5. If You Keep Recall, Limit What It Sees
If you want to use Recall, at least block it from sensitive apps and sites.
Go to: Recall & Snapshots → Filter apps and websites
Add your:
- Banking apps and websites
- Password manager
- Email accounts
- Medical or health portals
Don't rely only on the automatic filter. It's smart, but it's not perfect. Adding important apps and websites manually gives you extra protection.
தவெக ஆலந்தூர் வடக்கு பகுதிச் செயலாளர் வேம்புலி என்ற நபர், கணவரை இழந்து தனியே வசிக்கும் பெண்ணின் வீடு புகுந்து, பாலியல் அத்துமீறலில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ள செய்தி, மிகுந்த அதிர்ச்சி அளிக்கிறது.
பெண்களின் பாதுகாப்பு குறித்து தவெக தலைவர் முதலமைச்சர் திரு @TVKVijayHQ அவர்கள் கூறிவரும் வாக்குறுதிகளுக்கு நேர்மாறாக உண்மை நிலை இருப்பது, மிகுந்த ஏமாற்றமளிக்கிறது.
திமுக ஆட்சியில் நடைபெற்ற பெண்களுக்கு எதிரான குற்றங்கள், தற்போதைய ஆட்சியிலும் குறையவில்லை. இது போன்ற கடுமையான குற்றங்களில் ஈடுபடும் தைரியம், இவர்களுக்கு எங்கிருந்து வருகிறது?
சமூக விரோதச் செயல்பாடுகளுக்கு, அரசியல் அடையாளம் பாதுகாப்பாக இருக்கக்கூடாது என்பதை, முதலமைச்சர் உறுதி செய்யவேண்டும். குற்றவாளி மீது கடுமையான நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்பட வேண்டும் என்று வலியுறுத்துகிறேன்.
This video will boil your blood to the core & also, you will realize the danger created by bastard Gandhi & Nehru by not exchanging full Muslim population in 1947.
A young guy after getting selected in the Indian Army faced constant threat from fucking Muslims neighbors! 🤬🤬🤬
🚨The Engineer Who Lost His Job After Pokhran Helped Build India's First AI Chip that Can Operates Without Internet
In 1998, when India conducted the historic Pokhran-II nuclear tests, the world responded with sanctions. Technology restrictions tightened, foreign companies became cautious, and many Indian engineers working abroad suddenly found themselves facing barriers they had never expected.
One of them was engineer Jyotis Indirabhai.
At the time, he was working in Japan's semiconductor industry on advanced chip technologies. But after the sanctions that followed Pokhran, projects involving Indian engineers were disrupted, and his career path took an unexpected turn.
Nearly three decades later, that same engineer has helped India achieve a breakthrough of its own.
His startup, Netra Semi, has developed India's first 12-nanometer Edge AI chip, the A2000, a milestone that could significantly strengthen India's position in the global semiconductor race.
To understand why this matters, one must first understand what Edge AI is.
Most artificial intelligence systems rely on cloud servers located far away from the device using them. Data is collected, sent to a server, processed, and then returned. Edge AI changes that model entirely. Instead of depending on distant data centers, the AI runs directly on the device itself.
Imagine a smart surveillance camera that can instantly identify suspicious activity without sending video to a remote server. Or a military drone that can analyze battlefield footage in real time and make decisions without waiting for instructions from a data center thousands of kilometers away.
That is exactly what Edge AI chips are designed to do.
Countries such as the United States, China, Japan, and South Korea have already deployed such chips across industries ranging from defense and robotics to smart cities and advanced manufacturing. Now India has entered that arena with an indigenous design of its own.
The journey behind the A2000 chip is equally remarkable.
After leaving Japan, Indirabhai spent nearly two decades in the United States, working with some of the world's most advanced semiconductor companies. During that period, he contributed to the development of processors, wireless technologies, GPUs, and AI hardware while building a portfolio of valuable patents.
But in 2017, he returned to India with a larger mission.
Rather than seeing India remain dependent on imported chips, he wanted the country to build its own semiconductor ecosystem. That vision led to the creation of Netrasemi in 2020.
Over the next several years, the company developed its own AI processor architecture, vision-processing technologies, and supporting software stack. The design was eventually fabricated using advanced manufacturing facilities, culminating in the launch of the A2000 in 2026.
From smart surveillance systems and industrial automation to robotics, autonomous platforms, and defense applications, the chip opens the door to a wide range of indigenous innovations.
While Europe was under ice, someone in Ratnagiri carved a 14-metre map of India.
It's an elephant. Head west to the Konkan, tail east.
Inside it: a tiger in the east, a langur in the north, a boar in Madhya Pradesh, a pangolin in the south. Each animal where it actually lives.
Seven mountains. The Mahabharata also names seven. It was carved 10,000 years before the Mahabharata.
Now the part that should end the argument.
The map's width-to-height ratio is 1.167. Modern India is 1.04. Doesn't match.
Because they weren't mapping modern India.
Reverse-solve 1.167 against the coastline of 12,000 BCE — when the sea was 120m lower and the Sunda Shelf was dry land — and the eastern edge lands at ~100.9°E.
The eastern shore of the Malay Peninsula. The exact limit of the world you could walk to from India at the time.
A decorative outline doesn't do that. A map does.
The oldest known map is supposed to be Çatalhöyük, ~6,200 BCE. This predates it by 6,000 years.
It's on an open plateau. People play cricket near these carvings. The monsoon is erasing it.
Full paper, free, permanent:
DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.20516459
#Ratnagiri #Archaeology #History
A cartoon being circulated on X says Indians should thank the British because James Prinsep deciphered the Brahmi script & helped recover our history. :))
Do you know before he became a so-called expert on our ancient scripts, Prinsep’s primary day job was serving as the Assay Master (chief metallurgist & currency controller) at the Banaras & Calcutta Mints. He was not an academic; he was an economic agent sent to fundamentally alter India's wealth distribution system.
Until the 1830s, India had a beautifully diverse, highly resilient decentralized currency system. Local kingdoms, merchant guilds & regional mints issued their own silver and gold coins. Local money-changers (Shroffs) evaluated coins based on pure metal weight. James Prinsep was the literal architect who destroyed this system.
Using his position as Assay Master, Prinsep spent yrs systematically studying the purity of native Indian coins. He did not do this out of cultural curiosity, he did it to calculate how the East India Company could completely monopolize India's money supply.
His efforts directly culminated in the Coinage Act of 1835: The Elimination of Indian Heritage: Prinsep spearheaded the policy that completely banned all local Indian regional coins & traditional designs. He personally oversaw the design of the new, uniform colonial Silver Rupee. He forced the removal of traditional Indian symbols, replacing them with the cold, imperial face of British King William IV.
What makes this a financial "thug" operation is how the transition was enforced on ordinary Indians. By passing laws that declared traditional regional currencies invalid for tax payments, the British forced Indian merchants, farmers & citizens to bring their centuries-old ancestral coins to Prinsep's mints. Under Prinsep's direct technical supervision, the British mints engaged in massive institutional exploitation:
- They took the pure, high-quality silver coins of Indian states.
- They melted them down in giant cauldrons.
- They charged the native Indians a heavy seigniorage (a minting fee/tax) just to exchange their own ancestral silver for the new British currency.
This artificial bottleneck triggered a massive shortage of circulating cash in rural India, causing local economies to crash while systematically vacuuming pure silver out of Indian hands & placing it directly under East India Company control. It was 1 of the largest state-sanctioned currency manipulation schemes in world history.
But what is often sold to us is the idea that Prinsep was a polymath who single-handedly deciphered our ancient scripts. Ask the same people who Rathnapala was & you are likely to be met with complete silence. :(
A French moto vlogger "Frenchy" was traveling through India on his bike, He had a lump on his neck. Curious about the cost and process to remove it, he inquired locally and was quoted just $500 for the treatment.
Stunned by both the price and the short waiting time, he went ahead with the procedure. Within a week, the lump was removed. He documented the whole journey on camera.
He later shared that the same type of surgery in Australia after an accident had cost him $12,000.
If manufactured online hate and negative perceptions in the West didn’t exist, India could easily be earning hundreds of billions of dollars every year from medical tourism alone.
And this is why India needs to fight bad image/perception, that is being promoted by India's adversaries.
"Out of 10 rape cases, 9 are just rape. 1 involves murder after rape. I think that one case is when right after the rape, the guy gets up and the girl says, 'Aren't you going to cuddle?' Then the guy stabs her."
— Strict action should be taken against comedian Madhur Virli.
Dear US government,
Since you've just blocked Fable and Mythos on critical national security grounds, here are some other tools that pose a similar threat to the American people:
- Microsoft Teams
- SAP
- Salesforce
- Jira
- Outlook
Please do what you must to save America 🇺🇸
@nabilajamal_ Is he the petroleum minister?. I think his portfolio is of highways, his extreme interest in ethanol can be attributed to his sons industries thus bringing in conflict of interest. But this is India and it's a banana republic and public probity can go for six.