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First time co-host Jan Kleinert joins Mark Mirchandani this week to talk about database observability and the cool tools that make it possible. Morgan McLean and Nimesh Bhagat describe database observability, which uses metrics, logs, and other tools to help users understand the health of your database. We talk about Object Relational Mappers and the challenges with using these for debugging database performance. SQL Commenter helps database observability in two ways: it is both a library and a standard, Nimesh tells us. He describes the process for us, detailing exactly how SQL Commenter effects projects. Recently, SQL Commenter was donated to OpenTelemetry to augment the observability offerings, create an application standard, and make it easier for developers to use a variety of different tools and languages. Engineers can get end-to-end traces no matter which database technologies they use. Morgan tells us about Splunk and how information from SQL Commenter is taken into Splunk and used. Backend data like metrics from Cloud Monitoring and client libraries can be correlated together with SQL Commenter and brought into Splunk for full stack observability. Nimesh offers client examples to help us understand how these useful tools integrate for optimal observability. He tells us about the databases and ORMs supported by SQL Commenter. Our guests and co-host Jan give tips to help our listeners get started with SQL Commenter and talk about what they're looking forward to in the future of observability. Nimesh Bhagat Nimesh is a product manager at Google Cloud, he leads Database Observability. He has worked across engineering and product roles, building highly available and high performance enterprise infrastructure used by Fortune 500 companies. His passion lies in combining powerful infrastructure with simple user experience so that every business and developer can build software at scale and velocity. Morgan McLean Morgan is Director of Product Management at Splunk and co-creator of OpenCensus / OpenTelemetry. Cool things of the week Google Cloud Innovators site Redesigning the Cloud SDK + CLI for easier development blog GCP Podcast Episode 291: Redesigning the Cloud SDK and CLI with Wael Manasra and Cody Oss podcast What is Active Assist? video GCP Podcast Episode 235: Active Assist with Chris Law + MariaDB SkySQL with Robert Hedgepeth podcast Interview SQL Commenter site Sequelize site SQL Alchemy site ADO.net site GCP Podcast Episode 247: Cloud SQL Insights with Nimesh Bhagat podcast OpenTelemetry site Splunk site Cloud Monitoring site Cloud Spanner site Cloud SQL site Cloud Trace site Sqlcommenter now extending the vision of OpenTelemetry to databases blog Hosts Mark Mirchandani and Jan Kleinert
Learn about the life, work, struggles, and achievements of Shakuntala Bhagat. For show notes and more information check out our website https://www.shebuildspodcast.com/episodes/shakuntalabhagat
The Recitation of Gurbani Akhand Path sahib --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gsjhampur/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gsjhampur/support
Naam Bhagat Kai Pran Adhar, ਨਾਮੁ ਭਗਤ ਕੈ ਪ੍ਰਾਨ ਅਧਾਰੁ (Sri Guru Granth Sahib Page 189 Sabad 458)
We bone up on our Indian history with three biopics about revolutionaries during the Indian independence movement. Show notes: The Indian independence movement lasted from 1857 to 1947, but keep in mind we are not experts in Indian history when listening to this episode... Episode 88: Playing With The Past: Gandhi and Rang De Basanti with Torrey Dance What we learned about India in history class (basically nothing) Cycles of revolution: the 1857 Sepoy Uprising inspires HRSA in the 20s and 30s, inspires the assassination of O'Dwyer in 1940 Mangal Pandey: The Rising The “cartridge controversy”, as explained in Flashman in the Great Game (George Macdonald Fraser, 1975) BSD performances “Good” English-language villain actors The Legend of Bhagat Singh Non-cooperation movement Is Ajay Devgn too old to play Bhagat Singh? (INTERVAL “Rasiya” from Mangal Pandey) Sardar Udham Vicky Kaushal is having an amazing year Shoojit Sircar's directorial range Jallianwala Bagh massacre Koozhangal (Pebbles) and India's submission to the Oscars Next time: 2021 year-end wrap-up Bollywood is For Lovers is a member of the Alberta Podcast Network Listen to Get Checkered Check out ATB The Future Of Find us on Apple Podcasts! and Stitcher! and audioBoom! and iHeartRadio! and Spotify! and Google Podcasts! Thank you to Becca Dalke for the artwork! Follow us on Twitter! Like us on Facebook! #MangalPandey, #AamirKhan, #KetanMehta, #RaniMukerji, #AmeeshaPatel, #TobyStephens, #KirronKher, #OmPuri, #TheLegendofBhagatSingh, #BhagatSingh, #AjayDevgn, #RajkumarSantoshi, #SushantSingh, #SardarUdham, #VickyKaushal, #ShoojitSircar, #Bollywood, #HindiCinema
This week on Historia Obscura: how an Indian-American war hero and scholar fought against race-based naturalization restrictions in an attempt to become a United States citizen. Special thanks to Patreon subscribers Barbara and Tom! Subscribe to my Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/historiaobscura! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/historiaobscura/message
In this katha by Giani Harbhajan Singh (Dhudhikey) narrates the life story of Bhagat Ravidas Ji Any issues please contact me on kam1825@hotmail.com I would also like to thank my sponsors who have donated towards the podcasts financially. Thank you with your continuing support this podcast can become self sustaining
On this special occasion of #Diwali on #TheHabitCoach Podcast, We are bringing you the hybrid episode where Ashdin Doctor will chat with Anupam Gupta - Research Consultant, Author & Podcaster and Gaurav Bhagat - Founder, Gaurav Bhagat Academy. In the first half, Ashdin and Anupam discuss various financial principles for better management and a set of wise advice on how to recover from a 'flat-broke' phase. In the second half, Ashdin and Gaurav talk about how to be consistent while maintaining our behaviour & habits and what habits Gen Z and Millennials can apply for better life decisions. All this and much more on this episode of #TheHabitCoach Podcast with Ashdin Doctor. You can listen to the entire conversation with Anupam Gupta here:Part 1: ( https://ivm.today/2YCzULH )Part 2: ( https://ivm.today/3loneQj )You can listen to the entire conversation with Gaurav Bhagat here:Part 1: ( https://ivm.today/3uvizjH )Part 2: ( https://ivm.today/3q5TUSm )You can listen to The Habit Coach Kannada Podcast here: ( https://ivm.today/3j0Libf )You can follow Anupam Gupta on social media:Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/b50 )Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/b_50/ )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/anupam9gupta/ )You can know more about Gaurav Bhagat: ( https://gauravbhagatacademy.com/ ) Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/gauravacademy )Facebook: ( https://m.facebook.com/gauravbhagatacademy ) Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/company/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/gbhagat )Send questions to Ashdin Doctor for The Habit Coach Hot Seat Below: ( https://forms.gle/13vgf4MAk7zYKBd38 )Check out the Awesome180 website: ( http://awesome180.com/ ) You can follow Ashdin Doctor on social media:Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/Ashdindoc )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashdin-doctor/ )Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/ashdindoc/ )Facebook: ( https://www.facebook.com/ashdin.doc.9 )You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app.
On this episode, Cyrus is joined by Gaurav Bhagat, Managing Partner at Gaurav Bhagat Academy, Entrepreneur, Certified Trainer, MD at Consortium Gifts. Cyrus talks to Gaurav about he got started as an entrepreneur, Gaurav's riches to rags to riches story, how his father told him that they had lost all their money, how he started his first company when he was 19 years old, and tons more. They also talk about Gaurav's exuberant confidence, and he shares insights into plenty more about corporate life. They also discuss the economy and jobs post-COVID, investing in stocks in companies that you want to own or have a share in, the importance of entrepreneurship education in schools, the courses offered by GBA (Gaurav Bhagat Academy) how to demand what you're worth, the importance of having professional goals, and the importance of business storytelling, and more.Thanks SLAY Coffee for sponsoring this episode.Use Code - MYSLAY to get 50% OFF on SLAY CoffeeOrdering lInks:-Zomato: https://bit.ly/SLAYxCyrusInstagram: https://bit.ly/SLAYOnInstaFollow Gaurav on Tiwtter: https://twitter.com/gauravb1976Subscribe to our new YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmY4iMGgEa49b7-NH94p1BQAlso, subscribe to Cyrus' YouTube channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UCHAb9jLYk0TwkWsCxom4q8AYou can follow Antariksh on Instagram @antariksht: https://instagram.com/antarikshtDo send in AMA questions for Cyrus by tweeting them to @cyrussaysin or e-mailing them at whatcyrussays@gmail.comDon't forget to follow Cyrus Broacha on Instagram @BoredBroacha (https://www.instagram.com/boredbroacha)In case you're late to the party and want to catch up on previous episodes of Cyrus Says you can do so at: www.ivmpodcasts.com/cyrussaysYou can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the new and improved IVM Podcasts App on Android: https://ivm.today/androidor iOS: https://ivm.today/ios
Pop Philosophy is back! This is the first episode of Pop Philosophy, Season 3, featuring scenes from the movie, Rang De Basanti. In this series, Prakhar breaks down the meaning and philosophical lessons, hidden in art forms of recent times, including movies, poems, books, etc. This episode will give you a detailed philosophical deep dive into a short dialogue by the movie character, Karan, who is playing the role of Bhagat Singh. Prakhar extracts some lessons on getting rid of distractions by finding out what is it that we truly want. Listen to it till the end and find out.You can also watch this episode on [Youtube.com/PrakharKePravachan]https://youtu.be/Sg6K1ToNQK0Art of ConversationWant to become a master in conversations? artofconversation.inFollow on Instagram@Prakhar Ke PravachanGet in touch:email: asim@pgradio.com
Twins, synchronicity, science, anomalies, and dark mysteries. Support the show Merch, book Music by Kevin MacLeod Read the full script. Reach out and touch Moxie on FB, Twit, the 'Gram or email. In 1940, a pair of twin boys, only three weeks old, were put up for adoption in Ohio. Separate families adopted each boy and coincidentally named both James, calling them Jim for short. They grew up never knowing anything about one another, but their lives were bizarrely similar. They each had a dog named Toy and in elementary school, each both was good at math, showed talent in woodshop, but struggled with spelling. But it was as they moved into adulthood that coincidences really started to pile up. My name... If one is good, two must be better, so today we were talking about twin on the first of a pair of twin episodes. Let's start with a quick review. Fraternal twins occur when two eggs are separately fertilized. They are genetically distinct, basically regular siblings that happened to be conceived at the same time. Or not. There's a rare circumstance called superfetation, where a woman ovulates while already pregnant and the second egg also gets fertilized. Multiple eggs being released during ovulation can sometimes result in heteropaternal superfecundation, meaning the eggs were fertilized by different men's sperm, creating fraternal twins with different fathers. Identical twins occur when a fertilized egg splits, creating two zygotes with the same cells. The splitting ovum usually produces identical twins, but if the split comes after about a week of development, it can result in mirror-image twins. Conjoined twins, what we used to call Siamese twins, can result from eggs that split most of the way, but not complete. Twins account for 1.5% of all pregnancies or 3% of the population. The rate of twinning has risen 50% in the last 20 years. Several factors can make having twins more likely, such as fertility therapy, advanced age, heredity, number of previous pregnancies, and race, with African women have the highest incidence of twins, while Asian women have the lowest. Twins have always been of great interest to scientists. There's simply no better way to test variable vs control than to have two people with identical DNA. Identical twins share all of their genes, while fraternal twins only share 50%. If a trait is more common among identical twins than fraternal twins, it suggests genetic factors are at work. "Twins studies are the only real way of doing natural experiments in humans," says Tim Spector, a professor of genetic epidemiology at Kings College, London. "By studying twins, you can learn a great deal about what makes us tick, what makes us different, and particularly the roles of nature versus nature that you just can't get any other way.” NASA was presented with a unique opportunity in the Kelly brothers, identical twins Scott, a current astronaut, and Mark, a retired astronaut. As part of the "Year in Space" project, which would see Scott spend 340 on the ISS, the brothers provided blood, saliva, and urine samples, as well as undergoing a battery of physical and psychological tests designed to study the effects of long-duration spaceflight on the human body. According to Dr Spector, twin studies are currently underway in over 100 countries. Working with data and biological samples in the TwinsUK Registry, Spector's team has found more than 600 published papers showing a clear genetic basis for common diseases like osteoarthritis, cataracts and even back pain. "When I started in this field, it was thought that only 'sexy' diseases [such as cancer] were genetic," Spector says. "Our findings changed that perception." Back on our side of the pond, the Michigan State University Twin Registry was founded in 2001 to study genetic and environmental influences on a wide range of psychiatric and medical disorders. One of their more surprising findings is that many eating disorders such as anorexia may not be wholly to blame on societal pressured by may actually have a genetic component to them. "Because of twins studies,” says co-director Kelly Klump, “we now know that genes account for the same amount of variability in eating disorders as they do in schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. We would have never known that without twins studies." On the topic of body-fat, a LSU study by Claude Bouchard in 1990 overfed a dozen young male twins by 1,000 calories a day for three months. Although every participant gained weight, the amount of weight, and more importantly for the study, fat varied considerably, from 9-29lbs/4-13kg. Twins tended to gain a similar amount of weight and in the same places as each other, but each pair differed from the other pairs in the test. While some twin studies, like Year In Space, are famous, others are infamous. If you're worried where this topic is going, don't be. We're not talking about Joseph Mengele or the Russian conjoined twins, Masha and Dasha, though they may show up next week. Twin studies helped create the thinking and even the word “eugenics.” Francis Galton, a half-cousin of Charles Darwin, was one of the first people to recognize the value of twins to study inherited traits. In his 1875 paper, "The History of Twins," Galton used twins to estimate the relative effects of nature versus nature, a term he is credited with coining. Unfortunately, his firm belief that intelligence is a matter of nature led him to become a vocal proponent of the idea that "a highly gifted race of men" could be produced through selective breeding and that unsuitable people should be prevented from reproducing. The word “eugenics” came up a lot during the Nuremberg trials, if it wasn't already clear with adherents to the idea had in mind. More recently, in 2003, a psychology professor at the University of Virginia reviewed the research on the heritability of I.Q. He noticed that most of the studies that declared that I.Q. is genetic involved twins from middle-class backgrounds. When he looked at twins from poorer families, he found that the I.Q.s of identical twins varied just as much as the I.Q.s of fraternal twins. In other words, the impact of growing up poor can overwhelm a child's natural intelligence. Bonus fact: The trope of the evil twin can be traced back as far as 300 BCE, to the Zurvanite branch of Zoroastrianism, the world's oldest continuously-observed religion. Of all the things inherent to and special about twins, one of the most fascinating is twin language. You might have seen the adorable viral video of a pair of toddlers having an animated conversation in their twin language. If you want to bust out your Latin, it's cryptophasia, a form of idioglossia, an idiosyncratic language invented and spoken by only one person or very few people. It was a struggle not to throw myself head-first down the idioglossia rabbit hole; maybe for a later episode. Twin speak, or even sibling speak has existed, for as long as human language, but has only been seriously studied for the last few decades, not only to determine how the languages develop but to see if speaking a twin language could hamper the children learning their parents' language. The reason twins are more likely than other sibling pairs to create their own language is less interesting than psychic phenomena - twins spend a lot of time together, being built-in companions, and are at the same developmental stage. They unconsciously work together to build their language by imitating and pretending to understand one another, reinforcing their use of the language. This can weaken their incentive to learn to speak to everyone else--they already have someone to talk to. Some researchers advocate treating cryptophasia as early as possible. According to Oxford neuropsychologist Dorothy Bishop, twins often get less intervention from speech therapists than nontwins. “People often assume that it's normal for twins to have funny language, and so they don't get a proper assessment and diagnosis. And then, when they are identified, they are often treated together as a unit, and so each gets half the attention of the professionals working with them.” When doctors first began examining cryptophasic children, they discovered that the language isn't created out of nothing, but is made up of mispronounced words they've heard or references that only work inside their family. It's usually not a language at all. According to Karen Thorpe, a psychologist with Queensland University of Technology, you can think of it like “conversations between married couples where words are invented and abbreviated or restricted codes are used because full explanations are redundant.” That absolutely happens here. My husband and I talk like kids in a tree fort clubhouse. But sometimes, just sometimes, a full-blown language does develop, complete with syntax and totally independent of the language spoken at home. The syntax of a true twin language doesn't arise from mistakes made while learning the family's language. It's similar to the syntax seen in deaf children who create their own sign language when not taught to sign. This syntax could “gives us a potential insight into the nature of language” and mankind's “first language,” says linguist Peter Bakker. Twin languages play fast and loose with word order, putting subjects, verbs, and objects wherever, but always putting the most important item first, which makes sense. Negation, making something negative, is used as the first or last word of the statement, regardless of how the parental language handles negation. It's almost like a Spanish question mark, letting you know where the sentence is going. Verbs aren't conjugated--go is go, regardless of it's attached to I, he/she, us, or them. There are also no pronouns, like he, she, or they, only the proper nouns. There is also no way to locate things in time and space; everything just is. If you're a fan of Tom Scott's language series on YouTube, he's started making them again. If not, start with “Fantastic Features We Don't Have In The English Language.” I'll put a link to it in the show notes. If I forget, or you want to tell me what you thought, Soc Med. Breakroom Most children stop using private languages on their own or with minimal intervention, which is good, according to psychologists, because the longer they practice cryptophasia, the worse they do in tests later. If you remember nothing else I say ever, remember that correlation does not equal causation. Cryptophasia could be a symptom of an underlying handicap and that's the cause of the low test scores. This simple-structured language is fine for two or a few people, but once there are more people to talk to or more things to talk about, you're going to need some more features, “unambiguous ways to distinguish between subject and object,” Bakker says. “In the twin situation these can be dispensed with, but not in languages in which it is necessary to refer to events outside the direct situation.” So do twin languages really offer insight into mankind's first language? Could a primitive society have functioned as a cohesive unit with a language that can only refer to what can be seen at that moment? That's what linguists are studying, but UC-Santa Barbara's Bernard Comrie adds the asterisk that this research into the infancy of spoken language is still a baby itself. “First we were told that creole languages [that is, a distinct language that develops from the meeting a two or more languages] would provide us with insight into ‘first language,' then when that didn't pan out interest shifted to deaf sign language (also with mixed results)—I guess twin language will be the next thing.” It's not an easy scientific row to hoe. Twin languages come and go quickly as the children develop hearing their parents' language much more than their twin language. They might keep speaking their twin language if they were very isolated, like two people in a Nell situation or that Russian family who lived alone for 40 years, but we'll file that idea under “grossly unethically and probably illegal.” Not that it hasn't been tried. Herodotus tells us of what is considered the first every psychological experiment, when Pharaoh Psammetichus I in the sixth century BCE wanted to know if the capacity for speech was innate to humans and beyond that, what language would that be. He ordered two infants to be raised by a shepherd hermit who was forbidden to speak in their presence. After two years the children began to speak; the word that they used most often was the Phrygian word for bread. Thus, Psammetichus concluded that the capacity for speech is innate, and that the natural language of human beings is Phrygian. Similar experiments were conducted by Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II in the 12th century CE who ordered children to be raised by caretakers forbidden to speak to them and 15th century James I of Scotland who ordered children raised exclusively by a deaf-mute woman, which was repeated by 16th century Mughal Indian Emperor Akbar, among others. I shouldn't have to tell you that they were all based on dubious methodology and soaking in confirmation bias. A less-terrible test was done in the 20th century by British ethologist, or animal behavior scientist, William H. Thorpe, who raised birds in isolation to determine which songs are innate. One of the best-known cases a negative impact from cryptophasia is the Kennedy sisters of San Diego, Grace and Virginia, of Poto and Cabengo, as they called each other. They created a media whirlwind in 1970s when it was reported that they only spoke their twin language, to the complete exclusion of English, at the rather advanced age of 6. “Twin Girls Invent Own Language,” “Gibberish-Talking Twins,” “Like a Martian” the headlines read. Here is a clip of the girls speaking and sadly this is the best audio quality I could find. Grace and Virginia had suffered apparent seizures as infants, leading their parents to conclude that the girls had been left mentally handicapped. Their parents opted to keep them inside and away from other children, leaving them mostly in the care of a laconic grandmother who often left them to their own devices. They seemed like the next big thing in language-creation studies, but on closer examination, it was discovered that, like most cryptophasics, the girls were just very badly, and very quickly, mispronouncing English and German, the languages spoken at home. Adding to their disappointment, when scientists tried to use the girls' words to converse with them, the girls couldn't stop laughing. Grace and Virginia were also cleared of their parents mis-labeling them as intellectually handicapped. Both were found to have relatively normal IQs, for as much good as IQ tests are, which is very little, but that's another show. The girls eventually underwent speech therapy and learned regular English, though their language skills were a bit stunted, even into adulthood. identical twins come from a fertilized egg that splits. If the zygote splits most of the way, but not all, it results in conjoined twins. Or if the zygotes collide and fuse, science isn't really sure. Thus conjoined twins are always identical, meaning the same gender. Why am I pointing that out? I met two moms of twins at the She PodcastsLive conference who regularly have people ask them if their identical twins are the same gender. This is why we need sex ed in school. You'll also notice I'm not using the term Siamese twins. That term comes from Chang & Eng Bunker, who were born in Siam, modern day Thailand, in 1811, connected by a band of tissue at the chest. It's not offensive per e, but just doesn't apply to anyone not born in Siam, so people have stopped using it. Conjoined twins occur once every 2-500,000 live births, according to the University of Minnesota. About 70% of conjoined twins are female, though I couldn't find a reason or theory why. 40 to 60% of these births are delivered stillborn, with 35% surviving only one day. The overall survival rate is less than 1 in 4. Often, one twin will have birth defects that are not conducive to life and can endanger the stronger twin. Conjoined twins are physically connected to one another at some point on their bodies, and are referred to by that place of joining. Brace yourself while I wallow in my medical Latin. The most common conjoinments are thoracopagus (heart, liver, intestine), omphalopagus (liver, biliary tree, intestine), pygopagus (spine, rectum, genitourinary tract), ischiopagus (pelvis, liver, intestine, genitourinary tract), and craniopagus (brain, meninges). 75% are joined at the chest or upper abdomen, 23% are joined at the hips, legs or genitalia, 2% are joined at the head. If the twins have separate organs, chances for separation surgery are markedly better than if they share the organs. As a rule, conjoined twins that share a heart cannot be separated. Worldwide, only about 250 separation surgeries have been successful, meaning at least one twin survived over the long term, according to the American Pediatric Surgical Association. The surgical separation success rate has improved over the years, and about 75 percent of surgical separations result in at least one twin surviving. The process begins long before the procedure, with tests and scans, as well as tissue expanders, balloons inserted under the skin and slowly filled with saline or air to stretch the skin, so there will be enough skin to cover the area where the other twin's body used to be. It requires a whole hospital full of specialties to separate conjoined twins, from general surgeons, plastic and reconstructive surgeons, neurosurgeons, neonatologists, cardiologists, advanced practice nurses, and maternal-fetal medicine specialists, among others. In fact, the longest surgery of all time was a conjoined twin separation. Separation surgeries often last an entire day; this one required 103 hours. If they started at 8am Monday, the team finished the surgery at 3pm Thursday. In 2001, a team of 20 doctors at Singapore General Hospital worked in shifts to separate Ganga and Jamuna Shrestha, 11-month-old twins conjoined at the head. Not only did the girls share a cranial cavity, their brains were partially fused. Each tiny brain had hundreds of bitty blood vessels, each of which had to be traced and identified as belonging to one or the other of the girls. Their brains were not only connected, they were wrapped around each other like a helix. Plus, each twin's skull needed to be reshaped and added to, using a blend of bone material and Gore-Tex fibers. Both babies survived the surgery. Sadly, Ganga died of meningitis at age 7, but Jamuna has gone on to live a healthy life and attend school. We interrupt this podcast script for an exciting article. Meaning I was almost done writing it, then I found something I had to go back and include. There was another pair of conjoined twins named Ganga and Jamuna, this pair born in 1970 in West Bengal. The pairing of the names makes sense when you learn that the Ganga and Jamuna are sacred rivers. The sisters are ischio-omphalopagus tripus, meaning joined at the abdomen and pelvis. They have two hearts and four arms, but share a set of kidneys, a liver and a single reproductive tract. Between then they have three legs, the third being a nine-toed fusion of two legs, which was non-functional and they kept that one under their clothing. They can stand, but they cannot walk and crawl on their hands and feet, earning them the show name "The Spider Girls". Managed by their uncle while on the road with the Dreamland Circus, they exhibit themselves by lying on a charpoy bed, talking to the spectators who come to look at them. They earned a good living, making about $6/hr, compared to the average wage in India of $.40. Ganga and Jamuna have two ration cards for subsidized grain, though they eat from the same plate. They cast two votes, but were refused a joint bank account. They also share a husband, Gadadhar, a carnival worker who is twenty years their senior. When asked which he loves more, Gadadhar replies, "I love both equally." In 1993, the twins had a daughter via Caesarean section, but the baby only lived a few hours. Though the sister would like to have children, doctors fear that pregnancy would endanger their lives. Doctors have offered them separation surgery, but they're not interested. They feel it would be against God's will, be too great of a risk, and put them out of a job. "We are happy as we are. The family will starve if we are separated." Not all parasitic twins are as obvious as a torso with arms and legs. The condition is called fetus in fetu, a parasitic twin developing or having been absorbed by the autosite twin. It's extremely rare, occurring only once in every 500,000 births and twice as likely to happen in a male. The question of how a parasitic twin might develop is one that currently has no answer. To say the fetuses in question are only partially developed is still overstating thing. They are usually little more than a ball of tissues with perhaps one or two recognizable body parts. One school of thought holds that fetus in fetu is a complete misnomer. Adherents contend that the alien tissue is not in fact a fetus at all, but a form of tumor, a teratoma, specifically. A teratoma, also known as a dermoid cyst, is a sort of highly advanced tumor that can develop human skin, sweat glands, hair, and even teeth. Some believe that, left long enough, a teratoma could become advanced enough to develop primitive organs. There have only been about 90 verified cases in the medical record. One reason fetus in fetu is rare is that the condition is antithetical to full-term development. Usually, both twins die in utero from the strain of sharing a placenta. Take 7 year old Alamjan Nematilaev of Kazakstan, who reported to his family abdominal pain and a feeling that something was moving inside him. His doctors thought he had a large cyst that needed to be removed. Once they got in there, though, doctors discovered one of the most developed cases of fetus in fetu ever seen. Alamjan's fetus had a head, four limbs, hands, fingernails, hair and a human if badly misshapen face. Fetus in fetu, when it is discovered, is usually found in children, but one man lived 36 years, carrying his fetal twin in his abdomen. Sanju Bhagat lived his whole life with a bulging stomach, constantly ridiculed by people in his village for looking nine months pregnant. Little did they know, eh? Fetus in fetu is usually discovered after the parasitic twin grows so large that it causes discomfort to the host. In Bhagat's case, he began having trouble breathing because the mass was pushing against his diaphragm. In June of 1999, Bhagat was rushed to Tata Memorial Hospital in Mumbai, India for emergency surgery. According to Dr. Ajay Mehta, "Basically, the tumor was so big that it was pressing on his diaphragm and that's why he was very breathless. Because of the sheer size of the tumor, it makes it difficult [to operate]. We anticipated a lot of problems." While operating on Bhagat, Mehta saw something he had never encountered. The squeamish may wish to jump30 and think about kittens, though if you've made it this far, you're cut from strong cloth. As the doctor cut deeper into Bhagat's stomach, gallons of fluid spilled out. "To my surprise and horror, I could shake hands with somebody inside," he said. "It was a bit shocking for me." One unnamed doctor interviewed in the ABC News story described what she saw that day in the operating room: “[The surgeon] just put his hand inside and he said there are a lot of bones inside,” she said. “First, one limb came out, then another limb came out. Then some part of genitalia, then some part of hair, some limbs, jaws, limbs, hair.” There was no placenta inside Bhagat -- the enveloped parasitic twin had connected directly to Bhagat's blood supply. Right after the surgery, Bhagat's pain and inability to breathe disappeared and he recovered immediately. Upon recovery from the surgery, in which his twin was removed, Bhagat immediately felt better. But he says that villagers still tease him about it. The story I was referring to was made into a plot point on AHS:FS, the tale of Edward Mordrake, the man with two faces. In 1895, The Boston Post published an article titled “The Wonders of Modern Science” that presented astonished readers with reports from the Royal Scientific Society documenting the existence of “marvels and monsters” hitherto believed imaginary. Edward Mordrake was a handsome, intelligent English nobleman with a talent for music and a peerage to inherit. But there was a catch. With all his blessings came a terrible curse. Opposite his handsome was, was a grotesque face on the back of his head. Edward Mordrake was constantly plagued by his “devil twin,” which kept him up all night whispering “such things as they only speak of in hell.” He begged his doctors to remove the face, but they didn't dare try. He asked them to simply bash the evil face in, anything to silence it. It was never heard by anyone else, but it whispered to Edward all night, a dark passenger that could never be satisfied. At age 23, after living in seclusion for years, Edward Mordrake committed suicide, leaving behind a note ordering the evil face be destroyed after his death, “lest it continues its dreadful whispering in my grave.” This macabre story ...is just that, a story, a regular old work of fiction. “But, but, I've seen a photograph of him.” Sadly, no. You've seen a photo of a wax model of the legendary head, Madame Toussad style. Don't feel bad that you were convinced. The description of the cursed nobleman was so widely accepted that his condition appeared in an 1896 medical encyclopedia, co-authored by two respected physicians. Since they recounted the original newspaper story in full without any additional details, gave an added air of authority to Mordrake's tale. “No, there's a picture of his mummified head on a stand.” I hate to puncture your dreams, but that's papier mache. It looks great, but the artist who made it has gone on record stating it was created entirely for entertainment purposes. If you were to look at that newspaper account of Mordrake, it would fall apart immediately. “One of the weirdest as well as most melancholy stories of human deformity is that of Edward Mordake, said to have been heir to one of the noblest peerages in England. He never claimed the title, however, and committed suicide in his twenty-third year. He lived in complete seclusion, refusing the visits even of the members of his own family. He was a young man of fine attainments, a profound scholar, and a musician of rare ability. His figure was remarkable for its grace, and his face – that is to say, his natural face – was that of Antinous. But upon the back of his head was another face, that of a beautiful girl, ‘lovely as a dream, hideous as a devil.'” What did we say at the top? Conjoined twins are identical, meaning among other things, the same gender. And that… though we'll finish up out story of the twin Jims. Their lives were so unbelievably similar, if you saw it in a movie, you'd throw your popcorn at the screen. Both Jims had married women named Linda, divorced them and married women named Betty. They each had sons that they named James Alan, though one was Alan and the other Allan. Both smoked, drove a Chevrolet, held security-based jobs, and even vacationed at the exact same Florida beach, though one assumes not at the same time. After being reunited at age 37, they took part in a study at University of Minnesota, which showed that their medical histories, personality tests, and even brain-wave tests were almost identical. Remember, you can always find… Thanks…
Optimizing or debugging database calls has to become as easy as optimizing your application code based on logs, metrics or traces your observability platform provides to developers. It has to be doable by the development and DevOps teams who are becoming more end-2-end responsible which includes new database services that are running in some managed cloud service.In this episode we hear from Nimesh Bhagat, Product Manager at Google, how modern database observability supports development and DevOps teams to better understand, optimize and operate their end-2-end service flow. A great project Nimesh has been working on is sqlcommenter which uses OpenTelemetry to continue distributed traces started in the application into the internals of the database engine.If you want to learn more check out the sqlcommenter documentation or the Google Podcast on Cloud SQL Insights.Show LinksNimesh on Linkedinhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/nimesh-bhagat-b062354/SQLCommenterhttps://cloud.google.com/blog/products/databases/sqlcommenter-merges-with-opentelemetrySQLCommenter Documentationhttps://google.github.io/sqlcommenter/Google Podcast on Cloud SQL Insightshttps://www.gcppodcast.com/post/episode-247-cloud-sql-insights-with-nimesh-bhagat/
This week on #TheHabitCoach, Host Ashdin Doctor continues Gaurav Bhagat, Founder of Gaurav Bhagat Academy, One of Asia's largest sales training and business mentorship academy. Ashdin and Gaurav talk about the various habits for Gen Z and Millenials. They discuss an interesting concept of 'C.A.P.E.S' and how to improve the quality of consistency. Further, they even chat about the relationship between spirituality and the Gen Z generation and how to make adaptability a habit. Tune in to this awesome episode to learn more about the elements of success. You can know more about Gaurav Bhagat: ( https://gauravbhagatacademy.com/ ) Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/gauravacademy )Facebook: ( https://m.facebook.com/gauravbhagatacademy ) Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/company/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/gbhagat )Send questions to Ashdin Doctor for The Habit Coach Hot Seat Below: ( https://forms.gle/13vgf4MAk7zYKBd38 )Check out the Awesome180 Habit Coach app: ( https://bit.ly/2XTBvfC )Website: Awesome180 ( http://awesome180.com/ )You can follow Ashdin Doctor on social media:Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/Ashdindoc )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashdin-doctor/ )Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/ashdindoc/ )Facebook: ( https://www.facebook.com/ashdin.doc.9 )You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app.
Welcome to this special episode on Once Upon A Time With Uttara under the SWAP story series - Stories With A Purpose. Today, on the occasion of Bhagat Singh's Jayanti, we will listen to the true story of this brave and noble soul, who laid down his life in the service of our country at the tender age of 23 years. Listen to this real-life hero's story now! Support us on https://www.buymeacoffee.com/storytimeuttara so we can keep creating more awesome stories for you! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/onceuponatimewithuttara/message
This week on #TheHabitCoach, Host Ashdin Doctor is in conversation with Gaurav Bhagat, Founder, Gaurav Bhagat Academy, One of Asia's largest sales training and business mentorship academy. They start the conversation with Gaurav's entrepreneurial journey, what are their own definition of 'habits', how to differentiate between habits & behaviours and share an important concept called 'tiny habits system'. Further, Ashdin and Gaurav discuss how celebrating little achievements can make a big impact on our lives and how to respond to any feedback. Tune in to this awesome episode to know which tiny habit is suitable for you. You can know more about Gaurav Bhagat: ( https://gauravbhagatacademy.com/ ) Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/gauravacademy )Facebook: ( https://m.facebook.com/gauravbhagatacademy ) Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/company/gauravbhagatacademy )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/gbhagat )Send questions to Ashdin Doctor for The Habit Coach Hot Seat Below: ( https://forms.gle/13vgf4MAk7zYKBd38 )Check out the Awesome180 Habit Coach app: ( https://bit.ly/2XTBvfC )Website: Awesome180 ( http://awesome180.com/ )You can follow Ashdin Doctor on social media:Twitter: ( https://twitter.com/Ashdindoc )Linkedin: ( https://www.linkedin.com/in/ashdin-doctor/ )Instagram: ( https://www.instagram.com/ashdindoc/ )Facebook: ( https://www.facebook.com/ashdin.doc.9 )You can listen to this show and other awesome shows on the IVM Podcasts app on Android: https://ivm.today/android or iOS: https://ivm.today/ios, or any other podcast app.
On 27th September, some of the interesting events that took place were: 1932: Legendary Film Director Yash Chopra was Born. 1932: Bhagat singh was born. Bhagat Singh was a charismatic Indian revolutionary, professing socialism and atheism. https://chimesradio.com http://onelink.to/8uzr4g https://www.facebook.com/chimesradio/ https://www.instagram.com/vrchimesradio/ Support the show: https://www.patreon.com/chimesradio See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Beautiful Satsang by Rashu Bhagat Aunty- Jai Guruji
Gaurav is Game Changer in the industry. He is the one who trains and incarnates the successful leader, making them run prominent businesses exuberantly. Well, we have find found the one magnanimity who is the solution finder, to colossal to trivial problems. Tune in to the episode to understand his concepts and ideologies which makes him so great and rewards him huge success.
Happy 75th Independence Day! It is hard to imagine that 75 years ago, India was ruled by another country. I have often heard about freedom fighters but apart from Gandhiji, most children of my age are not aware of others.In this episode, I will tell you about 5 such men and women and what they did for the country. I was shocked to hear how brave each of them was.If you like my show, leave a review on the podcast platform you are listening to me on. You can contact me on Instagram/Twitter @hellokidacity or write to me at hello@kidacity.clubJai Hind!
Tere Bhagat Sohey Sachai Darbare, ਤੇਰੇ ਭਗਤ ਸੋਹਹਿ ਸਾਚੈ ਦਰਬਾਰੇ (Sri Guru Granth Sahib Page 122 Sabad 294)
Santi K.M. Bhagat, MD, MPH, is a mother of a young adult with a chronic medical condition, a physician, and the founder of a grassroots, voluntary charitable organization, Physician-Parent Caregivers (PPC). PPC's health care and policy research and analysis uncovered a lack of systemic supports for young adults who grow up with childhood-onset health conditions. PPC seeks to advance policy change for young adults with chronic conditions in health care, education, work, society and government. Dr. Bhagat works at the interface of health policy, medicine, disability and advocacy to identify strategies that will enable young adults with chronic conditions to live full lives. Through PPC, she leads a national multistakeholder group of policy experts, physicians, disability experts and advocates, parents and young adults in meetings, workgroups and community building. She has co-chaired national multi-stakeholder roundtables, introduced state legislation, authored policy briefs and medical articles and held charity events. Dr. Bhagat fosters partnerships with leading national organizations and connects with young adults and parents in the community. PPC launched a young adult social movement Invisible Wave in 2020 to create a safe space for these young adults. In 2021, PPC's Higher Education bill for students with chronic conditions passed in the Maryland General Assembly. PPC was featured in JAMA's first piece on young adults with chronic conditions. Dr. Bhagat promotes policies based on the patient-physician relationship and person/family-centered design. The heart of her work is centered on giving a face and voice to these young adults and their families.
Bhagat Ji Where did you get this fearlessness From
Join us as we spread the word about the unexplained disappearance of Mayushi Bhagat! Mayushi was last heard from on May 1, 2019. Mayushi lived with her parents in Jersey City, NJ. Her father had texted her through WhatsApp around 12:30am on May 1 when she did not come home that night. She did text back, stating she was fine, would come home on May 3, and she did not want to be bothered. Mayushi did not come home on May 3 and that was the last anyone has heard from her. Mayushi is an Asian female, would be 26 years old at the time of the recording. She has brown eyes and black hair, is around 5'11” and 150-160 pounds. She was last seen wearing a black t-shirt and colorful pajama pants. Anyone with any information regarding Mayushi's disappearance or her current whereabouts are encouraged to call the Jersey City Police Department 201-547-5477.
Story time: 10: Dhanna Bhagat and Lord Krishna --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/milanshree/support
Story time: 5: Dhruv Bhagat. Dhruv left his palace to go do his Bhakti at tender age of 6 years. He is one who sat in Lord Vishnu's lap as his bhakat or devotee. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/milanshree/support
India's Partition and Kashmir - Dr. Mohan Bhagat is a longtime friend of PeaceVigil who lived through India's partition when he was a teenager. His family was visiting Kashmir at that time. He shares his experience with PeaceVigil co-founder Shirin. If you like this video, don't forget to subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPX-... WATCH NEXT:Ram Puniyani on Propaganda: https://youtu.be/U1MOBlbtixAWhat did Gandhi Stand for? https://youtu.be/w5Ax7qvxsfs Ambedkar on the caste system: https://youtu.be/QUFtjSO_KB8 0:00 Introduction2:38 What was partition like?6:08 Meeting the Mahatma9:35 Protecting minorities in Jammu and Kashmir10:32 Dr. Baghat's father 15:35 RSS and the Shakhas17:45 Targeted for supporting Muslims 20:02 Casteism in the Shakhas21:56 The refugee camps and violence25:40 Did you feel anger against Muslims?30:59 Article 37033:31 Manufacturing hate35:25 Indians in the US Capitol riots36:00 Lessons from partition41:26 Could anything have been done differently?47:03 Were people more pro or anti Gandhi?46:40 Would things be better without partition? 50:26 Dr. Bhagat sings
India's Partition and Kashmir - Dr. Mohan Bhagat is a longtime friend of PeaceVigil who lived through India's partition when he was a teenager. His family was visiting Kashmir at that time. He shares his experience with PeaceVigil co-founder Shirin. If you like this video, don't forget to subscribe here: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCPX-... WATCH NEXT:Ram Puniyani on Propaganda: https://youtu.be/U1MOBlbtixAWhat did Gandhi Stand for? https://youtu.be/w5Ax7qvxsfs Ambedkar on the caste system: https://youtu.be/QUFtjSO_KB8 0:00 Introduction2:38 What was partition like?6:08 Meeting the Mahatma9:35 Protecting minorities in Jammu and Kashmir10:32 Dr. Baghat's father 15:35 RSS and the Shakhas17:45 Targeted for supporting Muslims 20:02 Casteism in the Shakhas21:56 The refugee camps and violence25:40 Did you feel anger against Muslims?30:59 Article 37033:31 Manufacturing hate35:25 Indians in the US Capitol riots36:00 Lessons from partition41:26 Could anything have been done differently?47:03 Were people more pro or anti Gandhi?46:40 Would things be better without partition? 50:26 Dr. Bhagat sings
They gave everything for the nation, they wanted India to be free from a lot of evils - not only the British rule. Yet today we forget the sacrifices of #BhagatSingh, #Rajguru & #Sukhdev and their teachings. On this Shaheed Diwas - a look at their legacy, what they achieved at a very young age and the how the British were afraid of them - even when they were gone. *** Unlock MEMBER ONLY - Discord / Chats / Content PATREON - https://www.patreon.com/thedeshbhakt YOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmTM_hPCeckqN3cPWtYZZcg/join MERCH - https://kadakmerch.com/thedeshbhakt Chapter Heads : 00:00 - Prince of Martyrs 02:08 - Shaheed Diwas: The Story 07:22 - Lahore and Lenin: Hours before hanging 10:14 - Religion: The ‘toolkit' of propaganda 11:05 - Casteism: Bigger battle than freedom 11:42 - Communalism: A politician's toolkit 12:22 - Godi Media- Spiteful since 1928 13:14 - Economy: The antidote of hate 13:40 - Are we still Free? *** SUBSCRIBE / FOLLOW US *** YouTube: - https://youtube.com/thedeshbhakt Twitter :- https://twitter.com/thedeshbhakt Web - https://thedeshbhakt.in/ Instagram :- https://instagram.com/akashbanerjee.in Facebook :- https://www.facebook.com/akashbanerjee.in Podcast - https://anchor.fm/thedeshbhakt **More DeshBhakt Videos** The Deshbhakt Episodes: https://bit.ly/3eLgvLv INDIA IN EMERGENCY: https://bit.ly/3dM4Bj8 Bhakt Banerjee Rocks: https://bit.ly/2VuFQlf B&D Media and the Public: https://bit.ly/389jjzw Akash-Vaani: https://bit.ly/3eKvN3h Credits : Editor : Tushar Producer & writer : Avishrant Singh Resources : https://caravanmagazine.in/vantage/bhagat-singh-politics-nationalism - Kirti magazine bhagat singh https://theprint.in/pageturner/excerpt/bhagat-singh-wasnt-just-hanged-but-was-chopped-and-stuffed-in-sacks/626392/ https://www.newsclick.in/Bhagat-Singh-Ideas-Way-Struggle-Social-Justice-Against-Communalism https://theprint.in/india/governance/shaheed-bhagat-singh-the-freedom-fighter-everyone-loves/125769/ https://www.newsclick.in/How-Revolutionary-Freedom-Fighters-Faced-Their-Most-Difficult-Month https://www.newsclick.in/Sukhdev-Thapar-Portrait-of-a-Revolutionary https://caravanmagazine.in/vantage/bhagat-singh-politics-nationalism https://www.livemint.com/Sundayapp/wub3jPDUJXggzFNrljozfM/Ideas-for-a-truly-new-India-from-Bhagat-Singh.html --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thedeshbhakt/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thedeshbhakt/support
Bhagat Singh was an Indian revolutionary who inspired a generation of Indians to fight against the British rule. Till date his story is heard in every corner of India. He was also an atheist and he has written about his views on atheism in his book which I discuss in this podcast.
We are uploading an essay written by Bhagat Singh in Tasneef Haidar's voice.
Dr Anshumen Bhagat, Founder and Chief Medical Officer of GPDQ - alongside continuing to be a practicing NHS GP - joined us on episode 18 of NHE’s Finger on the Pulse podcast, talking us through primary care, its challenges over the last 12 months and his visions for its future. We talk difficulties, solutions and ambitions in this insightful episode of the podcast.
Bhagat Ravidas Ji Motivate Clip
Adam Carswell brings on special guest Gaurav Bhagat, Sales Trainer and Founder of Gaurav Bhagat Academy, to discuss the growing prosperity and investing opportunities of India, debunking the “darkhorse” stigma placed on the flourishing country.In this episode, Gaurav talks about:The economic growth booming in IndiaGlobal companies based in and moving production to IndiaWhy large national companies are investing in IndiaHow investors of any caliber should pursue the investment opportunities in IndiaAdam would like to give a huge thanks to Gaurav for coming on the Dream Chasers platform and sharing his knowledge of and experience with business in India.Contact Gaurav Bhagat:Instagram - @Gaurav_GBA Timestamped Shownotes:01:49 – Host Adam Carswell introduces special guest Gaurav Bhagat, Sales Trainer and Founder of Gaurav Bhagat Academy 08:22 – How did Gaurav get connected with Grant Cardone?11:25 – Why has India been labeled as a “darkhorse” for investing and how is the country debunking that stigma?14:45 – What majors companies are investing in and moving production to India?16:33 – What does Gaurav think are the main reasons why billion-dollar companies are investing in India?18:40 – Where is the opportunity to invest in India for middle-class or mid-sized investors and businesses?20:40 – What is the up-and-coming area in India, or the “Austin, TX of India”?21:42 – Gaurav gives a shout-out to his wife22:47 – What advice does Gaurav have for listeners?*Check out our website!Listen to us on these platforms:SPOTIFYAPPLE PODCASTSSTITCHERGOOGLE PODCASTSRemember, in all you think, say and do, TAKE IT TO THE NEXT LEVEL.Sponsored by: High-Rise Capital (Download their free eBook More Doors, More Profits!)Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/dreamchasers_ix)
This week on the podcast, Mark Mirchandani and Gabi Ferrara talk with Nimesh Bhagat about Cloud SQL Insights. This powerful tool enables developers to diagnose database issues for faster, smoother performance. Nimesh tells us the inspiration for Cloud SQL Insight’s development and describes its biggest benefits. One of the important aspects of Insights is the ability for developers to gain an application-centric view by allowing them to tag database queries with SQL comments. These tags are aggregated in Insights and give developers a visual of the database queries. Here, developers can see load patterns and use that information to improve database efficiency. Cloud SQL Insights offers managed database analysis that helps developers understand the past and predict the future. Simplifying the journey of database debugging, Nimesh explains, was the goal of creating Cloud SQL Insights. He takes us through the process of using the software, pointing out the improvements Insights makes over the old way. Cloud SQL Insights only launched in January, but it’s already helping numerous clients with their projects. Nimesh describes these real-world uses, including Major League Baseball experience as part of Insights Early Access Program. Nimesh Bhagat Nimesh is a product manager at Google Cloud, he leads Cloud SQL Insights. He has worked across engineering and product roles, building highly available and high performance enterprise infrastructure used by Fortune 500 companies. His passion lies in combining powerful infrastructure with simple user experience so that every business and developer can build software at scale and velocity. Cool things of the week A new collaboration with Google Cloud blog Don’t fear the authentication: Google Drive edition blog Interview Cloud SQL Insights docs Cloud SQL Documentation docs GCP Podcast Episode 163: Cloud SQL with Amy Krishnamohan podcast Google Cloud Monitoring site Database observability for developers: introducing Cloud SQL Insights blog Introduction to Cloud SQL Insights codelab Boost your query performance troubleshooting skills with Cloud SQL Insights blog Introducing Sqlcommenter: An open source ORM auto-instrumentation library blog Introducing Cloud SQL Insights video Cloud SQL Github site What’s something cool you’re working on? Gabi is working on several things, including Schema Migrations with CI/CD pipelines. She is always available on Twitter and she offers free office hours! Sound Effects Attribution “Small Audience Laugh” by Tim Kahn of Freesound.org
The Grim and Bloody Podcast sat down with Nikhil Bhagat and we talked about the fantastic short horror film The Wheel, set to be released this February. The short film finds a woman, played by Molly Buecher, alone in a house while her husband is on a trip shopping for antiques to sell in their shop. When he sends home an old toy ferris wheel (made from parts of the original ferris wheel no less!) the couple has no idea the terror that is about to be unleashed. For those who haven't heard of Nikhil Bhagat - his equally as impressive short As They Continue To Fall has now been picked up for a feature adaptation by James Wan and Eric Heisserer! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/grimandbloody/support
Satvinder Juss joins us to tell the important story of Bhagat Singh, and the legal heresy that surrounded the Indian revolutionary.
Nachiket Lele, popularly known as the contestant with a complete package of entertainment, appeared in the getup of Bhagat Singh as a tribute to him.
Aamir Bhagat is the founder and owner of 'I Teach Stuff,' a website that offers a myriad of courses online. We speak about the lack of preparedness in the Pakistani context for a jump to online operations as far as businesses are concerned, about the inability of business owners to adapt to change, about the beauty of an artist finally getting their due, and about the possibilities that exist as a consequence of the proliferation of the digital medias.
The hypocrysy about Truth and lie is often seen in people. Bhagat Ravidas is speaks about this in Gurbani. Bhai Ranjit Singh Dhadrianwale is talking on this in this live recording.
In this special musical episode of Justify Season 2, hear through conversation and song from Sambhaji Bhagat on the award-winning feature film 'Court', on Ambedkar and lok shahiri, experiences with the law and justice system, and ruminations on the state of the nation. Bhagat is a Dalit activist and lokshahir who composed the music for 'Court' which takes a deep dive into the operation of India's police and criminal justice system marked by delays, apathy, and high-handedness. Watch out for Vidhi's legal quiz, CLATTR, at the end of the episode, and stand a chance to win an Amazon voucher. Write in your answer and feedback on the episode to justify@vidhilegalpolicy.in.
In this episode of Dubb’s podcast, “Connection Loop" meets with Vinay Bhagat. Topics explored include: #CustomerReviews #B2BMarketing #Entrepreneurship Listen to more episodes here (dubb.com/cl-podcast). The story continues on dubb.com. Learn more about Dubb at https://dubb.it/up5c Chat with us on social media: Dubb Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dubbapp Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/dubb/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dubbapp/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/dubbapp Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/dubbapp Ruben Dua Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rubendua Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rubendua Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rubendua/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/rubendua Medium: https://medium.com/@rubendua Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/theqbe About Dubb Do you want to be like the 30K+ people who use Dubb to boost their business with easy video communication? Here’s how people use Dubb to win... Easy Video Sharing to Streamline Comms Instantly record and share videos via Gmail, LinkedIn, Outlook, CRMs, and more to quickly build trust and increase sales. Drive Conversions for Your Business Book meetings, capture video testimonials, drive conversions, and more with customizable call-to-action buttons. Automate Your Marketing with Ease Create campaigns, email broadcasts, landing pages, funnels, and automatic workflows to streamline communication for your entire business. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/connection-loop-dubb/message
Be part of our community by joining our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thoughtbehindthings In conversation with Amir Bhagat, this episode explores online learning and content creation industry. Why Amir opted for teaching online. How he started his venture, #ITeachStuff. Why Pakistan is lacking in turning adversity into opportunities. Why Amir doesn’t want to be CEO of his own company. How the response has been on the courses. Is government working in the right direction for the people in tech. Where he sees himself in content creation. Where content industry is headed. How COVID has affected creators. Tune in to know about Karachi, Lahore, Islamabad’s infrastructure and living conditions and more! #ThoughtBehindThings #onlinelearning #contentcreation Follow us on Instagram: • https://www.instagram.com/thoughtbehindthings • https://www.instagram.com/muzamilhasan Amir Bhagat’s YT: https://www.youtube.com/user/AamirBhagat --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/syed-muzamil-hasan-zaidi3/support
Interview with Gaurav or GB as he's also called is often called India's 10X Sales Guy. A problem-solver who gets things done he believes in simplifying things and that's been his approach right from the beginning. He comes in with a mindset to help, a mindset of value creation and helping others achieve more. If you have a problem, he can put you on the path to solving it without it being complex, tedious, and time-consuming. He just sees the gaps and helps plug them. Sales have always been his passion and he's been selling since he was 6 and is trained by his mentor and the world's best sales coach, Grant Cardone. He is also Grant's India Licensee and the only trainer in India authorized to teach sales the Grant Cardone way and the content is specially optimized for India. ✔️Instantly become a subscriber and press the bell icon to get notified with the latest video https://www.youtube.com/c/the72mindsetinvestor?sub_confirmation=1
Today’s guest is Vinay Bhagat, Founder & CEO of Trust Radius. You’ll want to be sure to listen to this episode to hear how Vinay’s experience with racism growing up shaped him to be more empathetic, how Vinay addressed racial bias issues in the workplace, and ultimately, how being fired from a job was the best thing that ever happened to him.Vinay was born & raised in London and was the child of immigrants. His mother was a teacher and his father was a car designer, and his parents loved to travel and camp at lots of different places. Back when Vinay was growing up in London, there was still a great deal of racism, and he remembers being verbally abused and physically bullied very often in school. He attended the University of Cambridge, and wanted to work for a big consulting firm after college. Due to the ongoing racism during the time, Vinay couldn’t even land a first-round interview even though he was near the top of his class. Since he did so well in school, he was able to get into Standford to pursue a master’s degree in engineering economic systems. During his time at Stanford, he was approached by the same consulting firms to interview with them, the same ones that he couldn’t get a first-round interview with after graduating in London. Vinay would not take this lightly – after he was hired on at Bain & Company, he worked hard to demonstrate how there was a racial bias in their recruiting process. After Vinay got his MBA from the Harvard School of Business, he ended up at a computer software company in Austin, TX, as their director of e-commerce. Before finishing his first year, Vinay openly disagreed with the CEO, and was fired because of it. That would be the turning point for Vinay. He says that was the best thing that could’ve happened to him, because he was now able to finally satisfy the entrepreneurial bug that had always been itching inside of him. The first company he started was an online fundraising solution for nonprofits, making it easier for nonprofits to raise money.
As part of our series following the history of Bhagat Singh and his allies, this week's episode focuses on Subhash Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army (Azad Hind Fauj)
As part of our series following the history of Bhagat Singh and his allies, this week's episode focuses on Subhash Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army (Azad Hind Fauj)
Dr. Deepak Bhagat is a general dentist with more than 30 years of clinical experience. He is a Clinical associate professor in the department of Full Mouth Rehabilitation, NYU College of Dentistry, New York. He is a diplomate of the International College of Oral Implantologists. Learn more about 3D Printing on www.surgeonsin3dprinting.com. Subscribe Apple I Google I Amazon Music I Spotify I Gaana Resources: Join the Facebook community Surgeons in 3D Printing! Visit the website: www.surgeonsin3dprinting.com. Three Takeaways Digitization is the way forward. Cost is always recoverable. Mistakes happen even if things are planned but that's how we learn. Sponsors: Reconstructive Healthcare Solutions Private Ltd. Show Notes Today's AudioTraining: Masterclass on Dental Implant Guides: 6 Implants in 20 minutes with Dr. Deepak Bhagat. [1.38] Dr. Bhagat shares a brief Introduction about his practice and workflow in clinical dentistry in the USA. He tells how he wanted to eliminate paper and replace it with digital technology. Very early he bought the sensors for radiography. [4:02]He shares the story of his digital journey back in 1987. He has been a forward thinker in the digital dentistry world. [5:25]He shares his present practice and CBCT as a radiographic modality at his center. He shares how he got into 3D Printing and bought Form 2 as a 3D Printer. [8:30]He shares how he starts with the printing. He also shares in detail how the cost is always recovered. How he shows the patient about the treatment plan and how he gradually started to recover the cost with patient education. [10:46]Dr. Bhagat shares how surgery becomes a dream easy with the dental guides. Moreover, he explains how it took him 20 minutes to place 6 Implants. He tells everything in detail. [13:45] Dr. Bhagat talks about cross arch stabilization and AP spread. His experiences with Branemark, Misch, and upcoming principles in implant dentistry [15:17] He shares his first failure and the way the whole implant came out. He also elaborates on his learning and further trips with citric acid. [17:02] He tells the impact he had with an implant rep telling him about amazing things that could happen with implants. [18:11]He shares about his 3D Printer and experience with dental guides in 2014. He explains exactly how he did all the stuff. [20:35] He tells the advantages of 3D Printing for him as a surgeon and advantages for the patient. [22:45] Dr. Bhagat shares unrealistic expectations of patients and how to handle that aspect. He advises the usage and process of night guards and splints with the printer. [24:29] Dr. Bhagat also tried Invisalign trays but then he moved to train his staff and started with a team-building approach. He also explains his role in the team-based approach. [29:20] He says that learning is a continuous process and here the learning curve is short but one has to get into it. [34:31] He tells the flip side of technology. He shares his experience with lingual undercuts and roots almost into the sinus. He explains the process of learning. It's an amazing masterclass. Killer Resources Take the first step to your 3D Printing journey. Register for the upcoming course on Introduction to 3D Printing. Connect with us on a zoom call for 20 minutes of free consultation.
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.27.358291v1?rss=1 Authors: Steinmetz, N. A., Aydin, C., Lebedeva, A., Okun, M., Pachitariu, M., Bauza, M., Beau, M., Bhagat, J., Böhm, C., Broux, M., Chen, S., Colonell, J., Gardner, R. J., Karsh, B., Kostadinov, D., Mora-Lopez, C., Park, J., Putzeys, J., Sauerbrei, B. A., van Daal, R. J. J., Vollan, A. Z., Welkenhuysen, M., Ye, Z., Dudman, J. T., Dutta, B., Hantman, A. W., Harris, K. D., Lee, A. K., Moser, E. I., O'Keefe, J., Renart, A., Svoboda, K., Häusser, M., Haesler, S., Carandini, M., Harris, T. D. Abstract: To study the dynamics of neural processing across timescales, we require the ability to follow the spiking of thousands of individually separable neurons over weeks and months, during unrestrained behavior. To address this need, we introduce the Neuropixels 2.0 probe together with novel analysis algorithms. The new probe has over 5,000 sites and is miniaturized such that two probes plus a headstage, recording 768 sites at once, weigh just over 1 g, suitable for implanting chronically in small mammals. Recordings with high quality signals persisting for at least two months were reliably obtained in two species and six different labs. Improved site density and arrangement combined with new data processing methods enable automatic post-hoc stabilization of data despite brain movements during behavior and across days, allowing recording from the same neurons in the mouse visual cortex for over 2 months. Additionally, an optional configuration allows for recording from multiple sites per available channel, with a penalty to signal-to-noise ratio. These probes and algorithms enable stable recordings from >10,000 sites during free behavior in small animals such as mice. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
#VartalaapwithAakriti Becoming a makeup artist is a highly desirable career option at present, you can set your own hours and pay rate, choose your clients, and build your own brand. If this is the career you desire then this video is for you, to learn the nitty-gritty of the business side of makeup artistry, where Celebrity make-up artist and hair expert Vipul Bhagat has spilled his valuable secrets to excel in the career in a candid conversation with celebrity anchor & model Aakriti Anand. Vipul Bhagat has over 30 years of experience and he has been working his magic with the most sought after brands like #loreal #lakmeindia #iconic #sunsilkindia #sabyasachi and personalities like #aishwaryaraibachchan #dishapatani #sachintendulkar #msdhoni and others Instagram: www.instagram.com/aakritianandofficial Youtube: www.youtube.com/c/aakritianandofficial #aakritianand #Vartalaap #aakriti #businessofMUA #celebrityanchor #model #makeup #makeupartist #muaartist #hairexpert #india #vipulbhgat #bollywood #bollywoodmakeup #mumbai #freelance #freelancemakeupartist #businessofmakeupartistry #igtv #igtvcreator #vartalaap #vartalasaplive #business #aakritianand #aakriti --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/aakritianandofficial/message
Kakasaheb's doubt and Anandrao's vision-Wooden plank-Baba's bed stead and not Bhagat's