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T: 1383
Everyone keeps telling me AI is about to take my job.
I'm a beginner, and after a few months of actually using it daily, here's what I think
the hype gets wrong.
The reality is less sci-fi and more… spreadsheet.
AI didn't replace my work. It replaced the boring 20% of it — the rewrites, the
formatting, the “can you summarize this” busywork I never wanted to do anyway.
What surprised me as a beginner:
1. It's confidently wrong. A lot. You still have to know enough to catch it.
2. The magic isn't the model. It's how clearly you ask. Vague in, vague out.
3. The people winning with AI aren't the smartest. They're the ones who just started.
The hype says: AI will think FOR you.
The reality is: AI thinks WITH you — and only if you bring something to the table.
So no, I'm not worried about a robot taking my seat.
I'm more worried about the person next to me who learned to use these tools while I
waited for the hype to die down.
Still early. Still figuring it out. But the gap between “curious about AI” and “actually uses
AI” is the most real thing I've seen all year.
If you're a beginner too — what's one task AI quietly took off your plate
T:1388
YRF promised a bold female-led spy thriller — audiences got recycled plot logic, an illogical villain reveal, and a script that needed several more drafts. The Spy Universe just wrote its own obituary.
#Alpha#AlphaReview#YRFSpyUniverse
T:1388
YRF promised a bold female-led spy thriller — audiences got recycled plot logic, an illogical villain reveal, and a script that needed several more drafts. The Spy Universe just wrote its own obituary.
#Alpha#AlphaReview#YRFSpyUniverse
T: 1387
Kolkata's Suhrawardy Avenue is now Gopal Patha Sarani. The man who defended Hindus during the 1946 Direct Action Day riots finally gets his place in the city's map. History doesn't forget — even when politics tries to. A long-overdue correction.
@NewsAlgebraIND If the moral of this post is that arrogance does not lasts long, then that logic will catch-up to @BJP4India as well sooner that later.
T: 1386
🗓️ #ThisDayThatYear | June 22 in Indian History 🇮🇳
📜 1555 — Emperor Humayun declared his son Akbar as his heir apparent.
🔫 1897 — The Chapekar brothers, Damodar & Balkrishna, shot British officer W.C. Rand in Pune, in response to brutal anti-plague measures.
🛰️ 2016 — #ISRO scripted history by launching a record 20 satellites in a single mission aboard PSLV-C34.
From empire to independence to space — one date, many milestones.
#IndianHistory #OnThisDay #ISRO #GoodMorningMonday
T: 1385
What JD Vance has said is not the problem, its the symptom.
A year ago, the idea of a Pakistani Army chief getting a solo lunch at the White House — no civilian government chaperone, no pretense of routine diplomacy — would have seemed far-fetched. Today it's old news. Field Marshal Asim Munir has gone from the man India accused of presiding over a terror-sponsoring military establishment to a fixture in Washington's inner circle, credited publicly by President Trump for everything from the May 2025 ceasefire to brokering US-Iran talks in Tehran and Islamabad.
New Delhi's response to all this has been consistent in one way only: it keeps choosing restraint over clarity.
The pattern is the problem: After Operation Sindoor, the government's energy went into denying any US role in the ceasefire — a bilateral-resolution narrative aimed at preserving India's long-standing position against third-party mediation. Fair enough as far as it goes. But denying Washington credit is not the same as confronting Washington's choices. While MEA statements stayed carefully procedural, Trump kept repeating, in public, that he'd intervened to stop a war — and kept rewarding Munir for "not going to war," as though restraint from a state actively named in connection with cross-border terrorism were a diplomatic favor rather than a baseline expectation.
Where are India's red lines, actually stated?Compare this to how India has reacted, even rhetorically, to far smaller provocations in the past. Today, the Army chief can say in a domestic speech that Pakistan must decide whether it wants to be "part of geography or history," while the Ministry of External Affairs offers nothing nearly as sharp when an American president hosts the same army's chief for lunch, thanks him publicly, and lets him reposition himself as a indispensable regional mediator. That gap — assertive language for domestic consumption, calibrated silence for Washington — is the tell. It suggests the government is more worried about friction with Trump than about the signal its silence sends, both to Washington and to Rawalpindi.
This isn't just about hurt feelings: It has material consequences. Pakistan's military leadership has used its rehabilitated US relationship to extract real things — renewed counterterrorism cover, trade conversations, and a seat at the table on Iran — while continuing arms cooperation with China that was on full display during Operation Sindoor itself. Meanwhile India's own trade friction with Washington has dragged on, and tariff disputes have done more to define the relationship this year than any shared strategic vision. If "strategic autonomy" means anything, it should include the willingness to tell a partner, plainly, that fêting a figure India holds responsible for sponsoring terrorism is incompatible with claiming India as a strategic priority.
None of this means torching the relationship: The US partnership remains too important — on China, on technology, on trade — to manage through public rupture, and Washington's Pakistan outreach isn't going away regardless of what India says. But there's a wide spectrum between rupture and silence, and India has barely tested it. A clear, sustained, and public articulation of what is and isn't acceptable — not just in background briefings to friendly columnists, but on the record — costs little and signals a lot.
Quiet diplomacy has its place. But quiet should be a choice, not a default born of reluctance to upset Trump. Right now it reads like the latter.
T: 1384
Retirement was never really Ojas Gambheera's thing. Pawan Kalyan's team confirmed 'They Call Him OG 2' — cameras roll only after November...... Even gangsters apparently need a notice period. #TheyCallHimOG#OG2
T: 1382
Even the PM's convoy yielded right of way today — Modi waited 45 mins at Delhi Airport so NEET-UG re-exam students wouldn't get stuck in traffic. Exam stress: 1, commute stress: 0. #NEETUG2026#PMModi
@MSS_Unfiltered Why does the Govt not make four or five regional examination bodies with one syllabus say NCERT.WHY does the Govt do what it can not do?Be afraid of mass anger,who severe it may be .
T: 1380
What a shame for the education system that #NEET 2026 had to be cancelled due to a paper leak. An examination meant to reward hard work, discipline, and merit has instead become a symbol of administrative failure and institutional distrust. The real damage goes beyond the cancellation of one examination. It erodes public faith in the credibility of national institutions. Students begin questioning whether merit still matters, while parents lose confidence in the system’s ability to ensure fairness and transparency.
@NewsAlgebraIND#AIDMK is all set for political obvilion having lost 2 consecutive assembly and lok sabha elections. This is the right time for @BJP4TamilNadu to bring back #Annamalai as in-charge and occupy the political vaccum as the main opposition party to #TVK.
@NewsAlgebraIND It will be interesting to understand the Russian version of the gains of this war. The Russian narrative of success would likely include preventing further eastward expansion of NATO into what Russia considers its strategic sphere of influence.
@NewsAlgebraIND He was confident in 2014, 2019 and 2024 as well. @RahulGandhi is a day dreamer and lives in his own imaginary La La Land. Let the kid enjoy.
@PranavaBhardwaj To add to that they are thinking increasing the number of matches to 94 from next season. #BCCI is killing cricket enthusiasm in India.