Your Money, Not Health

Imagine you’re at a shop buying a chocolate bar. The price tag says $1, but when you get to the counter, the cashier charges you $5 because they claim you used a “premium napkin” and “special air” while standing in the aisle. That’s essentially what is happening in many of India’s private hospitals today. Here…

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Why the international day of women and girls in science matters

February 11 is the International Day of Women and Girls in Science—a UN-declared observance that recognises the achievements and challenges of women in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). Though progress has been steady, challenges persist. According to UNESCO, women account for less than one-third of the world’s researchers. From societal stereotypes to institutional bias,…

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Sculptural history happens at IAF 2026

At a single booth at the India Art Fair 2026 two international sculpture heavy weights rubbed shoulders with each other. India’s international star Subodh Gupta rubbed shoulders with the world renown Chinese contemporary artist, documentarian, as well as activist Ai Weiwei at Nature Morte Booth B1. In a world of men there were also two…

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A landmark recognition—but what comes next?

The recent decision by the ministry of commerce and industry, Government of India, to include cooperatives within the definition of start-ups is a landmark moment. It sends a strong policy signal that cooperative enterprises are not relics of an earlier economic era, but current business models capable of innovation, scale, and impact. By placing cooperatives…

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The age of the product mindset

We are witnessing the slow, agonizing death of the “Employee Factory” model. For decades, the tacit agreement between universities and society was simple: “You give us four years and tuition fees; we give you a stamped degree and a place in the queue for a safe corporate job.” This model worked when the world needed…

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Karma: The consciousness behind action

I have come to understand karma not as something extraordinary, but as something unavoidable. Everything we do, from the simplest breath to the most deliberate choice, falls within its scope. Karma is not limited to profession, duty, or visible action. It includes movement of the body, direction of the mind, and intention of the heart. …

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Andhra Pradesh’s DISCOM is using AI to push power losses below 5%

Most electricity distribution companies (DISCOMs) in India lose 15–20% of the power they buy before it reaches homes and businesses. Andhra Pradesh’s Eastern Power Distribution Company Limited (APEPDCL) has already performed much better, reducing losses to 5–6%, comparable to the technical losses of leading global utilities. Now it faces a tougher challenge: finding and reducing…

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Varanasi becomes a test bed for India’s digital twin revolution in power distribution

India loses nearly Rs 1.8 lakh crore every year because electricity disappears between power plants and homes. This amount is almost twice the Central Government’s annual health spending. In Uttar Pradesh alone, about 15% of electricity purchased by Uttar Pradesh Power Corporation Limited (UPPCL) is lost before it can be billed, resulting in losses of…

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Why consistency matters more than skill alone

Dentistry is changing. What was once a reactive, occasional interaction is now moving towards consistency, prevention and seamlessness. Patients no longer see dental care as something to be squeezed between busy schedules. They expect reliability, clarity and follow-through. To meet as well as try to exceed all these expectations, just having skilled dentists isn’t enough;…

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