Everytime something nice is written about Vaibhav Suryavanshi, there are always these people who sour the occasion by saying that he is not fifteen and has done age fudging and all that.
Guys, the guy has gone through bone densitometry studies and his age has been medically proven.
Ok, you don’t want to believe it? That’s ok. What could he be? Sixteen or seventeen? The kid doesn’t have a hair on his face, at best he is 16 or 17 years old.
How does that change anything?
He is the most exciting teenager cricket has seen since Sachin almost four decades ago. The kid is dragging people to grounds and putting many others in-front of TV screens. Like a true entertainer. All this as a teenager.
So, for once, you all sour people, both in India and abroad, pipe down your negativity and enjoy what is one the most exciting sporting talents around.
#VaibhavSuryavanshi
One common issue with personalization in all LLMs is how distracting memory seems to be for the models. A single question from 2 months ago about some topic can keep coming up as some kind of a deep interest of mine with undue mentions in perpetuity. Some kind of trying too hard.
If a bowler had to be given the POTM, my pick would be @akshar2026. Got the three players who could have made a match out of it: Allen, Mitch and Philips!
#INDvNZ#WorldCup2026
STAY WITH ME.
A few years ago, a patient was referred to me because he was diagnosed with complicated cirrhosis. He had an infection which led to a condition called hepatic encephalopathy (brain failure due to high ammonia levels). The treatment largely involved ammonia reducing therapies. One drug was central to this - Rifaximin - a non-absorbable antibiotic that reduced ammonia in the body. I prescribed him Rifaximin for 6 weeks and advised him follow-up.
He came back to me, not after six weeks, but in 4 weeks, this time, in liver coma (worst stage of brain failure - due to very high ammonia). He spent two days in the ICU and six days in total in the hospital. His hospital bill was close to INR 80,000. He had no insurance and his wife borrowed the money from neighbors and friends to clear hospital dues.
Upon questioning, I found that he was not taking the Rifaximin drug I had prescribed. He was only on the other two drugs (one, a syrup called lactulose for improving ammonia clearance in gut). I was furious, because the patient spent a whole week unecessarily in the ICU and wasted so much money that he never had - just because he was "not compliant" to my orders. I decided it was time for me to school him a bit.
But I was wrong. He was compliant. He had purchased Rifaximin and was on it. For 15 days. Thereafter, he could not afford it. He was an autorickshaw driver who shuttled school children every morning and evening. He could hardly make ends meet. He had two children of his own. The Rifaximin brand I prescribed him was 42 rupees per tablet. He had to consume two a day - which would mean 2520 rupees a month. He just did not have that money - so he skipped it - to not compromise on other important matters - childrens education and food.
He was confused and scared about opting for a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, he was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not prescribed by me and two, he was "scared" that I would scold him for buying a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble.
I was confused and scared about prescribing a cheaper version of Rifaximin because one, I was unsure about the quality of Rifaximin that was not "a good promoted brand" and two, I was "scared" that his family would scold me for prescribing a cheaper Rifaximin and if that got him into trouble.
It is heartbreaking that many doctors still simply don’t trust generic medicines. Too often, they worry that these cheaper options are lower quality or might cause more problems than the big, famous brands. This fear leads them to prescribe expensive drugs instead, and the real tragedy is that it pushes vital healthcare out of reach for the ordinary people who need it most - like my patient.
This narrative, that generic drugs 'are never good' and that only big pharmaceutical marketed drugs are what works has been deeply ingrained into doctors and patients alike - I do not know by whom and since when. Looking back, these strong emotions were based on either opinions, testimonials or second- and third-hand information. Not evidence.
Like I said. Stay with me. This is life changing and will disrupt the drug market in India. Here are the results of The Citizens Generic vs. Brand Drugs Quality Project.
1/11
@BloodDonorsIn URGENT: O Negative Blood Group Needed Immediately!
The patient urgently requires O Negative blood at Narayana RN Tagore International Institute of Cardiac Sciences (RN Tagore Hospital), Mukundapur, Kolkata.
Ph;
1. Ravi Raj 7321915829
2. Abhishek kumar: 8434618449
You’ve basically given in to @IndiGo6E ‘s blackmail. They had enough time to prepare for this and deliberately did not. Isn’t passenger safety better when pilots get the rest they deserve ?
@Mohammed_Sherry Exactly, was playing with India yesterday. Bowling line up was Bumrah, Arshdeep, Hardik, sundar and Axar. All with original actions. Loved bowling!
@BigAntStudios The game is not running smoothly on Xbox series s what is this bigant studio there is no optimisation for xbox the game is so laggy and not playable solve this issue
@BigAntStudios The game is not running smoothly on Xbox series s what is this bigant studio there is no optimisation for xbox the game is so laggy and not playable solve this issue