Does anyone building Tech Startup?, I'm a computer science student, love to build things, though I'm not a master in any programming language, but I'm happy to work for you. DM me if you want any help!
It takes exactly 90 days for a lifestyle change to shift your baseline biology. Your current energy, focus, and mood aren't a reflection of "who you are"; they are just a result of your last 3 months. Your mindset isn’t a permanent sentence, you can change it as you wish.
🌍✈️ Countries with the Largest Aircraft Manufacturers ✈️🌍
The global aviation industry is dominated by a few powerful countries leading in innovation, defense, and commercial aircraft production. Here’s a quick look 👇
🇺🇸 United States
Home to giants like Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman.
👉 Leader in both commercial and military aviation.
🇪🇺 France & Germany (Europe)
Dominated by Airbus.
👉 Boeing’s biggest competitor in commercial aircraft.
🇨🇳 China
Rising fast with COMAC.
👉 Focused on competing in commercial aviation (e.g., C919).
🇷🇺 Russia
Key players include United Aircraft Corporation and Sukhoi.
👉 Strong in military aircraft and regional jets.
🇨🇦Canada
Known for Bombardier.
👉 Leader in business jets and regional aircraft.
🇧🇷 Brazil
Home of Embraer.
👉 Major player in regional and executive jets.
🇯🇵 Japan
Companies like Mitsubishi Heavy Industries.
👉 Important supplier and growing aircraft developer.
The aircraft manufacturing industry is led by a mix of established giants and rising challengers, shaping the future of global aviation.
Officially dead in 1945, Subhas Chandra Bose live on for decades thereafter. Was given shelter by the Russians and later returned to India in the guise of a holy man. Complications related to the transfer of power, his actions during the world war and post-war activities forbade him from appearing in public. Claimed to have played advisory role in 1965 and 1971 wars. Died in Ayodhya in 1985.
Nvidia CEO: “you cannot show me a task that is beneath me.”
The enemy of continuous progress and growth is arrogance, a zero sum mindset, and a sense of entitlement. Stay humble, curious and kind. And work hard.
Nobody tells you this: Dopamine from information gathering is a dangerous drug. It’s the dopamine from reading, planning, or learning, but never doing. Stop looking for more information and start acting on the information you already have. Get your dopamine from action.
USA is attacking Iran.
Saudi Arabia is supporting the USA.
UAE and Qatar host U.S. airbases and are strategically aligned with Washington.
Iran, in response, targets locations connected to U.S. military presence in UAE and Qatar.
Now read that again.
If religion truly decided global alliances, Muslim nations would stand on one side. But they don’t.
Because states move based on security, survival, oil routes, military leverage and strategic interests, not emotional religious unity.
Religion often becomes the headline.
Geopolitics is the real story.
Sitting in India right now, watching the world burn in real time. US & Israel striking Iran. Iran retaliating across the Gulf. Russia-Ukraine still raging. Pakistan-Afghanistan tensions simmering.
Missiles flying over Tehran, Bahrain, Abu Dhabi, Qatar.
And here I am, safe at home on a Saturday evening, in a democratic, peaceful country, worrying about none of this at my doorstep.
We don't say this enough - we are incredibly lucky. Not perfect, not without problems. But at peace. That's not a small thing in 2026.
Examples are now pouring in about AI-assisted Code Engineering productivity.
The quoted post is a Bhagwad Gita app.
Anthropic has built an entire C compiler with their Claude AI. That is not an easy engineering feat at all.
At this point, it is best for those of us who depend on writing code for a living to start considering alternative livelihoods. I include myself in this. I don't say this in panic, but with calm acceptance and embrace.
As a matter of fact, I did a detailed session with Gemini Pro on how the economy will be shaped by the AI revolution. It was like having an extremely intelligent economic philosopher debating you. I asked it to critique its own work and it did a fantastic job too.
As Gemini and I developed see this, the future could unfold in two ways, depending on who owns and collects rent on this technology.
The optimist in me thinks that this technology will make most technological prowess by humans redundant and that would push tech to the background (all tech become trivial, like digital watches today) and we then get to focus on life, family, soil, water, nature, art, music, culture, sports, festivals and faith (faith is important), and that is best done in small close-knit rural communities. I live a life like this today and if we solve rural poverty, I consider this a very good life.
The pessimistic dystopian vision is centralized control.
Here is my Gemini chat session on this. You can continue the session on Gemini and see where it all goes.
https://t.co/ORdh7ejen4
This Economic Survey breaks new ground by blending a bold, optimistic vision for the future with a realistic assessment of the economy’s vulnerabilities.
But what stood out most to me, was a subject that has rarely received serious attention.
For perhaps the first time, Indian cities are treated not as administrative afterthoughts, but as core economic systems.
This marks a clear departure from earlier policy thinking, where cities were discussed mainly in terms of housing shortages, congestion, or welfare delivery, rather than as strategic assets.
The Survey recognises that urbanisation plays a vital role in accelerating growth and productivity by concentrating people, skills, capital, and infrastructure in ways that reduce transaction costs and improve efficiency.
Crucially, it also acknowledges that successful urbanisation is not measured by output alone, but by quality of life.
Cities that prioritise liveability, meaning clean air, walkability, safety, affordable housing, efficient mobility, green spaces, and access to culture and opportunity, are the cities that will attract and retain talent and sustain creativity.
(This perspective resonated deeply with me, since one of the courses I took during my undergraduate studies in the Liberal Arts was Town Planning and Urban studies, and I have never lost my fascination for the subject)
If this thinking carries meaningfully into budgeting and institutional reform, it could mark a long-overdue shift: from managing cities as problems to building them as platforms for India’s growth.
Compliments to the team that produced this document.
Now it needs to be translated into reality!