions
ThePrintIndia@ThePrintIndia

How Ayyappa went from a local forest deity to Kerala’s most controversial God Anirudh Kanisetti @AKanisetti, author and historian, writes #ThinkingMedieval #ThePrintOpinion theprint.in/opinion/how-ay…

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Sunderdeep - Volklub
Politely refused a big alloy brand for a collaboration on Instagram. I’m not in favour of aftermarket alloy wheels just for aesthetics because I feel they aren’t rigorously tested for Indian conditions. Stick to the brand setup and keep your car stock wherever possible. These are complex machines & brands just need one reason to disown you & void the warranty if something majorly goes wrong.
Sunderdeep - Volklub tweet media
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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@volklub Data what you are collected and it is of the highest quality as coming directly from potential buyers can be a goldmine for car manufacturers and even dealers.
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Sunderdeep - Volklub
My stats from consultations say that first time buyers highly prefer 360 deg camera in budget. Not to boast but as a safety feature. Tata Cars & Baleno are having big edge in this. Brands which are not providing it yet or keeping it reserved in expensive cars are losing sales.
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Kawaljeet Singh
Kawaljeet Singh@kawal279·
Rich people should have more kids. This is the best wealth tax a rich person would pay happily.
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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@volklub @kawal279 Still better as we are not worried that some depressed soul in western world will open fire with a semi-automatic weapon and kill students in schools and colleges.
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Sunderdeep - Volklub
Sunderdeep - Volklub@volklub·
@kawal279 Comes with a lot of anxiety in a country like India where you will remain worried about them for their safety / exploitation / health / friend circle most of the time while they grow up no matter how much money you have.
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Comman Man
Comman Man@CommanMan777589·
Have you ever wondered why??) 1.After the Congress government left, why has Mumbai not seen the rise of another Haji Mastan, Karim Lala, or Dawood Ibrahim? 2.After the BSP government ended, why was Mayawati not weighed with diamonds, crowns, and bundles of cash on her birthday anymore? 3.After Yogi Ji became CM of UP, why have mafia dons like Atiq Ahmed, Azam Khan, and Mukhtar Ansari stopped emerging? 4.After Modi came, why can’t P. Chidambaram grow cabbages worth ₹6 crores in the flowerpots of his bungalow anymore? 5.Why can’t Supriya Sule cultivate crops worth ₹670 crores on her 10-acre farmland these days? 6.After the Congress lost power in Haryana, why has Robert Vadra stopped buying land there? 7.After losing power in UP, why did Akhilesh Yadav stop organizing the Saifai Mahotsav? 8.After selling a painting to Yes Bank owner Rana Kapoor for ₹2.5 crores, why has Priyanka Gandhi never sold another painting again? 9.After A.K. Antony sold his wife’s painting to the government for ₹28 crores, why has his wife never painted again? 10.During the 10-year rule of the UPA (2004–14), Sonia Gandhi used to travel abroad every six months for treatment of her “unknown” illness. She lived in Delhi, yet her flights always departed from airports in Kerala, carrying 4–5 large trunks with her. There was never any question of security checks, since she was the “Super PM” of India at that time. But after the change of power in 2014, how did Sonia’s “mysterious illness” suddenly vanish into thin air?
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India_AllSports
India_AllSports@India_AllSports·
𝐍𝐄𝐖𝐒 𝐅𝐋𝐀𝐒𝐇: 𝐏𝐫𝐞𝐞𝐭𝐢 𝐏𝐚𝐰𝐚𝐫 𝐖𝐈𝐍𝐒 𝐆𝐎𝐋𝐃 𝐦𝐞𝐝𝐚𝐥 𝐚𝐭 𝐀𝐬𝐢𝐚𝐧 𝐁𝐨𝐱𝐢𝐧𝐠 𝐂𝐡𝐚𝐦𝐩𝐢𝐨𝐧𝐬𝐡𝐢𝐩𝐬 🔥🔥🔥 STUNS 3-time World Champion Huang Hsiao-wen 5-0 in Final (54kg). #Boxing
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We, the People of India
We, the People of India@India_Policy·
Iran is now the new hegemon in West Asia. From Saudi Arabia to UAE to Qatar, all will have to now pay tribute to the regime.
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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@soigomaa @YRDeshmukh Absolutely right. My wife and I often joke that we now have 6 kids. ( 4 our parents and 2 our kids). Btw this is the most challenging time as your energy levels are going down and you need to manage all fronts at the same time.
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goma
goma@soigomaa·
After a certain age, your parents slowly become your children. They ask simple questions, repeat stories, and depend on your patience the way you once depended on theirs. Very few understand this role reversal.What looks like innocence or inconvenience is really time coming full circle. Don't correct them harshly. Don't rush them. Care for them the way they once protected you. This is not a burden. It is repayment.
໊smolaraa@kesikesiluv

Hit me with the harshest reality truth.

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Rahul Raj
Rahul Raj@x_rahulraj·
The first battery we manufactured was a 1 kWh battery designed for solar home lighting applications. It may look simple today, but it was not simple for us back in 2017–18. It was also a superhero product, as it provided power to many households for the first time. Later, we built Edge (our 2-wheeler battery platform) and then Simba (our 3-wheeler battery platform). These products served as superheroes in their respective markets. This year, we have started working with Ornate Solar on something much larger and more utilitarian. We are building our BESS product range, UnityESS, which will go beyond 5,000 kWh. This is 5,000 times larger than our first battery. We have tried to capture this journey through our new MASCOT.
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Khalid Baig
Khalid Baig@KhalidBaig85·
With due respect to Nirupama ji, I want to make just one point. A country gets created 79 years back because the leaders of it's movement say that they cannot stay with Hindus. This is the core existence of the idea of Pakistan. This is the worldview of it's critical majority, this is what drives it's day to day life. Who ever is the Prime Minister of India, this reality of Pakistan, as an idea, will not change. The day this idea changes, is the day the original and foundational, existential idea of Pakistan would have been destroyed. This should be the starting point of all the diplomacy with a country whose sacred value is all about not staying with the Hindu, which translates into being anti-India. Can sections of Indians stop lying to themselves as to why Pakistan exists?
Nirupama Menon Rao 🇮🇳@NMenonRao

There is a certain genre of writing that substitutes accusation for argument. It begins by assigning motive, then arranges facts,real, distorted, or imagined, to fit that conclusion. The recent commentary on my views on India-Pakistan relations follows that familiar script. Let me state the essentials clearly. To argue that India must combine deterrence with engagement is NOT to diminish the reality of terrorism, nor to excuse it. It is to recognise how serious nations manage adversaries. India has, across governments and decades, done precisely this, responding firmly to terror while retaining channels of communication where necessary to prevent escalation and miscalculation. This is not sentimentality. It is statecraft. The suggestion that engagement grants “impunity” rests on a false binary, that one must either talk or act. In practice, states do both. To collapse that complexity into a moral accusation may make for forceful prose, but it does not make for sound policy. The caricature of a women’s caucus is equally misplaced. It is not proposed as a substitute for national policy, nor as a solution to entrenched conflict. It is a modest Track II initiative, one of many possible avenues, to widen dialogue, reduce hostility, and explore areas where cooperation may still be possible. Such efforts do not require approval from those who see every form of engagement as capitulation. Invoking the suffering of victims of terrorism to argue against any form of dialogue is particularly troubling. Their loss demands seriousness, not rhetorical deployment. Accountability is not strengthened by narrowing the space for thought. The claim that an idea is discredited because it is welcomed by a Pakistani voice is also a curious standard. If the merit of an argument is to be judged by who agrees with it, then independent judgment itself is surrendered. Ideas must stand or fall on their own logic. Beyond the rhetoric lies a more fundamental question: what is India’s end game with Pakistan? If it is to reduce Pakistan to rubble, that is fantasy dressed up as toughness. It is not going to happen, and any attempt to move in that direction would risk catastrophe for the entire region, not least for India. Nuclear geography is a stern schoolmaster. It does not indulge chest-thumping. The real end game has to be containment, deterrence, internal strengthening, and selective engagement. In plain words: India’s objective should be to make Pakistan’s use of terror too costly to sustain, while preventing the relationship from sliding into permanent uncontrolled escalation. That means four things. First, raise the cost of terrorism. Through intelligence, border management, diplomatic isolation where warranted, calibrated military response when necessary, and relentless exposure of the infrastructure of proxy violence. No illusions there. Second, deny Pakistan veto power over India’s future. We should not let our growth, our diplomacy, our regional ambitions, or our internal confidence be held hostage by a single hostile neighbour. The greatest strategic answer to Pakistan is a stronger, more cohesive, more prosperous India. Third, manage the conflict, not romanticise it. There will be no grand reconciliation in the near term. But neither can every interaction be reduced to rage. Ceasefire mechanisms, back channels, water safeguards, crisis hotlines, and limited functional engagement are not signs of softness. They are instruments of control. Fourth, keep open the possibility of a different future without betting on it. That is where dialogue belongs. Not as wishful thinking, not as “aman ki asha” balloon releases, but as disciplined statecraft. You talk not because you trust, but because you must understand, signal, warn, probe, and occasionally de-escalate. So the end game is not rubble. It is a Pakistan that is deterred, constrained, denied easy success, and unable to derail India’s future. Fury is a mood. It is not a policy.

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Vibhuti Sharma-SEBI Registered Research Analyst
A big milestone in my journey 📈 I’m proud to share that I am now a SEBI Registered Research Analyst. SEBI REGD. NO.: INH000025647 What started as a passion for markets has now turned into a responsibility — to provide disciplined, research-backed and trustworthy insights. This is just the beginning 🚀 much more to achieve... — ProfitPulseByVee, VIBHUTI SHARMA ⚠️ Disclaimer: Investments in securities market are subject to market risks. This is for informational purposes only and not a recommendation.
Vibhuti Sharma-SEBI Registered Research Analyst tweet media
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Chayenne Zhao
Chayenne Zhao@GenAI_is_real·
unpopular opinion: 16GB is plenty if software engineers actually cared about memory efficiency. chrome eating 4GB for 12 tabs is not a hardware problem its a software disgrace. docker consuming 2GB idle is not a feature its laziness. we live in an era where people optimize every single token to save $0.001 on API costs but happily ship electron apps that eat 500MB to display a todo list. if the industry treated RAM the way we treat inference compute - obsessively measuring every byte - 16GB would feel luxurious. the hardware isnt the problem, the software is @adxtyahq
aditya@adxtyahq

never buy a 16GB RAM laptop in 2026. you’ll regret it within a week

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vineet garg
vineet garg@vineetgarg2002·
@GenAI_is_real Exactly, I mentioned to my teammates that you are abusing the computing power by doing lazy coding. I started my career with 32 mb ram and now having 64 gb ram in my office laptop and trust me I am still feeling the same power or sometime laggard b'cos company standard bloatware.
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