
Abhishek Merukar
5.1K posts

Abhishek Merukar
@abhida
An IT professional and aspiring Marathi filmmaker.
Singapore เข้าร่วม Mart 2009
555 กำลังติดตาม196 ผู้ติดตาม
ทวีตที่ปักหมุด

My film now available on Prime video!!
app.primevideo.com/detail?gti=amz…
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100%, I always disagree with this "Singapore is expensive" myth that comes from few expats who live in pricey bubbles. All 3 daily meals easily under $15 total, cheap transport and sports facilities, safety. Compare it to the likes of London. Sydney, LA, NY, Paris and you'd know.
Bluebird@abigbluebird
That’s why I’ve never got the whole ‘Singapore is expensive’ stereotype, especially when it comes from locals. Singapore is expensive for expats, given that they have to rent private housing, are subject to expensive international school fees for their children etc. But for locals? In relation to the average salaries, it’s far cheaper than our neighbours and other global cities.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

I took an Uber ride today, where the driver took a wrong turn and gave me some twenty extra minutes to go into a historical wormhole
It goes somewhat like this
The concept of Uber became possible because of Google Maps.
Google Maps works because of GPS
The GPS that powers Google maps, became available for us civilians, because Ronald Reagan opened it up after the Soviets shot down an off-course Korean Air flight 1983, killing 269 people.
But GPS as a concept traces its origins to John Hopkins institute where two bored researchers built something to track the Sputnik satellite. While doing that, they accidentally stumbled onto the concept that evolved into what we call, the GPS.
And the Sputnik that they were tracking in Space?
Well, it was able to go into Space because of the efforts of many Nazi German Rocket Engineers, who were kidnapped by the Soviets, post Nazi German defeat in WW2. They were the ones who built the rockets which launched the Sputnik into orbit.
And how did the Nazis know so much about rockets?
That happened because Nazis and Hitler went all in on rocket technology, when they realized that they couldn't win WW2 conventionally and they needed some extraordinary weapons to win the war.
But why did they go to war in the first place?
Because the Nazis and Hitler, wanted to avenge their humiliation in WW1.
And Why did WW1 Start?
It started because a Serb decided to assassinate the Crown Prince of Austria, Archduke Franz Ferdinand, which precipitated the entire conflict.
Hope you realize, how so many things had to come together, so that in 2026, we can hail a cab to our doorstep thru a mobile phone.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

Your brain is built to forget almost everything that happens to you. It makes one exception, and you're looking at it.
Carole Peterson at Memorial University has spent over 25 years studying our earliest memories. She found that the first one most adults can recall comes from age 2.5, not 3.5 as the old textbooks said. The early memories that survive share three things: a strong feeling, a new experience, and a physical sensation. A wave, a dad's grip, and the weird feeling of riding a board check every box.
The mechanism lives in the amygdala. It's the brain's emotion sensor, sitting right next to the hippocampus, the part that files memories. When something big happens, the amygdala triggers a flood of stress hormones like cortisol. That's the signal to the hippocampus to file this one extra deep. James McGaugh at UC Irvine spent his career showing this works for happy moments too. The amygdala fires for pleasure the same way it fires for fear. What matters is how loud the feeling is.
Dads play a particular role here. Daniel Paquette, a developmental psychologist in Montreal, has spent 20 years researching what he calls the "activation relationship." Moms tend to be the safe base kids come back to. Dads tend to be the door to the outside world. They push kids into new and slightly scary situations, and stand right there as the safety net. Kids who grow up with this kind of dad end up more confident, less anxious, and more comfortable around strangers.
A 2017 review pulled together 16 studies covering 1,521 father-child pairs. Quality rough-and-tumble play, which means the wrestling and tossing and chasing kind, was linked to lower aggression, better emotion regulation, and stronger self-control. In rats, baby animals that don't get to play-fight grow up with an under-developed prefrontal cortex, which handles planning and impulse control.
Christina Bethell's 2019 study in JAMA Pediatrics took the long view. Her team at Johns Hopkins surveyed 6,188 Wisconsin adults about their positive childhood experiences. Adults reporting six or seven of those had 72 percent lower odds of adult depression than those reporting zero to two. The effect held even for people with serious childhood trauma. Good moments keep paying out for decades.
The original tweet is right. The moments that burn in are the ones with big feelings, new physical sensations, and an adult who is the bridge between safe and scary. Twenty years from now, the grip is what he'll remember.
The Best@TheBestqueenx
The son will carry this with him for the rest of his life and he will never forget this moment.
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@RanvirShorey @elonmusk Doesn't sound right Ranbir. Elon is not a filmmaker, merely an audience. And audiences have the right to react to a film.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว
Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว


@GabbbarSingh Panchang wohi nahi rehta! Promptly badla jata hai in such houses 😀
Largely applicable to the West, where visa, weather issues exist. Otherwise it's more balanced. Parents visit children every year for few months, explore the world, and bond with other parents they meet there.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

THEY SENT FOUR HUMAN BEINGS 452,000 KILOMETRES BEHIND THE MOON AND BROUGHT THEM BACK TO SPLASH DOWN IN THE EXACT SPOT THEY CALCULATED BEFORE THEY EVER LEFT THE GROUND
THE MATHEMATICS WORKED. THE PHYSICS HELD. THE SILENCE ENDED.
EVERY ENGINEER, MATHEMATICIAN, PHYSICIST, AND PROGRAMMER WHO TOUCHED THIS MISSION IS THE COOLEST PERSON ALIVE AND THEY KNOW IT
WELCOME HOME
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

@Nithin0dha Always bothers me when top students select economics and not medicine or engg or something that could really help humanity with a brilliant mind working on it.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

I recently had dinner with Dr Devi Shetty, the founder of Narayana Hospitals. For those who don't know him, he's the guy who figured out how to do open heart surgery for a few hundred dollars when the same procedure costs a bomb in the US. Narayana has 18,000 beds across India, and if you ask most middle-class people in Bangalore about it, they'll speak highly of it.
There was one thing I kept thinking about over and over again after meeting him.
Narayana's market cap is around ₹38,000 crore. Now compare that to pretty much any half-decent financial services business in India, and it'll be valued more than that, including Zerodha. A brokerage, worth more than a hospital chain, that has probably saved hundreds of thousands of lives.
I get the arguments. If you're a fund manager/analyst, you can immediately explain it away using margins, capex, asset-light vs asset-heavy, and all that, and I'm not saying the market is wrong.
But it's still a strange world we've built, where the businesses closest to money get valued the highest, and the ones doing the hard and essential things get priced like boring utilities. A hospital carries physical infrastructure, enormous liability, thin margins and the actual weight of keeping people alive. And somehow that's worth less than a platform for buying and selling stocks.
I don't have a clean take on this. All of this just felt odd.
Ps: Nothing here is investment advice. For that, go to @zerodhavarsity

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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

@CoachDanGo Apple is one of the foods that I immediately feel hungry after eating, like in 15 minutes. Surprised to see that it lists in keeping hunger hormones in check.
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Using AI to create videos is dying.
AI orgs are realizing there is barely any money to be made in video, Anthropic is raking in $19 billion sales just selling code & text. Video is resource intensive, and is just to create fake stuff to spread misinformation. Good news for video production people.
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว
Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

Street dogs attack, kill woman in Pune’s Chakan
The woman was walking alone, when, all of a sudden, six to seven street dogs attacked her
indianexpress.com/article/cities…
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Drunk af and missing Delhi . That’s why I don’t get drunk cause 7-8 drinks in , all I want to do is smoke a cig at panditji outside chanakya , have Paratha at Indian oil building at green park , drink at sarkari club at chanakyapuri , have hot and sour soup at Chinese van at lodhi road , have hot chocolate fudge at now long closed nirulas at chankyapuri , sit at friends , friends , friends run down terrace at mehruali overlooking Qutab minar …..
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Abhishek Merukar รีทวีตแล้ว

Back in 2011, I went into computer hardware repairs. I started with laptop chargers. I remember peeling back the rubber, soldering wires, and always staring at that weird plastic bulge on the cable. It didn't look like it did anything, but it was on every single high-end charger I fixed. I used to wonder if it was a hidden battery or just a weight to keep the cord from tangling.
It turns out, that little lump is the unsung hero of your workspace.
It's called a Ferrite Bead, and its only job is to act as a silencer for your electricity.
See, every electronic device is naturally noisy. They send out invisible electromagnetic signals. Without that cylinder, your charger cable would turn into a giant antenna, broadcasting interference that would make your Wi-Fi slow, your TV flicker, or your speakers buzz.
Inside that plastic shell is just a chunk of magnetic iron. It catches all that electrical noise and kills it before it can escape the wire.
It’s basically a muzzle for your cable so your gadgets can live in peace.
INALEGWU.
Peter Agboola@baba_Omoloro
Doesn't seem like anyone knows what this is for, right?
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