Most dangerous habit in BTech:
• Studying just 1 day before exams
• Being busy without improving.
• Completing assignments without learning
• Watching tutorials instead of building
• Waiting for right time to start
• Prioritizing attendance over skills
• Copy-pasting projects
• Staying in same comfort zone for years
What a bizarre college I am in lol(Jadavpur University) : My RTI data regarding placements statistics for the already graduated batch gets leaked and then gets misused by dehati leftists and brainded seniors from my department whose work is to spread hatred against their own junior's by using misinformation through a illegal means of leaking confidential information against me, Also, in Student Elections, there are no cameras where vote counting happens, and instead of ballot boxes they’re using envelopes. Students are even openly clicking pictures of their voter slips and putting them on the internet alongside their college IDs during voting.
And on top of that, outside an NCC building, which comes under the Ministry of Defence, left-wing propaganda symbols are being made in its walls without any permission by unidentified people at night. That too when everyone knows that these same left elements oppose and get countered by India’s security forces to elimination lol.
No wonder they don’t have the courage to show their faces openly while covering the entire campus walls with their irrelevant propaganda.
The benefits of not eating three hours before bedtime extend beyond improving sleep; but are also harnessed in protecting the natural increase in parasympathetic activity at that time. @foundmyfitness on the Huberman Lab podcast out now
Never met such a nice guy @TheWolfKnightx
- Procastinates whole day.
- Prioritize family.
- Devotional.
- No bad words.
- Hate to discuss tech related things
- Saves water and electricity.
Never met such a nice guy @amanntwt
- Procastinates whole day.
- No GF.
- Prioritize family.
- Devotional.
- No bad words.
- Hate to discuss tech related things, Love to shitpost.
- Saves water and electricity.
And his story does not stand alone. It stands on the shoulders of a tradition, Bengali intellectual culture, that has arguably contributed more to the scientific and technical backbone of this nation than any other regional tradition and that deserves far greater national recognition than it receives. Consider what sits within or originates from this one state: IIT Kharagpur, the first IIT ever established in independent India. ISI Kolkata, the institution that gave the world foundational statistics. IISER Kolkata, Jadavpur University, and IIEST Shibpur, one of the oldest engineering colleges in Asia. NIT Durgapur, IIIT Kalyani, AIIMS Kalyani, Calcutta University, IIM Calcutta, and CSIR laboratories of national importance. This is not a cluster; it is a civilization of the intellect, concentrated in one place. One must be clear-eyed here: this legacy is entirely separate from the urban governance challenges of Kolkata, from political narratives of any kind, or from questions of development pace relative to Hyderabad or Bengaluru. Those are policy conversations. The brain of Bengal is a different matter altogether; it is a historical fact, a national asset, and something every Indian, regardless of where they are from, ought to take pride in and actively celebrate.
Rajesh Gopakumar: Physicist, Institution Builder, and the Quiet Force Behind India's Theoretical Science Renaissance.
Born and raised in Bengal, Rajesh Gopakumar taught himself the foundations of physics and mathematics with a rigor that earned him AIR 1 in IIT-JEE 1987, arguably the most competitive examination in the country. He chose physics at IIT Kanpur, then went on to Princeton for his PhD under Nobel Laureate David Gross, followed by a postdoctoral fellowship at Harvard. In an era when every top global university would have welcomed him with open arms, he chose to come home. At the Harish-Chandra Research Institute and later as Director of the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences (ICTS-TIFR), Bengaluru, he has done something rare and built an institution from the ground up into a world-class hub for fundamental research, while continuing to produce path-breaking work in string theory, gauge theories, and holography, including celebrated results co-authored with Cumrun Vafa that reshaped how physicists think about the deep connections between gravity and quantum field theory. A recipient of the Shanti Swarup Bhatnagar Prize and a fellow of India's leading science academies, Prof. Gopakumar represents something this country deeply needs more of a scientist of the highest global caliber who bet on India and then worked tirelessly to make that bet worth it for every young researcher who follows.
@JUMechTard@GunhaonKaDevta Your reply is perfect
Personally I’ve seen for some people change in habits and lifestyle produce better results than doctors and meds