Imtiaz Ali said how can anyone say they are comfortable in Burqa?
"You have been victimized in your mind"
As expected, Liberals and Islamists have started attacking him.
So much love for Burqa?
This book was published in 1916 by Benaras Hindu University...
Not available now. All the copies got destroyed. One copy was available in the library of California University, which has been digitised by Microsoft. It is a beautiful introduction to Hinduism, without any school affiliations. It is especially suited to youth. You may go through at leisure. It has 304 pages and share it further with your known younger generation kids. This is a rare book on “Sanatana Dharma” - Please READ and share it to our youth group as much as possible... https://t.co/pKkRmqtP6d
In a landmark judgment on May 22, 2026, the Delhi High Court held Google liable for trademark infringement.
The case was between Hindware and Google. The court held that, by allowing competitors of Hindware to purchase the keyword “Hindware” (a trademarked name) through Google Ads, Google enabled trademark infringement. The court said that “Hindware” is not a generic English word but a specific brand trademark. By allowing competitors to place ads on that keyword, Google is enabling competitors to divert traffic that should have legitimately gone to Hindware.
This has been a big challenge for companies, both big and small. Even today, if you search for Zerodha, you will see search results from competitors. This has been happening for well over a decade.
Although it is hard to quantify, we have lost a lot of business to this. Think about what happens. Whenever someone searches for "Zerodha", the traffic should rightfully come to Zerodha. But what often happens is that the first couple of results on Google Search are ads, leading the customer to a competitor's website. In the process, we lose business that should have come to us.
This is made worse by the fact that we do not advertise.
There is also an even more ironic thing here. A lot of brands, just to capture the traffic that should have come to them organically, end up bidding on their own keywords. Think about it. If you own a business and have a trademarked name for your business, you still have to pay Google just to hopefully make your name too expensive for your competition to run ads on it.
But now, thanks to the Delhi High Court judgment, we have the option of taking legal action whenever we come across instances of other companies squatting on our keyword.
The other brilliant part about this judgment is that it levels the playing field. And this matters even more for startups, who are already starved for resources and have the odds stacked against them. The last thing they need is for competitors to bid on their brand keywords and steal their traffic.
This judgment now opens up a route for legal recourse whenever such deceptive practices occur.
While keyword squatting is most visible in Google web results, it is an even bigger problem when it comes to app stores. Whenever someone searches for your brand, the first couple of results, both above and below your app listing, often tend to be those of your competitors. And in the case of app stores, I think the ads are even more problematic. When a user clicks on an app-store ad, they often end up installing an app. That is a much higher-commitment action than clicking on a competitor’s web search result and then just closing the page. Because the user has installed an application, the conversions, at least anecdotally, tend to be much higher.
Again, brands that do not advertise are at the receiving end of this. So I welcome this ruling and hope this changes the unfair norms we've been living by for so long.
This guy literally broke down how to master Claude Code (even if you haven't coded before):
05:28 - Level 1: Why you start with Lovable
08:04 - Level 2: The Lovable + Claude Code bridge
28:37 - Level 3: Cursor + Vercel for real production
41:17 - Level 4: Agents, skills, and CLAUDE.md
42:50 - The CLAUDE.md memory file explained
45:24 - The PM orchestrator agent pattern
53:26 - How AI-native teams spend 50% of their time
01:01:33 - Why 90% of European PMs are still non-technical
01:07:45 - The Monday morning move
The Lotus blooms in West Bengal!
The 2026 West Bengal Assembly Elections will be remembered forever. People's power has prevailed and BJP's politics of good governance has triumphed. I bow to each and every person of West Bengal.
The people have given a spectacular mandate to BJP and I assure them that our Party will do everything possible to fulfil the dreams and aspirations of the people of West Bengal. We will provide a Government that ensures opportunity and dignity to all sections of society.
@BJP4Bengal
Facing an imposing supreme court bench, Senior Advocate @jsaideepak takes us on an incredible journey in constitutional law to bolster his case for overturning Sabarimala judgment. He is fighting ferociously for dharma, armed with nothing but his intellect.
Watch, and be amazed:
Quick commerce is a $5.4B market in India growing at 70-80% CAGR. Blinkit, Zepto, Instamart collectively do 4M+ orders a day. But the interesting story isn’t the business.
It’s what it did to how Indians buy things. 7 shifts nobody saw coming.
1/ 73% of q-com orders happen outside traditional shopping hours. 10pm-1am is now peak for ice cream, condoms, skincare, snacking. Three years ago this buying window didn’t exist. An entirely new consumption slot was invented and nobody’s talking about it.
2/ ₹149 mini sunscreen outsells ₹599 full size on Blinkit. The full bottle is a commitment. The mini is a maybe. Consumers are treating q-com like a sample store. Brands without trial SKUs are invisible.
3/ Brand loyalty disappeared in grocery. Search “atta” on Zepto. 8 brands sorted by delivery time. The one in the nearest dark store wins. Not the one your mom used. For staples, proximity replaced preference. Terrifying if you’re a legacy FMCG brand.
4/ Kirana shops aren’t losing staples. They’re losing the ₹50-200 impulse buy. The chocolate, the chips, the random face mask. The small purchases that used to happen because you were already in the store. That foot traffic is gone and it’s not coming back.
5/ Men started buying skincare. The anonymity of tapping “face wash” on Blinkit vs asking for it at a medical store broke a psychological barrier nobody was talking about. Embarrassment was the barrier all along. Men’s grooming on q-com is growing faster than any other beauty subcategory.
6/ Blinkit and Zepto aren’t delivery companies anymore. They’re media businesses. Blinkit’s ad revenue grew 220% YoY. Both crossed ₹1,000 Cr in annual ad revenue by FY25. Ads are now 15% of Blinkit’s total revenue. If you’re thinking of q-com as just a listing channel, you’re missing the point.
7/ The delivery bar moved for everyone. If Zepto delivers in 10 minutes, why does your D2C site take 5 days? The consumer doesn’t separate “q-com speed” from “normal speed.” Every brand shipping in 3-5 days is now competing against a 10-minute standard they didn’t set and can’t match.
Quick commerce didn’t just create a new delivery channel. It rewired how 50 million Indians think about buying things
Christopher Nolan just showed Trojan Horse footage from The Odyssey at CinemaCon. The business math behind this movie is wild.
$250 million budget. His most expensive film ever. First movie shot entirely on IMAX 70mm cameras. No franchise, no sequel, no superhero IP. The source material is a 3,000-year-old poem.
IMAX opening weekend tickets went on sale a full year before release. They sold out in 12 hours. $1.5 million in ticket revenue before a single TV spot aired.
The trailer pulled 121.4 million views in 24 hours. More than Universal's Wicked sequel. More than double what Oppenheimer's first trailer did in the same window.
Today's footage confirmed Charlize Theron is playing Calypso, the nymph who kept Odysseus trapped on her island for seven years. The scene opens with Damon asking her "How long have I been here?" He can't remember if he had a wife or a son.
That's pure Nolan. Starting the story in captivity, with a man who's lost his own identity. The same filmmaker who opened Memento backwards.
The cast is absurd: Damon, Holland, Hathaway, Pattinson, Zendaya as Athena, Lupita Nyong'o, Theron, Bernthal as Menelaus, Safdie as Agamemnon, Mia Goth, Leguizamo, Elliot Page, Travis Scott. Nolan joked it would be faster to list who isn't in it.
His last five films averaged $680 million worldwide. Oppenheimer made $976 million with an R rating and a three-hour runtime about a physicist.
Every studio spent the last decade convinced original films can't open big. Nolan's response: adapt the oldest story in Western literature. Homer's been in public domain for about 2,500 years.
Nolan IS the franchise. His name on a poster does what a superhero logo used to do. Universal figured this out when they signed him after Warner Bros let him walk over a streaming window dispute. Twenty years of partnership, gone.
July 17. IMDb's most anticipated film of 2026. Built from a poem your ninth-grade English teacher assigned.
Good skin isn’t complicated.
Just the right ingredients, and zero excuses.
Powered by Niacinamide, Kakadu Plum, Aloe Vera & more, this lightweight Skin Syrup hydrates, controls oil, and keeps your skin looking sharp all day.
Simple routine. Strong results.
#MudAndMilk
Is there a Hitler Road in Tel Aviv?
My views, on why the problem is not remembering Tipu Sultan; the problem is eulogising him, celebrating him - a man who destroyed hundreds of temples, converted thousands of Hindus, and claimed annihilation of the infidel was his sacred duty.
Dharma has no concept of "conversion."
It is a way of life - lived, practiced, and realized through karma (conduct), dharma (duty), and jñāna (understanding).
In Dharma, one walks the path, not "joins" a religion.
No founder, no forced belief, no entry ritual only self-realization and righteous living.
Reviving Recording.
Respecting Bharat's Civilizational Memory...