I replaced the battery.
Never faced any lag with the older battery, but I feel the more demanding OS has more to do with the drain Than the battery itself.
Definitely getting more screen on time, will probably push it for a couple of years and switch.
Cause I'm already seeing feature parity (Airdrop not here yet)
Hey @Swiggy
Found a bug,
Items that are listed as "available next day" tend to show up in these addon suggestions.
We'd ordered a meal from the same place, only to realise the breads we selected didn't come with the order!
Product Managers on my TL,
We are hiring for a Director role,
Do apply,
It’d be of great help to us if you can share it across your network.
Retweets appreciated.
Something small happened on my flight yesterday.
IndiGo flight. Sitting next to a guy, well put together, well dressed. The kind of person you’d point to and say “educated, aware.”
He finishes his snack. Looks at the trash in his hand. And places it on the floor under the seat in front. Not accidentally. Deliberately.
The cabin crew came through for trash collection. Did their job perfectly. Collected from everyone’s hands, every tray table. The stuff on the floor, easy to miss from that angle, stayed.
We landed. His cups and food box were still sitting there on the aircraft floor.
And I just sat with this feeling I couldn’t quite name.
It wasn’t anger. It was something closer to disappointment. Or maybe exhaustion.
Because we’ve been having this conversation about civic sense in India for decades now. And nothing moves.
Here’s what I’ve come to believe. It’s not an awareness problem. It’s not an education problem. It’s not even an income problem.
It’s a “whose problem is it” problem.
Most people in India have unconsciously decided that shared spaces, flights, roads, parks, footpaths, are not their responsibility. Someone is paid to clean it. Someone will handle it.
Me? I’m just passing through.
And that mindset is exactly where the problem begins.
Because civic sense isn’t just about what you do. It’s about what you normalize.
Every time someone litters and nobody reacts, the bar drops a little lower.
Every time someone cleans up after themselves in a space nobody’s watching, the bar rises.
We are all, quietly, setting the standard for each other.
Choose the standard you want to live in.
Arvind Mehta died in 2018. Heart attack. 59 years old.
His wife informed the bank.
Submitted death certificate. Closed all accounts.
Three years later — she applied for a small loan to repair her house.
Rejected. CIBIL score: 492.
She checked the report. Her dead husband had been marked a "wilful defaulter" in 2020. Two years after his death.
The bank had kept billing his credit card after she submitted the death certificate. He hadn't responded. They had reported him to CIBIL for non-payment.
A dead man was being chased for a credit card bill. And it was destroying his widow's financial life.
She went to consumer court.
The court said: The bank had received the death certificate. Continued billing. Then reported the deceased as a defaulter. This is not a clerical error. This is gross negligence amounting to cruelty.
Bank ordered to remove the CIBIL entry immediately. Pay ₹5 lakh compensation. Pay ₹1 lakh for mental harassment.
He had been dead for 3 years.
They were still billing him.
Save this post. When a family member dies — immediately submit the death certificate to every bank in writing, with acknowledgment. Keep copies forever. That paper protects the family for years
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.