POPULARITY
VIII En el programa de hoy, vamos a hablar de Ooparts. (Out Of Place Artifact) Artefactos fuera de lugar y Tiempo. Se trata de aquellos objetos arqueológicos y tecnologías ancestrales que no parecen corresponder a la época donde han sido encontrados. Exploraremos la posibilidad de que estos objetos sean pruebas de civilizaciones avanzadas perdidas, errores en la datación, fraudes o incluso, como aseguran algunos, intervenciones extraterrestres. Creas lo que creas, en mi opinión, lo importante es mantener una mente abierta, por supuesto, sin dejar de lado el escepticismo. Las Cadenas de El Baúl (Venezuela) – Gigantescas cadenas de acero sin soldaduras visibles y de origen desconocido. Las tuberías de Baigong (China) – Estructuras tubulares incrustadas en formaciones rocosas que algunos creen que son artificiales, pero que podrían ser formaciones naturales. Las Piedras de Ica (Perú) – Rocas grabadas con escenas de humanos y dinosaurios, ampliamente consideradas un fraude. La Batería de Bagdad (Irak) – Un jarrón de arcilla con una estructura interna de cobre y hierro que podría haber sido una primitiva batería. La Máquina de Anticitera (Grecia) – Un dispositivo mecánico de la antigüedad con engranajes avanzados para calcular movimientos astronómicos. El Minitúnel de Noruega – Un túnel de apenas 6 cm de diámetro con paredes lisas y un giro inexplicable en la roca. Los Tubos Metálicos de Saint-Jean de Livet (Francia) – Tubos incrustados en estratos de 65 millones de años, lo que desafía la cronología humana. Los Esqueletos de Guadalupe (Caribe) – Restos humanos incrustados en estratos de 28 millones de años. Las Huellas Fósiles de Meister (EE.UU.) – Una huella fosilizada de sandalia sobre trilobites, lo que implicaría presencia humana en el período Cámbrico. La Copa de Hierro de Wilburton (EE.UU.) – Un objeto metálico encontrado dentro de un bloque de carbón de 300 millones de años. Las Esferas de Klerksdorp (Sudáfrica) – Esferas metálicas con surcos paralelos encontradas en estratos de 3.000 millones de años. El Estegosaurio de Angkor (Camboya) – Una talla en un templo que parece representar un dinosaurio. Nanotecnología en los Urales (Rusia) – Microespirales metálicas de miles de años de antigüedad. Las Calaveras de Cristal (México y otros lugares) – Objetos de cuarzo tallados con precisión, rodeados de mitos y controversias. El Martillo de Londres (EE.UU.) – Un martillo incrustado en roca datada en millones de años. El Martillo de Kingoodie (Escocia) – Similar al de Londres, encontrado en roca de 400 millones de años. El Disco de Sabu (Egipto) – Un objeto circular de esquisto con un diseño avanzado. Centavo de Maine (EE.UU.) – Una moneda noruega del siglo XI encontrada en América, sugiriendo presencia vikinga. La Piedra de Narragansett (EE.UU.) – Supuestamente con inscripciones rúnicas vikingas. La Piedra de Kensington (EE.UU.) – Otra piedra con inscripciones rúnicas, considerada posiblemente un fraude. El Pilar de Hierro de Delhi (India) – Una columna de hierro de más de 1.600 años sin signos de oxidación. Los Glifos de Gosford (Australia) – Jeroglíficos egipcios tallados en piedra en Australia. El Teléfono de Babilonia (Irak) – Un objeto de arcilla que se asemeja sorprendentemente a un teléfono móvil. La Piedra del Lago Winnipesaukee (EE.UU.) – Un objeto ovalado tallado con símbolos desconocidos. El Sivatherium de Kish (Irak) – Una figurilla que parece representar a un animal prehistórico extinto. El Helicóptero de Abidos (Egipto) – Jeroglíficos que parecen representar un helicóptero y otros vehículos modernos. El Mapa de Piri Reis (Turquía, 1513) – Un mapa que supuestamente muestra la Antártida sin hielo. Otros mapas enigmáticos – Como los de Oronteus Finaeus, Hadji Ahmed y Kangnido, que incluyen detalles supuestamente desconocidos en su época. La Cuña de Aiud (Rumanía) – Un objeto de aluminio encontrado en estratos antiguos. El Cuenco Fuente Magna (Bolivia) – Una vasija con inscripciones similares a la escritura mesopotámica. La Figura de Nampa (EE.UU.) – Una pequeña figura humana hallada en una capa geológica de 2 millones de años. Las Figuras de Acámbaro (México) – Estatuillas que representan dinosaurios y humanos, ampliamente consideradas un fraude. Las Piedras Dropa (China/Tíbet) – Discos de piedra con supuestos jeroglíficos extraterrestres. Las Líneas de Nazca (Perú) – Geoglifos gigantes que solo pueden apreciarse desde el aire. La Piedra de Dashka (Rusia) – Un supuesto mapa tridimensional tallado en piedra. Las Esferas de Costa Rica – Esferas de piedra perfectamente redondeadas. La Cabeza de Tecaxic-Calixtlahuaca (México) – Una escultura con rasgos romanos encontrada en una tumba precolombina. La Piedra de Ingá (Brasil) – Una roca con grabados que podrían representar un lenguaje desconocido. Las Esferas de Bosnia – Rocas esféricas gigantes descubiertas en bosques bosnios. Los Jeroglíficos de Dendera (Egipto) – Relieves que parecen mostrar bombillas eléctricas. El Avión de Saqqara (Egipto) – Un modelo de madera que se asemeja a un avión moderno. OOPARTS en España: La Cueva del Sol (Tarifa, Cádiz) – Pinturas prehistóricas que parecen representar asteroides. La Plancha de Alcoy (Alicante) – Unas inscripciones de plomo que algunos relacionan con el euskera antiguo. HAZTE MECENAS, no dejes que La Biblioteca, cierre Nunca sus Puertas… Sigamos sumando en LLDLL, SUSCRIBETE en IVOOX y comparte. GRATITUD ESPECIAL: Siempre a los MECENAS. Sin ustedes… esto no tendría sentido. SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE TELEGRAM: https://t.me/LaLamadaDeLaLuna PUEDES VER ALGUNOS VIDEOS DE LLDLL: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEOtdbbriLqUfBtjs_wtEHw Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021
VIII En el programa de hoy, vamos a hablar de Ooparts. (Out Of Place Artifact) Artefactos fuera de lugar y Tiempo. Se trata de aquellos objetos arqueológicos y tecnologías ancestrales que no parecen corresponder a la época donde han sido encontrados. Exploraremos la posibilidad de que estos objetos sean pruebas de civilizaciones avanzadas perdidas, errores en la datación, fraudes o incluso, como aseguran algunos, intervenciones extraterrestres. Creas lo que creas, en mi opinión, lo importante es mantener una mente abierta, por supuesto, sin dejar de lado el escepticismo. Las Cadenas de El Baúl (Venezuela) – Gigantescas cadenas de acero sin soldaduras visibles y de origen desconocido. Las tuberías de Baigong (China) – Estructuras tubulares incrustadas en formaciones rocosas que algunos creen que son artificiales, pero que podrían ser formaciones naturales. Las Piedras de Ica (Perú) – Rocas grabadas con escenas de humanos y dinosaurios, ampliamente consideradas un fraude. La Batería de Bagdad (Irak) – Un jarrón de arcilla con una estructura interna de cobre y hierro que podría haber sido una primitiva batería. La Máquina de Anticitera (Grecia) – Un dispositivo mecánico de la antigüedad con engranajes avanzados para calcular movimientos astronómicos. El Minitúnel de Noruega – Un túnel de apenas 6 cm de diámetro con paredes lisas y un giro inexplicable en la roca. Los Tubos Metálicos de Saint-Jean de Livet (Francia) – Tubos incrustados en estratos de 65 millones de años, lo que desafía la cronología humana. Los Esqueletos de Guadalupe (Caribe) – Restos humanos incrustados en estratos de 28 millones de años. Las Huellas Fósiles de Meister (EE.UU.) – Una huella fosilizada de sandalia sobre trilobites, lo que implicaría presencia humana en el período Cámbrico. La Copa de Hierro de Wilburton (EE.UU.) – Un objeto metálico encontrado dentro de un bloque de carbón de 300 millones de años. Las Esferas de Klerksdorp (Sudáfrica) – Esferas metálicas con surcos paralelos encontradas en estratos de 3.000 millones de años. El Estegosaurio de Angkor (Camboya) – Una talla en un templo que parece representar un dinosaurio. Nanotecnología en los Urales (Rusia) – Microespirales metálicas de miles de años de antigüedad. Las Calaveras de Cristal (México y otros lugares) – Objetos de cuarzo tallados con precisión, rodeados de mitos y controversias. El Martillo de Londres (EE.UU.) – Un martillo incrustado en roca datada en millones de años. El Martillo de Kingoodie (Escocia) – Similar al de Londres, encontrado en roca de 400 millones de años. El Disco de Sabu (Egipto) – Un objeto circular de esquisto con un diseño avanzado. Centavo de Maine (EE.UU.) – Una moneda noruega del siglo XI encontrada en América, sugiriendo presencia vikinga. La Piedra de Narragansett (EE.UU.) – Supuestamente con inscripciones rúnicas vikingas. La Piedra de Kensington (EE.UU.) – Otra piedra con inscripciones rúnicas, considerada posiblemente un fraude. El Pilar de Hierro de Delhi (India) – Una columna de hierro de más de 1.600 años sin signos de oxidación. Los Glifos de Gosford (Australia) – Jeroglíficos egipcios tallados en piedra en Australia. El Teléfono de Babilonia (Irak) – Un objeto de arcilla que se asemeja sorprendentemente a un teléfono móvil. La Piedra del Lago Winnipesaukee (EE.UU.) – Un objeto ovalado tallado con símbolos desconocidos. El Sivatherium de Kish (Irak) – Una figurilla que parece representar a un animal prehistórico extinto. El Helicóptero de Abidos (Egipto) – Jeroglíficos que parecen representar un helicóptero y otros vehículos modernos. El Mapa de Piri Reis (Turquía, 1513) – Un mapa que supuestamente muestra la Antártida sin hielo. Otros mapas enigmáticos – Como los de Oronteus Finaeus, Hadji Ahmed y Kangnido, que incluyen detalles supuestamente desconocidos en su época. La Cuña de Aiud (Rumanía) – Un objeto de aluminio encontrado en estratos antiguos. El Cuenco Fuente Magna (Bolivia) – Una vasija con inscripciones similares a la escritura mesopotámica. La Figura de Nampa (EE.UU.) – Una pequeña figura humana hallada en una capa geológica de 2 millones de años. Las Figuras de Acámbaro (México) – Estatuillas que representan dinosaurios y humanos, ampliamente consideradas un fraude. Las Piedras Dropa (China/Tíbet) – Discos de piedra con supuestos jeroglíficos extraterrestres. Las Líneas de Nazca (Perú) – Geoglifos gigantes que solo pueden apreciarse desde el aire. La Piedra de Dashka (Rusia) – Un supuesto mapa tridimensional tallado en piedra. Las Esferas de Costa Rica – Esferas de piedra perfectamente redondeadas. La Cabeza de Tecaxic-Calixtlahuaca (México) – Una escultura con rasgos romanos encontrada en una tumba precolombina. La Piedra de Ingá (Brasil) – Una roca con grabados que podrían representar un lenguaje desconocido. Las Esferas de Bosnia – Rocas esféricas gigantes descubiertas en bosques bosnios. Los Jeroglíficos de Dendera (Egipto) – Relieves que parecen mostrar bombillas eléctricas. El Avión de Saqqara (Egipto) – Un modelo de madera que se asemeja a un avión moderno. OOPARTS en España: La Cueva del Sol (Tarifa, Cádiz) – Pinturas prehistóricas que parecen representar asteroides. La Plancha de Alcoy (Alicante) – Unas inscripciones de plomo que algunos relacionan con el euskera antiguo. HAZTE MECENAS, no dejes que La Biblioteca, cierre Nunca sus Puertas… Sigamos sumando en LLDLL, SUSCRIBETE en IVOOX y comparte. GRATITUD ESPECIAL: Siempre a los MECENAS. Sin ustedes… esto no tendría sentido. SUSCRIBETE AL CANAL DE TELEGRAM: https://t.me/LaLamadaDeLaLuna PUEDES VER ALGUNOS VIDEOS DE LLDLL: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEOtdbbriLqUfBtjs_wtEHw
(0:00) Intro(3:00) Aayaat Surah Ma'arej(3:30) Sabar: Har mushkil ka hal(5:42) Hakumat k khalaf musallah baghawat ka natija? Libya k sadar ka hashar? Hazrat Imam Hussain ra ki baghawat?(9:02) Afghanistan mn musallah baghawat?(11:16) Darbari mulla?(11:50) Libya sadar aur Saddam Hussain ka hashar?(13:03) Kamzor k liye baghawat krna kaisa hai?(16:27) Pakistan ki misal?(17:35) Imam Hussain ra ki mazloomiyat(19:23) Mukhalif k liye foran jazbati hony wala?(20:53) Namaz se stress cure(23:24) Happy labourer(24:12) Artificial cure for stress(26:44) What happened in plane travel during vibration?(29:02) Khudki banai hui tension?(32:35) Maqam e shukar(36:41) Suicide in developed countries?(38:48) Suicide in Niagara Falls?(39:32) Suicide legal in Switzerland?(41:19) Haqeeqi mazy musalman k(43:34) Heart control in love n hatred?(47:18) Heart control in happiness n grief?(48:16) Zikrullah: Way of getting happiness(49:05) Taqdeer pr yaqeen se stress khatam(53:30) Nabi ﷺ ka farman(54:44) Khushi/gham mn aetadal(55:30) Mufti sb k ghutnay(56:48) Lady doctor's reply?(58:53) Gham mn sabar ka faida(1:02:00) Gham mn sabar krny ka tariqa(1:03:27) Aik shakhs ki adalti khula ka dardnak waqia(1:05:21) Engineer aur Khalil Rehman k gumrah kun fatway(1:06:16) Men's condition on court's favour(1:08:38) Daisi liberals(1:10:44) Mazloom khawateen(1:11:10) Deendar aurat vs liberal(1:12:26) Mazloom mard(1:14:14) Khawateen ko baghi bnany waly: Media/Court/Drama(1:17:41) Khulasa bayan + dua(1:18:14) Ludo/cricket pr paisa lgana?(1:18:34) Roohani aamil imam masjid ka wahid hal?(1:20:52) Iman barrhany wali chizain?(1:21:50) Guest from Delhi India(1:22:30) Fajar ki qaza namazain parrhny ka tariqa?(1:23:04) Shohr k bhai ki aulad namehram hai?(1:23:36) Hindu ka mzaq, Muslim cousin marriage pr!(1:25:09) Aulad ki ma'azuri ka chance? Agar aurat ki age 30,35 ho. (Aurat aur mard k overage hony mn farq?)(1:26:48) UK mn cousin marriage illegal kiyoon?(1:29:10) Cousin marriage k nuqsanat? (Mtm's instruction to make clip)(1:30:06) Ma'azur bacha palny pr khush khabri(1:33:20) Baitiyan palny pr khush khabri(1:34:18) Drawback of women's late marriage n late baby birth?(1:36:01) Cousin marriage vs out of family(1:37:51) Bachy ki ma'azuri ka test? (After woman age 35)(1:40:08) Cousin marriage ki hausla shikni krny walon ko jawab(1:40:51) Aisi namaz ki jamaat?(1:41:11) Dimaghi mareez ki namaz?(1:41:29) Jamiatur Rasheed mn admission criteria?(1:41:52) Bijli ka meter badalna/kunda lgana?(1:43:06) Allah ny Nabi ﷺ pr darood parhha, ka matlab?(1:46:41) Government ka hukam manna?(1:48:24) Mufti sb ka Japan se Australia safar aur sun rotation?(1:49:54) What happened in 2nd US trip?(1:50:34) USA/Canada jaty huay roza na rakhny ki wja?(1:52:35) 60 rozy rakhny ka aasan tariqa?(1:54:12) Hazrat Ayyub as ki bemari mn Allah ka btaya hua heela(1:55:06) Ulama heelay kiyoon btaty hain? Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Delhi, India Part 2 In this episode, your FAQ is: Safety in India for solo travelers Today's Destination is: Delhi, India. Part 2 Today's Misstep- Cellphone issues that were my fault and more Travel Advice: Safety tips for travel in Delhi. FAQ: Let's talk about safety in India. My friend Kathryn is going to Delhi and is worried about being a solo woman. Can I talk to her about what she can expect? The short answer is that Kathryn is already back home, and she had a great trip, but she was nervous and needed confirmation that all would be well. Today's destination: Delhi, India Part 2 One of the best parts of India…and Aero City Let's discuss a region of Delhi called Aero City. It's really close, just minutes from the airport. Indira Gandhi International Airport, that is. It's well connected to the rest of the city through the Airport Metro Line. And you can get to places in the center of Delhi, like Connaught Place, in about 25 minutes. Aerocity is a top priority for safety and security for female travelers, with state-of-the-art cameras, staff, and surveillance. The hotels and surrounding public spaces are really nice. Aero City was full of what's new about India. There are hotels, shopping centers, and restaurants. I felt Safe being here. I took the AirPort Express Metro to Aero City and walked for about 6 minutes in the 105-degree heat. Drenched in sweat, the pool was on my mind when I arrived! It made the walk bearable! There were girls and sisters in the pool, my new friends, ages 8 and 11. They were in the room next to me and on School holidays in Dehli—a break for the families and fun for me. Today's Misstep: Cellphone issues: Here is when I discovered my cellphone issues with Airalo and why my WhatsApp was not working! India is not in the Asia plan! That was my failure! I did not have internet service when out of Wi-Fi coverage in India. Something with the eSIM, Airalo plan, which was not covered under “All Asia”. I need to tell them to label that better. If you want to sign up for the plan I have used worldwide, get $3.0ff with the code MARY2856. Today's Travel Advice- Dehli Safety Tips Dress Conservatively: Especially in urban villages and when visiting religious sites Avoid Crowded Areas at Night: Stick to well-lit and populated areas, and avoid walking alone at night Be Aware of Your Surroundings: Keep an eye on your belongings and be cautious of pickpockets and scams Use Trusted Transportation: Prefer pre-paid taxis, Uber, or Ola, and avoid accepting rides from unknown drivers Act Confident: Walk with confidence and firmly decline any unwanted attention or offers Connect with Dr. Travelbest 5 Steps to Solo Travel website Dr. Mary Travelbest X Dr. Mary Travelbest Facebook Page Dr. Mary Travelbest Facebook Group Dr. Mary Travelbest Instagram Dr. Mary Travelbest Podcast Dr. Travelbest on TikTok Dr.Travelbest onYouTube In the news
Delhi, India Part 1 In this episode, the FAQ is: My listeners ask: How do I check for the weather where I'm going? Today's Destination is: Delhi, India Today's Misstep- Stuck in India and missed the bus Travel Advice: Ask a group of people for directions FAQ: You asked me how to get the most reliable weather forecast: Here's how> Use apps like AccuWeather, weather.com, and windy or local services, with hourly and long-range forecasts, radar maps, and severe weather alerts. For more local alerts, sign up for location-based apps on Google Weather or MyRadar. Look for seasonal patterns that are already known. Goa, India has monsoons from June to September. Wind and rain forecasts like windy.com will tell you the wind and wave conditions, especially to help with beach plans. Check for Cyclone Warnings in places like coastal India. Answer: Reliable Weather Apps and Websites: For accurate forecasts, use apps like AccuWeather, Weather.com, Windy, or local Indian weather services (like IMD). Many offer hourly and long-range forecasts, radar maps, and severe weather alerts. Localized Alerts: Sign up for location-based alerts on apps like Google Weather or MyRadar, which provide real-time weather updates for your location. This can be especially helpful for any sudden coastal storms or cyclones. Seasonal Patterns: Since you're going to Goa or nearby coastal regions, familiarize yourself with local weather patterns. For example, Goa experiences the monsoon season from June to September, with dry and sunny weather from October to March. Wind and Rain Forecasts: Coastal areas are affected by both rain and wind speed. Windy.com offers detailed wind and wave conditions, which can help with beach plans. Check for Cyclone Warnings: Especially in coastal India, monitor IMD's cyclone warnings as they provide updates on tropical storms that may affect Goa. Lastly, social media can help by using WhatsApp groups to get firsthand information from locals. Today's destination: Delhi, India Part 1 My visit to Delhi, or New Delhi, India Which is it? New Delhi when referring to the specific district that serves as India's capital. New Delhi is a planned city developed during British rule and officially designated as the capital in 1931. Delhi refers to the larger metropolitan area, encompassing both New Delhi and other historical and residential parts like Old Delhi, which includes the Red Fort and Jama Masjid. Delhi is the correct term when speaking broadly about the city and its culture, so we will use that one here. After two weeks in India, visiting four southern cities, I flew north to Dehli from Goa, barely missing the seasonal monsoons. My flight had a Female co-pilot who Said hello to me with a big smile, which made me happy to see a woman pilot there. The flight attendants checked my boarding tickets. Again, getting off the plane! That was a first. Who checks them getting off the plane? Should I take a Bus, train, or taxi to Agra? Even after arriving, I could not decide. I was overwhelmed with the decisions, but I knew I had to get there. A taxi costs at least $6000 rupees each way, maybe more. Although this sounded like a lot, it was only $72 USD. Bus or train may be best. However, the temperature is
It's another DESI ADDICTION!!! The Best Punjabi Songs of 2024 (Part 2) mashed up into a one-hour non-stop mix performed by EMENES and filmed in Chandni Chowk, Old Delhi, India. (watch performance on Youtube)
Intermundial ha anunciado un nuevo plan de expansión que pone el foco principal en Latinoamérica para elevar su facturación fuera de España, hasta alcanzar un 20% del total de su negocio proveniente del mercado exterior en los próximos años, cuando en la actualidad esta cifra se encuentra en el 5%. BlaBlaCar, la plataforma de viajes compartidos en coche, ha integrado la venta de billetes de Renfe en su aplicación y página web, que se suma a la prueba que lleva desarrollando desde antes del verano para vender billetes de Iryo. Barcelona, Madrid y Granada son los destinos favoritos de los españoles en HomeToGo para viajar en el próximo puente de Todos los Santos, según los datos de la plataforma de alquiler en base al número de búsquedas realizadas. Travelplan, el turoperador perteneciente a Ávoris Corporación Empresarial, ha anunciado su programación para 2025 con una amplia oferta de nuevas rutas, entre las que destacan los vuelos a Delhi (India), Banjul (Gambia) y la isla Djerba (Túnez). El Ayuntamiento de Málaga ha aprobado la modificación del Plan General (PGOU) para prohibir la creación de nuevas viviendas turísticas en 43 barrios de la ciudad, donde estas superan el 8% del total del parque residencial. Esta medida busca limitar la expansión de viviendas turísticas en zonas con alta concentración, a partir de una zonificación específica de la ciudad. España ha sido incluida entre los 15 países más seguros para viajar en 2025, según el informe anual de Berkshire Hathaway Travel Protection. Islandia ocupa el primer lugar, seguida de Australia y Canadá. La clasificación se basa en factores como la delincuencia, riesgos de terrorismo y sistemas de salud.
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literary-studies
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/south-asian-studies
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/geography
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English.
Old Delhi's Parallel Book Bazaar (Cambridge UP, 2024) looks at Old Delhi's Daryaganj Sunday Book Market, popularly known as Daryaganj Sunday Patri Kitab Bazaar, as a parallel location for books and a site of resilience and possibilities. The first section studies the bazaar's spatiality - its location, relocation, and spatialization. Three actors play a major role in creating and organising this spatiality: the sellers, the buyers, and the civic authorities. The second section narrativizes the biographies of the booksellers of Daryaganj to offer a map of the hidden social and material networks that support the informal modes of bookselling. Amidst order and chaos, using their specialised knowledge, Daryaganj booksellers create distinctive mechanisms to serve the diverse reading public of Delhi. Using ethnography, oral interviews, and rhythmanalysis, this Element tells a story of urban aspirations, state-citizen relations, official and unofficial cultural economies, and imaginations of other viable worlds of being and believing. Dr Kanupriya Dhingra is an Assistant Professor and Assistant Dean at the Jindal School of Languages and Literature, O.P. Jindal Global University (India). She researches the History of the Book and Print Cultures, focusing on Delhi (India), from an ethnographic perspective. She earned her doctorate under the Felix Scholarship Fund from SOAS, University of London in 2021, on her dissertation titled “Daryaganj's Parallel Book History”, which became this Element. She has also published in journals such as The Caravan, Himal SouthAsian and Seminar Magazine. She is also deeply interested in Hindi, Punjabi, and Urdu poetry, especially that of Amrita Pritam, and continues to research and translate it. Her creative writing and translations have appeared in Indian Literature (A Sahitya Akademi imprint), Scroll, Indian Writers Forum, Guftgu, Aainanagar, and Antiserious. Currently, she is working on translations of Krishna Sobti and Amrita Pritam. SM Khalid is a doctoral student at the University of Oxford, working comparatively on postcolonial satire in South Asia in Hindi, Urdu and English. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
© JPS Archives
© JPS Archives
GOOD EVENING: The show begins at the Federal Reserve, waiting for the governors to recognize that the economy is slowing quickly, that the two-tier economy means the least among us are struggling. To France, to Germany, to Brussels and the EU debate. To the South China Sea. To Gaza and Lebanon and the "War of the North". To South Africa, to Peru, to Perth Australia, Delhi India, Sudan, Burkina Faso, Sudan, Ethiopia. 1942 Solomon Islands
இந்தியா வெல்லப்போகிறது... ராகுல் காந்தி நம்பிக்கை! சூரியனை வணங்கிவிட்டு தியானத்தை தொடங்கிய மோடி! கைதுசெய்யப்பட்டார் பிரஜ்வல் ரேவண்ணா... நீதிமன்றத்தில் ஆஜர்படுத்திய 5 பெண் போலீஸ்!தமிழ்நாட்டில் மக்களுக்கும், போலீஸுக்கு பாதுகாப்பில்லை! - எடப்பாடி பழனிசாமி! பற்றி எரிந்த பள்ளிக்கரனை சதுப்புநிலம்! இந்திய எல்லையில் போர் விமானங்களை நிறுத்திய சீனா?அமெரிக்கா: முன்னாள் அதிபர் ட்ரம்ப் குற்றவாளி எனத் தீர்ப்பு!-The Imperfect Show Podcast
Destroyed By Distraction | Delhi India 4 Feb 2024 by S.B. Keshava Swami
Don't Be Religious | Jan 2024 Delhi India by S.B. Keshava Swami
Three Types Of Crying | Delhi India 3 Feb 2024 by S.B. Keshava Swami
© JPS Archives
„Nagyon nagy mértékben megélem a magyarságot és az indiai dolgoknak az érintkezését.” – Köves Margit http://abaratsagosszekotaszoosszehoz.libsyn.com/ aszoosszehoz@gmail.com https://drive.google.com/open?id=16jIMy0_BKoYrarbtYELctwHfMv_iE66-&usp=sharing https://www.facebook.com/groups/383671148748549/ https://www.buymeacoffee.com/aszoosszehoz Zenei betétek: Mirage - Chris Haugen
„Indiára nagyon jellemző az, hogy nagyon sokszor van krízishelyzet. És ezekben a krízishelyzetekben valóban nagyon-nagyon odaadóan viselkednek az emberek.” – Köves Margit http://abaratsagosszekotaszoosszehoz.libsyn.com/ aszoosszehoz@gmail.com https://drive.google.com/open?id=16jIMy0_BKoYrarbtYELctwHfMv_iE66-&usp=sharing https://www.facebook.com/groups/383671148748549/ https://www.buymeacoffee.com/aszoosszehoz Zenei betétek: Mirage - Chris Haugen
Rohit Sharma scores 131 as India secure a dominant victory over Afghanistan in New Delhi. Next up for the Men in Blue? PAKISTAN.....! Twitter (X): https://twitter.com/CricCornerPod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/anthropology
In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sociology
In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/south-asian-studies
In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-...
In Delhi, former street children guide visiting tourists around the streets that they used to inhabit and show how the NGO they work for tries to resocialise the current street children. What social, cultural and economic structures are in the backdrop of slum tourism in Delhi? Why are emotions and personal stories important to understand in slum tours? In this episode, Dosol Nissi Lee is joined by Dr. Tore Holst to discuss slum tourism and affective economies in Delhi, focusing particularly on the emotional labour of the former street children and the ethical position of tourists. Dr. Tore Holst is a Lecturer at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen and the Department of Communication and Arts at Roskilde University. His intellectual works; including his latest article “The Emotional Labor of Former Street Children Working as Tour Guides in Delhi” in 2019, provide insightful discussions of post-humanitarianism, tourism and human migration. Dosol Nissi Lee is a Master's Fellow at the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies and a Master's Student at the Centre for Advanced Migration Studies at the University of Copenhagen. She researches human security and human mobility by testing out her theoretically vigorous and methodologically innovative ideas on research topics such as refugee sur place, intercountry adoption and floating city. The Nordic Asia Podcast is a collaboration sharing expertise on Asia across the Nordic region, brought to you by the Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (NIAS) based at the University of Copenhagen, along with our academic partners: the Centre for East Asian Studies at the University of Turku, and Asianettverket at the University of Oslo. We aim to produce timely, topical and well-edited discussions of new research and developments about Asia. About NIAS: www.nias.ku.dk Transcripts of the Nordic Asia Podcasts: https://www.nias.ku.dk/nordic-... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
We're stoked to present episode 100 of Juicebox Radio - celebrating the milestone with a collective comprising Guha Bharadwaj a.k.a. Goos, Russell Muller a.k.a. Murder By Sound and our very own imprint's headman Praveen Achary. Concluding the 100th episode milestone session, Praveen Achary has been occupied with playing wide-ranged gigs across the cities, including recently having opened for John Digweed in Diablo (Delhi, India), rejuvenating Juicebox Music's label ethos and sound 'PHASE' in Hyderabad and Delhi (India) and more, Praveen returns back on the podcast for round four, closing down episode 100 with yet another exquisite extended mix. Enjoy! // Tracklist // 01. Kyotto - Esplanade [CRFT] 02. Dofamine - Manifest [Shambhala] 03. Taleman - Inspiration (Greenage Remix) [Where The Shadow Ends] 04. Domingo + - Pocket Vibes (Rise Mix) [The Purr] 05. Ventt, Keparys - Sladkih Snov [Melody Of the Soul] 06. Emrat - Serenity [Hoomidaas] 07. Talemates - Tartar [Rubicunda] 08. G.Pal - 3rd of July (Simon Vuarambon Retouch) [Shanti Radio] 09. Sebastien Leger - In A Distorted Galaxy [Lost & Found] 10. Agustin Ficarra - Resign [Mango Alley] 11. Facucio - North In Mendoza [Transensations] 12. ID - ID [Juicebox Music] 13. ID - ID [Juicebox Music] 14. Gadi Mitrani - Gone (Alex O'Rion Remix) [Balance] 15. Mike Rish - Void [Vapour] 16. Tomas Garcia - The Way of Life [Deep Down] 17. GMJ, Matter - Elemental [Meanwhile] 18. Röyksopp ft. Beki Mari - This Time, This Place (Henry Saiz Remix) [Dog Triumph Profound Mysteries] 19. John Digweed, Nick Muir - Stand Still (Jonathan Kaspar Remix) [Bedrock] // Links // Follow Praveen Achary on Facebook, Instagram & SoundCloud Follow Juicebox Music on Facebook, SoundCloud, Twitter, Beatport & Spotify
Research begins at 22:44 Yeehaw BFers! We got ourselves a rodeo showcase of some of Delhi's best ghosts and urban legends - it's the whole enchilada served up Indian style this week on MBCTP. Thanks to Natalie O'Hamilton for the topic! In the first segment, Andy and Art are captured once again by the titular Mr. Bunker - how did he fool them this time? In the second segment, Andy and Art give you, the listeners, an uninterrupted presentation of their research into Delhi's Ghost Stories. Finally, Andy and Art discuss urban legends vs ghost stories, blind scares, Schmaug, and so much more! Send us your thoughts to @MrBunkerPod and mrbunkerpod@gmail.com using the hashtag #PascaryPastrami Music by Michael Martello Artwork by Hannah Ross Audio Editing by Arthur Stone Follow Us: Patreon Twitter Instagram Website Youtube Merch Links Mentioned: Chasing shadows―the most haunted places in Delhi - Times of India India's Most Haunted: Delhi Cantonment area | India.com This Road In Delhi Cantt. Is Apparently Haunted & Those That Stop By Are Never Seen Again! - so.city 7 Hair-Raising Real Indian Ghost Stories from 7 Famous Tourist Destinations - Tripoto 15 Haunted Places In Delhi To Visit in 2022 To Challenge Your Souls - Travel Triangle Gruesome Stories Behind The Most Haunted Places in Delhi -MagicPin Delhi | Directorate General Defence Estates Delhi Cantonment - Wikipedia Agrasen Ki Baoli - Wikipedia Lothian Cemetery – New Delhi, India - Atlas Obscura The headless ghost of Lothian cemetery - New Indian Express Most Haunted: Meet The Lady in White at Sanjay Van in Delhi - India.com ‘Haunted' in folklore, south Delhi's Sanjay Van is now a birders' paradise | Latest News Delhi - Hindustan Times Sanjay Van - Wikipedia Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal ‘Hunting Lodge to Haunted Palace' | INDIAN CULTURE The hyped up Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal- The New Indian Express Bhuli Bhatiyari Ka Mahal: History, Haunted Story, & Metro station - Jovial Holiday Feroz Shah Kotla Fort and its history with djinns | Times of India Travel Dungeons and Djinns: I Spent a Day Chasing Wish-Granting Supernatural Beings Agrasen Ki Baoli is HAUNTED Place In Delhi, India ?
This week, host Ayush Tiwari is joined by Newslaundry reporters Pratyush Deep and Prateek Goyal. Pratyush talks about his report on Delhi's efforts to eradicate manual scavenging, and how its claim that it has “no manual scavengers” isn't quite true. “The situation on the ground is different,” he explains. Prateek then discusses the world of illegal loan apps in India, and how those offering these “quick” loans use violent, illegal methods to get their money back. This and a lot more as they talk about what made news, what didn't, and what shouldn't have. Tune in.Contribute to our ongoing NL Sena project, The Yogi Who Has it All.Timecodes00:00:00 - Introduction00:01:28 - Loan apps00:13:00 - Manual scavenging00:47:00 - RecommendationsRecommendationsPrateekAnatomy of a ScandalPratyushSpy StoriesAyushThe Vinoo Mankad Appreciation SocietyProduced and recorded by Tehreem Roshan, edited by Chanchal Gupta. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Shyam Kumar Lohat, Nueva Delhi, India
EP289 - ShipBob Co-Founder Dhruv Saxena Dhruv Saxena is the co-founder and CEO of ShipBob, Inc. ShipBob is a tech-enabled third-party logistics provider (3PL) that fulfills e-commerce orders for direct-to-consumer brands. We discuss ShipBob's origin story, how the e-commerce fulfillment industry has evolved, as well as the challenges and implications of Amazon and Shopify's various fulfillment initiatives. Episode 289 of the Jason & Scot show was recorded on Friday March 18, 2022. http://jasonandscot.com Join your hosts Jason "Retailgeek" Goldberg, Chief Commerce Strategy Officer at Publicis, and Scot Wingo, CEO of GetSpiffy and Co-Founder of ChannelAdvisor as they discuss the latest news and trends in the world of e-commerce and digital shopper marketing. Transcript Jason: [0:23] Welcome to the Jason and Scot show this is episode 289 being recorded on Friday March 18 20 22 I'm your host Jason retailgeek Goldberg and as usual I'm here with your co-host Scott Wingo. Scot: [0:37] Hey Jason and welcome back Jason Scott show listeners Jason as you know we did a Amazon Fulfillment deep dive a couple weeks ago and that was quite a popular Topic in episode and we've been getting a lot of questions from listeners about what's going on in the world of and we are now living in a world where products used to be if you get it in a week that was amazing and now anything that's longer than 2 days feels like a lifetime so we thought it would be good to bring on one of the top startups in the Fulfillment area the shipbob and we have with us the CEO and co-founder of shipbob dhruv saxena dhruv welcome to the show. Dhruv: [1:20] Thank you so much Scott and Jason for having me excited for our conversation. Jason: [1:24] We are looking forward to it as well I'm getting tons of complaints on the feet already that people were expecting Bob to be on the show today so you'll have to tell us how it became dhruv started shipbob. Dhruv: [1:36] Yeah for sure I'll give you a quick back story on me if that's the opening question and tell you how did we come up with the name shipbob. Jason: [1:46] That would be perfect yes I asked it very awkward we Scott is laughing at me on the back Channel. Dhruv: [1:51] Yeah so. Quick back story on us you know I grew up in Delhi India came to the u.s. in 2007 to pursue engineering my co-founder on shabaab device is also from India we've known each other all our lives. And so we after we both did an engineering in the midwest here I went to Purdue we came back to Chicago and started. I'll booking in a full-time jobs at software programmers and on nights and weekends as most Engineers do. We were trying and experimenting with a bunch of thought of ideas and one of the start-up ideas was in e-commerce. And be Engineers we were able to automate effectively everything in that e-commerce business except the part around shipping and Logistics. And so every time you would have a bunch of folders we would have to run to the post office here in Willis Tower Chicago in the basement, they have a post office and we would have to stand in line and basically ship out those orders out and that became the most manual and painful part of our e-commerce business. And we wanted to find ways of automating that. [2:58] And we would call up a bunch of these existing companies 3pls who helped companies with the shipping and Logistics take all three pills third party Logistics providers. And none of them wanted our business because we were too small for them, and so that got us thinking as to hey how do others small to mid-sized e-commerce businesses figure out their shipping and Logistics we realize that there really isn't a good alternative for businesses like ours who are you know ramping up e-commerce businesses and that caught us into, thinking what should pop can be. And how did the name come about you know so when we started thinking about building a company for helping businesses with their shipping and Logistics needs. We were going for like like people want fast shipping so we should have ship and a fast you know like an animal name or something like a ship park or a ship Cheeto something on those lines so that it conveys. That heylia company which helps you with fast shipping and all of these that domain names were taken, stop after a while godaddy's recommendation engine you know started recommending you no other alternative domain names and one of them was shipbob for 299 or something, and so we say you know we don't have money but this seems like a cool name and so if you just turned shipbob.com for 299 and that's the story of her name and so now we have a good messaging around hey, Bob Means bending over backwards for your shipping or Bob can be a plumber Bob can be you know any use for gyves but as Bob kennels to be a shipment so that's like the marketing angle on shipbob. Scot: [4:24] Very cool so it's interesting because this kind of parallels a lot of a lot of companies in e-commerce they start with people building e-commerce stores and then they're like, this part of it stinks I'm just going to focus on solving this so what is your original e-commerce store do. Dhruv: [4:42] So we started were doing a lot of like printed photographs and so you know this is like 2013 2012, bear Instagram had just been acquired by Facebook for like a billion dollars and so we thought oh wow that's photo-sharing seems to be like a heart, market right now and Instagram is all about digital photo sharing so what if we brought back the Retro way of sharing pictures which is people would print and mail pictures to each other so our e-commerce business was that you would send us a photo. Honor text bot we would print that photo we would frame it we would write a message at the back of the for any personal message you wanted and mail it to your friends and family all across the world. And so that was sort of you know our big idea then like physical photo sharing. Scot: [5:28] Cool car like frame bridge I think does some of that now cool yeah so then you you did you wind that down as you kind of pivot it over to the Fulfillment center. Dhruv: [5:39] Yeah it won't down on its own to be honest because once we started focusing on on shipbob E that business wasn't really taking off with shipbob first was was so we started spending a lot more energy on shipbob. Scot: [5:52] And then so that was 2015 earlier kind of also 2014 yet. Dhruv: [5:58] Now 2014 2015 we got into this incubator called y combinator Scott so. That allowed us to you know quit our full-time jobs because y combinator gives you like a hundred and twenty thousand dollars so that was enough money for us to like put in you know our notices on a full-time jobs and go all in on shipbob. Scot: [6:20] Brickell so you got no Y combinator and then that usually requires you to go out to Silicon Valley for a period of time did you guys do that or are they at some point they introduced remote but I think that was later. Dhruv: [6:32] Much later yeah no that's a good question so. This is another great sort of Peace around you know building startups and Chicago so when we go into YC. We were one of the very few companies you know. Who did not relocate to California so it was it wasn't mandated or Partners there were very comfortable we okay with us traveling back and forth. So every week on Tuesday they have these partner meetings but you go and tell them the progress you've made. And so we would fly every Tuesday morning to our Mountain View California do our pitch and you know and learn and then come back and because, we had to fly and I was you know what a red eye flight Etc it was a lot of effort so we would always try to make sure that we have enough progress that we've made in a given week to make that trip worthwhile otherwise we would go there and we will just come out looking like we didn't really do much and that would be a waste of our time so that pressure of making that trip by productive I think in the early days for stars to work way harder, that may be a lot of other companies simply because you know we were putting a lot of effort and these so and capital in making those trips and but we headquarter the business in Chicago. I'll see you know which turned out to be you know pretty good decision I guess in hindsight. Scot: [7:49] Yeah and then you know what's really interesting and I kind of live this every day so I'm curious how you path you took here as software people you know we love to solve things with software and at some point shipping is not a software problem right you can you can build the world's best shipping but at some point some human has to and maybe a robot but you know some something has to move a package from point A to point B sometimes Point c d and e and then someone has to you have this middle Mile and this last mile when did you guys realize that you're going to have to actually have like fulfillment centers. Dhruv: [8:26] Um right from the prions yeah pretty much. Because you know coming out of the running your own e-commerce business and then also a couple of other startups before then. Like. Be being Engineers yes we were very accustomed to writing a lot of code and then just hoping that users will show up and none of the startups are for shipbob for us worked out, and one of the realizations that would be in the way had is that just because you build it doesn't mean that people will come, and so you would have to spend a lot of your time and energy in making sure that you actually spend you know time on sales marketing and distribution and so when so we were very. Early before even adding code we were talking to our customers and these customers you know who would eventually become users or loyal users. Told us very clearly that we don't really care about great software what we care about is a great product or a great service which helps us in packaging and shipping so that influence the decision-making right. We can't be a pure software company these Merchants are paying us because they need great fulfillment service so having our own fulfillment centers probably requirement for us before we can start scaling. Scot: [9:36] Got it okay cool so you go do y combinator and then women did you like build your first like when did you have your first fulfillment center. Dhruv: [9:48] So right at the you know when you started the company like our office and my apartment became sort of a file template. Fulfillment center very Loosely here so you won't really be able to. Call the Department of proper fulfillment center but you know it did the did the work so there was enough room in our apartment and enough first office. Which is like I think thousand square feet for us to have some room for people to send us their product and we would store their inventory. And then have couple of hours basically pick pack and ship you know those boxes out so my apartment was on the 31st floor so every evening we would get a big. Little trolley and put all the packages and that's all a and then use the freight elevator to bring those packages to the ground level where Michael ejector words you know use the car and we'll take it to the post office. Scot: [10:41] If you're in Jason's building he would have reported you as like a probably a drug dealer some suspicious Behavior going on up on the 31st floor. Dhruv: [10:50] Yeah no. Jason: [10:51] I'm just grateful the city planners that do the zoning didn't hear this story. Dhruv: [10:56] Yeah you know it. Scot: [11:00] It's not illegal if you don't get caught. Dhruv: [11:02] You know we did get in trouble in the early days with the local post office so what would happen is again you know because we had been. We didn't have a lot of successful startups before shipbob Beaver like way paranoid about finding customers. And we none of us came from the sales and marketing background so we tried to run for this position where you can we find customers in the most cheapest and fastest way possible and the obvious answer to us was let's go outside the post office because there's always a line, people don't always seem very happy or to go to a post office and so if he. Can find a few e-commerce merchants in those lines we can pitch them that idea while they are still in the line and convince them to give us their package and not go to the Post Office the second webinar. And so we spend the first three during by see it is like a first three to six months of our shipbob basically standing in lines outside different post offices in Chicago to convince people walking in that shabaab is a better alternative than you going inside the post office. So the post office Forks very nice people thought that we were trying to take business away from them. [12:10] So they were sent they would call up these post office apparently post office has its own police do something so they would send out these post office cops, who would comment she was away and so we would just go from one post office to the other like based on you know which one had last called the cops on us and so, I think some post office might still have a picture of Jessica and the way to make sure that they don't show up again. Scot: [12:33] Hello. Jason: [12:35] Those cops are federal agents by the way they're not messing around. Dhruv: [12:38] Oh man I hope they did especially because we were immigrant Founders so we can't get in trouble with the the federal police. Scot: [12:49] The federal jails and I hear pretty nice though so good they have tennis and stuff. Jason: [12:54] What we're going to have a separate episode about how Scott knows that. Scot: [13:00] Okay cool so you did your wife see then you came back to Chicago and then maybe kind of update us like the bullet points to where we are today. Dhruv: [13:10] Yeah so once we you know got back to Chicago post why see we were fortunate enough to raise a seed round of a million dollars and so that allowed us to, you know take that top pill and hire a couple more engineers and hire a few more sales people and then expand the business so we opened up a warehouse in Chicago. Where we were headquartered and then we quickly expanded to New York as well so we added a location in Brooklyn New York. [13:38] And based on the progress that we had made you know in Chicago and New York and remember let's also limited so it requires Capital because you're opening up these fulfillment centers at the very beginning and you're also writing a lot of software which powers. The inside operations of the Fulfillment center and so we have to raise Capital simply by the nature of the business we are in also fulfillment I'm sure like, all your list has no it's not like a software business it's not an 80% gross margin business we have very tight margins, and so you are you require a lot of captains in this business to scale and so every couple of years we've had to raise Capital simply for us too, add investment dollars into building, either the software which powers are fulfillment centers or to open up our own fulfillment centers and so The quick summary of f Bob is today is that over the last five years or so, we raised you know close to 400 million dollars or so of venture capital, we've added you know be as close to 1,000 employees now a lot of it on the product and Engineering teams and sales and marketing team for us too. Add many emotions to our network but also write a lot of great stuff in which power is the back end of almost we know back-end systems of all of the e-commerce businesses using a platform. And the business strategically also has you know evolved where we don't now need to. [15:02] Operate our own fulfillment centers because we have four of our own social incentives each one in Chicago New York Texas and California so we kind of know how to run fulfillment centers we now partner with existing. 3pl Zone fulfillment centers who have empty capacity we bring in our software our know how our physical infrastructure into those locations, we bring them up to the shipbob standard and then we are able to Route our Merchants into those locations and so the business now requires a lot less capital in scaling the infrastructure side of things but not all of that Capital goes towards you know basically growing out the product capabilities and adding new Merchants into our Network. And we have fulfillment centers in the u.s. in Canada in UK Europe in Australia. And we of course added a lot of capabilities on a network all the parts on this wall so truly today now shipbob is a global. Omni-channel fulfillment solution for a Merchants where we can we are probably you know on power if you were starting an e-commerce business and you wanted to compete very effectively with Amazon and Walmart supply chain we are a great alternative. Scot: [16:13] Pickle the way I explain it let me see if this pencils for you so if someone asked me how this you know how this kind of what I would call your one of these next-generation fulfillment companies my pitch is you had these 3pls but they were really designed for you're kind of almost like a real estate thing where you go in and say Hey I want a corner of this fulfillment center and I'm going to lease it and do X Y & Z and then Amazon's Innovation was FBA where it was you know what much more aligned with the the e-commerce model of yes I want you to hold my goods but they're going to turn over quickly and I want to pay more of a per transaction kind of a thing, and I also want a lot of flexibility about how fast I can get products to Consumers so 3pls were in this kind of old world where they weren't really built that way so then part of what you guys did as you built your own fulfillment centers with this new model and then you can kind of take that model and put it into Old 3pls bring them up to kind of like the FBA level of above standard is that a fair summary of how you explain shipbob to other folks. Dhruv: [17:20] Yes that is very real articulated Scott I might actually use that going forward and and the only piece I would add to it is, of course you hit on the fast piece of it which is very relevant for a merchant, the second big element of wine Merchants choose us and our network is our ability to customize the unboxing experience which is unique for that particular brand so you know when you order something on Amazon it shows up in Amazon branded box for a merchant they want that unboxing experience to represent their brands you know. Ethos and the brand value so whether that's a custom box you know whether it could be eco-friendly material it could be custom gift notes accustomed shipping labels Etc the ability to customize that you know that. Transaction is very relevant for them it's almost on par alongside speed and and so that's the piece the second element of. Of customization I guess that should Bob's been able to unlock that I think FB it doesn't offer. Jason: [18:18] Got it and just to sort of clarify for listeners like so the goal then is it feels like it got shipped by the vendor right so it has whatever packaging the the manufacturer would want to use and a bill of lading that has their logo and those things on it as opposed to I ordered something from cuts and then I got an invoice from shipbob or something like that. Dhruv: [18:41] Yep exactly right we want to be. In the background you know where the Shopper is building a direct relationship with the brand and and the Shopper is agnostic to whether shipbob ships or whether the brand shifted. Jason: [18:58] Yep so and just to kind of frame this like back in that time frame the the idea of B2 C3 PLS was not common today it's a it's a pretty crowded Market space there's a lot of a lot of options but they're back then is got kind of pointed out like there was a thing called 3pls but they were more of like a B2B service really right. Dhruv: [19:22] That's right yep and so, the reason why even we were able to even build a business here is because majority of the 3pls out there were focused on the palette and Palette outside our transaction because most of their customers, but the bands who was selling predominantly in retail stores like Macy's no storm or Target Etc and so the concept of this High Velocity two to three units per order was very foreign to them, and all of the infrastructure was designed to store large number of palettes worth says having inventory in each has or in single units stored in bins and shelves. And so far from that perspective, the reason you know if you are doing pallets and pallid out like getting into e-commerce and then getting working with small and mid-sized e-commerce businesses where you don't make a lot of money for customer Justin. Pencil for these for these B2 B3 Tails because they were used to having. A small number of very large customers and then designing their entire operation inside the building's only for that few number of merchants because they would be able to make a you know the entire earnings ones from that limited set of merchants, word says it shipbob you know we we have a whole large number of merchants none of our Merchants you know are these are all birds or these massive Brands but these are growing emerging bands and. [20:50] Productized what is very much like been away service-oriented business. Jason: [20:55] Yep and so the profile of the typical shipbob customer is a start-up that's intending to sell direct to Consumer mostly through their own website is that a fair characterization. Dhruv: [21:08] That's how we got started his and so you know today that is definitely evolved as a capabilities have grown as well so, I would say like if you have to break down the merchants that we serve are so, on one end of the spectrum we have these Merchants you know they could be ought to pronounce what just getting started and they're doing anywhere from you know less than a hundred thousand dollars of annual revenue on the website all the way up to maybe a million dollars or so. So that's one and then we have Merchants who are from 1 to 15 million dollars of gmv, and they are predominantly selling on their own website but they're also selling on marketplaces like Amazon eBay Walmart. And then we have a mid-market segment of merchant these are relatively established Brands they are doing anywhere from 10 to 150 million dollars of gmv across all the different channels that they're selling on, and for them you know they are in e-commerce which is direct-to-consumer they're also in marketplaces but they're also in retailgeek, and so they and they also are thought getting to be Global and so for them, they use shipbob because under one umbrella they are they get not only great technology but the Fulfillment solution is able to carry it across all the different channels that they're selling on, and it allows them to manage inventory Under One Roof so in the. I guess the value proposition over the last six years for shipbob has definitely evolved as a capabilities have grown I've grown. Jason: [22:33] Makes total sense and I'm assuming so in my day job one of the the new categories of business that I see you like getting into direct fulfillment more are traditional products that used to exclusively sell through wholesale and in some cases these could be quite large companies that are used to sending pallets to Target and Walmart and now they're starting to sell some of their own goods from their own website and just like those those startups from 2014 they've got to figure out how to do the each's Fulfillment and I think they turn to folks like you as well now. Dhruv: [23:06] Yeah absolutely and so you know that's the exciting piece of direct-to-consumer is that. The technology and the infrastructure needed for you to start your own e-commerce business and be able to reach your consumers is has massively evolved so these traditional. You know Brands who are predominant retail now they are able to participate in e-commerce in the pretty meaningful way as well and they have access to Great infrastructure and. I think you know the. They've also realized that the infrastructure that they need it for their retail shipping doesn't look anywhere close to what they need for the direct to Consumer so on the record consumer side maybe you choose Chopper 5 for your front end platform. Are you choose to do a lot of your advertising and marketing on through Facebook Instagram Snapchat social media is the predominant digital marketing channel effectively. And then you choose shipbob for your fulfillment and and running your supply chain and maybe use a form or you know or care enough for your buy now pay later like those credit financing options and so this technology stack that you need to run your direct-to-consumer e-commerce business you know now exists, and is completely different from what you might have used for running a full wholesale retail operation. Jason: [24:27] Yep and I do want to just double-click on one other thing before we turn to two marketplaces and the Frenemy situation there but the so a couple of your advantages why you develop this software to make the Fulfillment center much more efficient than traditional ones were and obviously efficiency is a huge differentiator and in the Fulfillment you you enable all this customization and personalization which is a better match for The Branding that all of these clients want to do one of the other things that I think of is. 3pls from that era that was sort of problematic and that kind of Amazon disrupted is like they used to make you manage your own inventory so if they had to. Fulfillment centers you as the merchant had to decide how much good you are sending to the West Coast and how much good you are sending to the east coast and and you sort of had to do all those things and. Amazon through their fulfillment by Amazon kind of took that that that Inventory management burden away from some of their their merchants and sort of did all that for them and did the load balancing and all those sorts of things so do you do that like you now it sounds like you've got four of your own fulfillment centers and a bunch of virtual fulfillment Centers do you do all of that sort of AI based inventory allocation for your customers as well. Dhruv: [25:56] Yep absolutely so and that's sort of I guess we can break that inventory allocation into two parts so one is choosing where in the network, to send your products from your manufacturer. [26:08] And so that's based on you know we provide all of that information upfront to a merchant base where you know based on historical purchase data that we captured from all the different sales channels that you connect into Shabbat we can be have a model that, Delta to fairly well as to how much inventory to store in which parts of the network, and so that's and so you can but we don't necessarily mandate that because for these brands you know they want to be one them to have the ability to make those decisions for themselves we provide them with all of the information and if they choose to they can have shipbob distribute that inventory for themselves for them or they can do it directly from the manufacturer my following our data you know that we give out to them so that's on the first half of like sending like the right amount of inventory to the right location so that's a little bit of a optionality for these bands. And then the second part of it where we do a lot of the work ourselves is once we start getting these orders into our platform once you buy something from our, from a branch choosing which fulfillment center that particular order gets routed to and what shipping carrier is used for that particular transaction that is something that we that we definitely do you know in the house and so that is a pretty important element of it because as a brand you might off be offering two day shipping on your checkout page. [27:32] But you actually don't want you know to be using Ups 2 day or FedEx overnight to do that today transaction because that will be very expensive, and sociable because we've captured a lot of far, carriers performance data over time we have a pretty built out model which tells us hey if we even if you use this local Regional carrier for this particular order we have a very high likelihood it will get delivered in 2 days or less and we don't have to pay for a UPS guarantee today service and so we are able to bring down the cost of two days significantly down at this almost the same price point as a USB as ground shipping which is a total which is the cheapest form of shipping simply by placing inventory in better you know better placement of inventory and a fulfillment centers but also choosing where which fulfillment center ships that particular order and what shipping carrier we use for the transaction, for that was a little long answer but I think that is sort of the secret, Elemental why brands of any size are able to offer a two-day next a sort of a shipping experience on the checkout page. Scot: [28:37] Yeah if that's helpful at when I've talked to some people about this kind of stuff they're always like how hard could this be like this comes up in the Shopify so a lot of Shopify Wall Street folks you know they'll say well why is this so hard and you know one of my favorite things about e-commerce is going to tour warehouses because once you get inside of warehoused you realize that this pretty complicated and the way I explain it is once you've committed to a. [29:09] Yo an asset like a warehouse and all the people in everything then it becomes an optimization problem in optimizing warehouses is pretty complicated right so let's let's take you guys have X number of customers in a fulfillment center let's just keep it one of the ones you own and operate to make it even simpler and you know there's a there's a bazillion questions like how do you if you take customer 1 through 100 do you intermix there things how do you do the packaging you talked about how do you how tall are the shelves do you use conveyor belts do you do two floors or one floor and your fulfillment center so what's fun about that is an engineer there's a lot of fun problems to solve their and it's a lot, you know your explanation of the shipping is interesting because that's like yet another one so a lot of people feel like this is too easy is really easy and then they kind of run up against the the the hardness of it and they kind of have to step back and redo it do you have a point of view of. You know what Shopify kind of did it seem like they tried to do a software-only kind of a solution and it kind of didn't work and now they're trying to get more involved in it and you have a point of view on that. Dhruv: [30:18] Yeah for sure but you framed it really well Scott which is. Once you you know once you go inside the Fulfillment center the number of problems of that that you can potentially solve or almost endless, and the reason it's important to attack these optimization problems is fundamentally you know fulfillment is not a software only problem. And it doesn't come with 80% gross margins and so it's in your best interest to optimize once you get to certain scale because every cent and dollar you share from those operating costs is a dollar that flows to your bottom line alternatively is a dollar that you can then reduce you know your cause to your brand which then allows them to reduce their fulfillment costs and that way allows them to offer free shipping which then drives, you know more sales on the website which then drives you no more orders into your platform which allows you to get to scale faster. And so optimization is you know is key for you to be operating at the lowest cost possible because there are advantages of doing so. And so there are a lot of different ways to get to Optimum to try to optimize but if you don't own and operate your fulfillment centers at least the onset you simply don't know what problems to solve, and so at shipbob you know what I believe worked really well in our favor is because we operated our own fulfillment centers we saw firsthand. [31:45] What are the consequences of the choices that we are making. And that involves you know the physical infrastructure do we mix products of different merchants in the same aisle where in the, we're in the Fulfillment Centers do we place the fast-moving skus do we take the loaf slowest moving skills and put them at the back of the Fulfillment centers away from the rest of the merchants inventory or do we place them high up in the, under racking system how do we think about Labor planning is Mondays. [32:15] 20% higher than Friday so do we need to staff up in the morning shift Etc and they are all and material handling and and Idol walking is such a big. Cost of the Fulfillment centers operations how do we try to minimize that and at what scale there are hundreds of these optimization decisions that we've had to make over the last seven years, which then have been productized in our software in our warehouse management system which then now is being deployed across these Partners sites, and so I think if we were to to you know jump ahead and just do our partners sites that we don't own and operate we don't own or operate on a day-to-day basis we would have missed out on all of these optimization decisions that we made over the last seven years which then allows us to operate, at a much lower operating costs than any of the competition so I think Shopify I don't know, you know the products are actually there but I think they might have tried to short-circuit their way into running virtual fulfillment centers to early without having learned the lessons of our without having experienced the lessons of running your own building which I think they might be course-correcting now. Scot: [33:25] Yeah it gives you the ability to go to a 3pl and say hey here's your you know 3pls are kind of V1 and you guys are like V10 so you can go in there and say take this section do it this way here's how you know here's the barcode reader you need to use yours there's like all this stuff that has to come together seamlessly with the software to kind of execute and you guys have figured all that out and you can just kind of plop it right into the 3pl I imagined. Dhruv: [33:50] That's right yeah exactly out pitch to these existing 3pls is that you have this unused capacity. This is like a warehouse in a box that we are providing you and if you follow you know the product or the our operating protocol then you will be able to make X dollars and order or Y dollars a square foot, Which is higher than what you are achieving now and by the way you don't have to spend any money on sales and marketing and servicing because shabab you know these are shipbob merchants and so you should be able to make. You know. You should be able to generate a return on that on that space in a relatively short amount of time which makes it a pretty interesting proposition for these existing 3pls who want to participate in e-commerce but they necessarily don't have the infrastructure. All the capital to do so as yet. Scot: [34:44] Interesting cool so give us an idea of your scale so I saw on crunch basis it says you've raised over 300 million so congrats on that the I've been raising capital in this kind of more asset heavy World in it's not not easy so so kudos to you for being able to fund us at the scale you have maybe like how many packages a day are you guys processing or anything you can tell us around scale would be kind of interesting. Dhruv: [35:10] For sure I won't be able to get to the. Exact are approximate taxes but here he is maybe a good proxy you know we have close to. 30 or so fulfillment centers in our Network today we are adding one fulfillment center a month that's the relative scale and majority of the reason why we're adding these fulfillment centers that are rapid clip. Is because we are you know reaching. Pasty in these fulfillment centers fairly quickly and the amount of space that we take inside of a fulfillment center is anywhere from. 30 to 40,000 square feet on the lower end as much as 90 200,000 square feet on the higher end so that's the sort of every sight every node in the network represents at least you know maybe call it average 50,000 square feet and we have close to 30 of them. Scot: [36:04] Furcal and then it wouldn't be a Jason and Scot show if we didn't at least throw you an Amazon question. So so it's easy to kind of you know again for someone to kind of look at this and say hey you're competing with FBA and I I get that you know. Amazon's talked about doing you know a you know just non-market play Style Style fulfillment. And then but then and then they've also talked about yeah you can use your own packaging and but you know my understanding is they're not really doing that at scale do you do you guys feel like you compete against them or do you see them the other thing that also blows people's minds a lot of time is software and sinners like you guys operate frequently will ship stuff using Amazon's API so that it can be prime eligible which is also kind of a so-so the 3pl the shipping partner can be Merchant fulfilled Prime which thus means their products are prime eligible so maybe talk a little bit about how you feel about Amazon. Dhruv: [37:03] Yeah for sure and yes you're right so we do ship inventory sometimes into Amazon Fulfillment centers as well for, for the fpaa. [37:15] And some of our some of our Merchants do also you know use the what you call the seller fulfilled Prime option but more on your question on the do we compete with FPA I think it is servicing a slightly. Different segments of the market and so if you talk to most of our brands, you know they were they won't really say that we trust Amazon with all of our data. And so for these brands that we serve as passing that customer information or who their buyers are, to Amazon seems like a big business dress because Amazon competes with them, you know on the Amazon to the Amazon Basics line or you know placing the product slightly differently on the the listing speed and sector so they want to build a supply chain, and demand you know sort of website which allows them to control their own destiny without having to rely on. On Amazon which could potentially be problematic for them down the road. And so in that context they want to stay away from Amazon as much as possible of course they also do sometimes have Amazon listings because Amazon is such a great. Aggregator of demand that maybe it has a lower cost of acquisition than having to do it yourself on your website but you don't want to rely on Amazon for. [38:40] Majority of your sales and so in you know under that, through contacts then we don't necessarily compete with Amazon FBA because for these Brands using FPA is not even an option and so and two because then we are there under this ethos of like if I have. Slightly Superior brand and my brand is represented through all aspects of my branding website supply chain I can I can be a better business, then you know shipbob stability to provide us a plethora of customization options, is a real value sell because and I know our ability to match you know this two-day Prime life experience. I think it's a real value add and the third aspect of it if I may add is as these Brands grow larger being able to have inventory globally is. Something which I don't think is possible with FB and fourth is if you're also getting into retail, you know doing being able to ship Ballads of inventory to these retail distribution centers again is not an option with fpso if a brand is thinking about their supply chain as a whole I think shipbob FB is probably not a solution. Jason: [39:51] Yeah so that really makes sense I'm kind of curious how this is going to continue to evolve I mean it seems like there's some risk that some of these big retailers like or marketplaces like Amazon and Walmart might eventually start selling their fulfillment as as a third party service that could potentially compete in the 3pl area and I think the the FedEx is and UPS is of the world are leaning more into it as well is. Is the future going to be kind of all of these different Services kind of colliding and meaning in the middle or how do you see the future of this industry playing out. Dhruv: [40:26] Yeah that's a hard question to answer, because yes you know e-commerce is growing so quickly that there are so many Greenfield opportunities for different companies. To play a part in so but I think each one probably you know like this industry benefits from scale. And so and of course this is a hard business because you're dealing with physical products and physical inventory and physical assets. And so I don't know if the industry would sort of all of us will start doing each other's work simply because it's by doing our core businesses by itself pretty hard and getting to scale in our Core Business is very relevant so. [41:07] I think UPS and FedEx might I think might have dabbled an e-commerce fulfillment but I think majority of the business still very much remains around transportation and and same for shipbob I think majority of our business is around fulfillment we are looking at ways of adding value to a merchant Base by taking parts of the transportation and seeing if we have enough density on certain routes, that can be that can allow us to reduce the overall fulfillment calls for a Merchants but again I think there's so much you know there's so much to be done in this space that if you. Lose focus you can lose the advantage that you have right now so you know I and and businesses are able to grow, simply by focusing in the core business area so for us at least you know it's mostly fulfillment and maybe pieces of Transportation sprinkled in. Jason: [41:58] Well that seems like a toy reasonable perspective and it certainly is going to be fun to watch but I think that's going to be where we have to leave it today because as per usual we have used up all of our allotted time as always if this is episode was helpful to you we sure would appreciate that five-star review but we really appreciate your time today and sharing a little bit more about shipbob with us. Dhruv: [42:21] Now thank you so much Jason and Scott for having me this was a good conversation. Scot: [42:25] Dexter even if folks want to follow you online do you pontificate or should they just follow the shipbob socials. Dhruv: [42:32] The shipbob Socialist would be a great great dad. Scot: [42:35] I know I would advocate for you doing more would love to read anything you write about the industry as it's been a good discussion and you know at least Jason I would read it so we can guarantee that. Dhruv: [42:47] It's great to read as I got I got it. Scot: [42:49] Boom and Jason's mom she always follows Oliver stuff stuff. Dhruv: [42:54] I can convince my mom as well. Jason: [42:59] The audience is growing by the minute well thanks very much everyone and until next time happy commercing.
This Episode of Kaka Balli Punjabi Podcast talks about the recent incident in Delhi India, where a girl's hair was cut off and her face painted black before she was paraded into the street where some people in a cheering crowd called for her to be raped. I talk about how our Indian patriarchy society decides and defines roles for genders. What is the reason and how unknowingly we operate in gender roles.
This week in Indian startup news, Delhi becomes India's new startup capital, Ashneer Grover probed for financial fraud, Budget 2022: startup tax holiday extended and LTCG surcharge capped at 15%, Ola rebrands quick grocery delivery business as Ola Dash, and Curefoods acquires Maverix. In funding news, Dealshare raises $165 million to become a unicorn, Moglix raises $250 million, Chargebee raises $250 million and Scaler Academy raises $55 million. Delhi becomes India's new startup capital: According to the Economic Survey 2021-22, Delhi is now the new startup capital of India - taking the title away from Bengaluru. Between April 2019 and December 2021 - while Bengaluru added 4,514 new startups, Delhi on the other hand added over 5,000 startups. Ashneer Grover probed for financial fraud: Days after BharatPe's Ashneer Grover went on a ‘voluntary leave', not only did his wife Madhuri Jain Grover (who also works at BharatPe) also went on a leave and BharatPe also announced an independent audit of the company's internal processes and systems. According to media reports, both Ashneer and his wife are being investigated for financial fraud at BharatPe. Ashneer is already facing a hard time in the media for the leaked audio clip controversy, but allegations of financial fraud could have serious consequences for not just Ashneer but for India's startup ecosystem. Ashneer has hired a legal firm and is looking to safeguard his reputation and interests at BharatPe. Budget 2022: Startup tax holiday extended and LTCG surcharge capped at 15%: While there wasn't much talk about startups in general in the latest budget, there are a few positives for Indian startups. First of all, startups that were incorporated between 1st April 2016 and 31st March 2022 - were eligible for a tax holiday - meaning they don't have to pay any tax on profits for three consecutive years out of the first ten years of their operations. Due to the whole covid situation, this period has been increased by one more year until 31st March 2023. Secondly - investors, startup founders and employees will now have to pay less tax on their startup investments as the long-term capital gain (LTCG) surcharge is now capped at 15%. Ola rebrands quick grocery delivery business as Ola Dash: Just like Gofers rebranded themselves as Blinkit to focus on instant grocery delivery, Ola's latest grocery delivery business called Ola Store is now renamed as Ola Dash to focus on instant grocery as well. They already have a presence in nine cities with a network of 200 dark stores – which they are now planning to increase to 500 across 20 cities in the next six months. Curefoods acquires Maverix: Cloud kitchen startup Curefoods has acquired another cloud kitchen startup called Maverix Platforms - making Curefoods the second-largest cloud kitchen in the country with 125 kitchens across 12 cities. Dealshare raises $165 million to become a unicorn: Social commerce platform Dealshare has raised $165 million in a round led by Tiger Global and Alpha Wave Global at a $1.4 billion valuation – making them India's fifth unicorn of 2022. Moglix raises $250 million: Moglix, which is a B2B marketplace for industrial products, has raised $250 million in a round led by Alpha Wave Global – more than doubling their valuation from $1 billion to $2.6 billion in just eight months. Chargebee raises $250 million: SaaS-based subscription management platform Chargebee has raised $250 million in a round led by Tiger Global and Sequoia Capital – raising their valuation from $1.4 billion to $3.5 billion in nine months. Scaler Academy raises $55 million: Upskilling platform for college students and working professionals Scaler Academy has raised $55 million in a round led by Lightrock India at a $710 million valuation.
13. Fall of Delhi | | India History | India History in Hindi | Bharat ka Itihas |India before Independence |Indian History in story | Indian Mutiny British Raj History of India |भारत का इतिहास |
Past Highlights: FIFA and AFC. Expertise: Consulting, football management & development and project management. Recorded August 2021. Here is the link to his public profile: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shaji-prabhakaran-38bb365/
Podcast in Hindi on Kids Moral Stories & Indian History, Hindi Kahaniya, हिंदी कहानियाँ, बाल
13. Fall of Delhi | | India History | India History in Hindi | Bharat ka Itihas |India before Independence |Indian History in story | Indian Mutiny British Raj History of India |भारत का इतिहास |
On July 1, 2018, the police discovered 11 bodies of all family members and shocking details emerged. Listen to learn more.
Now a seasoned medtech entrepreneur and leader, Amar Sawhney first became interested in the industry starting in graduate school. He was studying chemical engineering and developing biodegradable polymers for adhesion prevention and hydrogels for light-activated polymerization within the body. He and his advisor were then approached by Mayfield Fund to spin out the technology into the startup Focal. Amar was fortunate to learn a lot from then CEO Mark Levin, including some hard lessons that drove him and Fred Khosravi to found Incept, an IP holding company for creating operating companies based on field of use. As CEO/Founder of Confluent Surgical, AccessClosure, Augmenix, Ocular Therapeutix, and now Instylla, Amar learned how to transition from scientist to executive and is truly a medtech influencer. In this interview with host Geoff Pardo, Amar shares many of the valuable lessons he's learned founding and managing various startups, including how to find the right application for a technology, when a platform solution really makes sense, how to effectively lead and build successful teams, the value of a diverse workforce, and tips for overcoming the funding gap for early-stage companies, plus his candid thoughts on the differences in funding/entrepreneurship between the East and West coasts.Amarpreet (Amar) Sawhney, Ph.D., is the Founder, Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Instylla. He is also the CEO of Pramand LLC, and Rejoni, Inc. Prior to this Dr. Sawhney served as CEO and Chairman of Augmenix (acquired by Boston Scientific) and Ocular Therapeutix (NASDAQ: OCUL). In addition, he is a general partner of Incept, LLC, an intellectual property holding company. Previously, Dr. Sawhney founded Confluent Surgical and served as its President and CEO prior to its acquisition by Covidien plc. He also was a technology founder of Focal, Inc., a biopharmaceutical company acquired by Genzyme Corporation, and a founder of AccessClosure, Inc., acquired by Cardinal Health. Dr. Sawhney's innovations are the subject of over 120 issued and pending patents. He holds M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in chemical engineering from the University of Texas at Austin, as well as a B.Tech. in chemical engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi India.
Deep Anand is an astronomy lover and dark sky enthusiast. Deep has been working to spread awareness about light pollution, from his home base in Delhi India. Deep is passionate about bringing the night sky back for the children. Maybe he’ll even get this issue onto the Prime Minister of India's desk. Deep has even written poetry about the night sky and the stars. And get this - he’s only 17!
Deep Anand is an astronomy lover and dark sky enthusiast. Deep has been working to spread awareness about light pollution, from his home base in Delhi India. Deep is passionate about bringing the night sky back for the children. Maybe he’ll even get this issue onto the Prime Minister of India's desk. Deep has even written poetry about the night sky and the stars. And get this - he’s only 17!
Deep Anand is an astronomy lover and dark sky enthusiast. Deep has been working to spread awareness about light pollution, from his home base in Delhi India. Deep is passionate about bringing the night sky back for the children. Maybe he'll even get this issue onto the Prime Minister of India's desk. Deep has even written poetry about the night sky and the stars. And get this - he's only 17!
My guest today is Abhiir an active youth environmentalist from India.Abhiir has worked on climate change for over 8 years - particularly on air pollution and waste segregation and has been identified by the BBC as among the foremost international youth environmentalists.Twitter: @abhiirbhallaLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/abhiirbhalla/
El efecto cobra, extraído de la Wikipedia, ocurre “cuando un intento de solución a un problema en realidad empeora el problema». El nombre de efecto cobra proviene de una anécdota de ocurrió en la ciudad de Delhi (India) cuando era todavía una colonia británica. El Efecto Cobra: Cuando las “Soluciones” empeoran los problemas Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Welcome to The Jewish Hour with Rabbi Finman, for May 2, 2021. In this episode, Rabbi Finman talks to Sarah Kupchik a Chabbad representative in New Delhi India about COVID in India. How do you listen to The Jewish Hour? You have a lot of options you know? iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, Stitcher, RSS, it’s […]
Welcome to The Jewish Hour with Rabbi Finman, for May 2, 2021. In this episode, Rabbi Finman talks to Sarah Kupchik a Chabbad representative in New Delhi India about COVID in India. How do you listen to The Jewish Hour? You have a lot of options you know? iTunes, Spotify, Google Play, Stitcher, RSS, it’s […]
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India Gate Facts | National War Memorial Delhi | India Gate History Hello dosto swagat hai aapka aaj ki social studies mein jo based hai delhi tourism ke bare mein, delhi india gate ke bare mein, india gate history ke bare mein,delhi city,delhi facts,amar jawan jyoti,india gate facts,akbari mandi,mochi gate ke bare mein, india gate history ke bare mein, war memorial ke bare mein, india gate new delhi ke bare mein, delhi tourism ke bare mein, tourist places in delhi ke bare mein, delhi tourist place ke bare mein, india gate tour ke bare mein, places to visit in delhi ke bare mein, delhi tourist places ke bare mein, indian culture ke bare mein, delhi tour ke bare mein and india gate ke bare mein. To dekhte rahiye video ko ant tak ,dher saare gyan ko paane ke liye. delhi tourism,delhi india gate,india gate history,delhi city,delhi facts,amar jawan jyoti,india gate facts,akbari mandi,mochi gate,india gate history,war memorial,india gate new delhi,delhi tourism,tourist places in delhi,delhi tourist place,india gate tour,places to visit in delhi,delhi tourist places,indian culture,delhi tour,india gate || If You Enjoyed This Video You Can LIKE This Video || Like || Share || Comment || Subscribe Watch out our related videos to this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PltWW5SCj9E https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1V1hPfij3s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8fLyLAS2NQM Subscribe Factree and do follow us on: Website: https://deeshuumm.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/dee.factree Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dee.factree Business Query: admin@deeshuumm.com Other Queries: support@deeshuumm.com About Factree: This channel is totally dedicated to Fun Facts, Myth Busters, Scientific and Educational videos on almost every topic that would make you dive deep down in the vast ocean of knowledge. This channel is passion for people who are constantly challenging their intellect and feel a constant desire to learn more and grow along. Whether you are looking for a certain piece of information (probably for experiment or a project), or looking to learn something new or simply looking to impress your friends with incredible fun facts about the world around us– this channel can help. #Factree #Deeshuumm
In this episode, Dr Renny Thomas introduces his research on science and religion in India. Renny explains how his ethnographic work in Indian laboratories allowed him to explore belief systems among Indian scientists. He discusses some of the challenges of ethnographic research in scientific settings, from gaining access to negotiating insider/outsider status in the field. Renny's work challenges orientalist assumptions and helps us to move beyond science and religion literature dominated by Western perspectives by examining the science-religion relationship in spaces and places that have been previously overlooked. In considering the experience of Indian scientists, Renny rethinks what atheism(s) mean in such contexts, how we think of culture in relation to religion and the key role Science and Technology Studies (STS) can play in investigating science and religion. Dr Renny Thomas is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology, Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi (India). Renny received his PhD in Sociology from Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi and was the 2017-2018 Charles Wallace Fellowship in Social Anthropology at Queen's University, Belfast, UK.
On our final episode for the year, Ashwin and Mohit speak to Mannan Dattah, the Director and Founder of Knockout Fight Club. Knockout Fight Club is one of the largest MMA gym chains in the country with branches all across Delhi & India. A very unique personality of Indian MMA, Mannan believes vehemently in the power of positivity and has a can-do attitude that takes center stage. He is the Hindi colour commentator for Matrix Fight Night and staunch advocate of Self Defence and he does all this in the effort to empower others. We discuss the roles in gyms, the interpersonal dynamics and the mountain of work necessary to grow the sport in India. We struggle with power and internet issues of the real work, and have some behind the scenes moments in this podcast. Thanks to Mannan for coming on and being very candid with everything, we hope to train together soon!
How do we repair the Poor Hair Transplant? | Hair Transplant Repair in Delhi, India Repair Hair Transplant | Hairline Correction in Delhi, India | MedLinks Hair Transplant A hair transplant surgery that is used to repair bad or deterred results of previously performed procedures is referred as Corrective or Repairing hair transplant surgery. This podcast is by Dr. Gaurang Krishna, a renowned hair transplant surgeon at MedLinks Hair Transplant Clinic. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ About MedLinks Hair Transplant Clinic- The Best Hair Transplant Clinic in India: MedLinks Hair Transplant Clinic has been awarded as the best hair transplant clinic in Delhi NCR on numerous occasions. Based in Delhi and Gurgaon, we have a team of world-renowned doctors who are widely known to carry out the best hair transplants in India. Our surgeons are internationally trained in performing hair restoration surgery. We have expertise in performing various procedures including FUE hair transplant, FUT hair transplant, etc. Dr. Gaurang Krishna, the co-founder of MedLinks Hair Transplants is also the pioneer of the PERFECT-i hair transplant procedure that ensures faster results. Being a top hair transplant clinic in India, we aim to deliver the best results to our patients. We use the latest equipment and innovative technologies that ensure the most natural and desirable results. We also follow the best hygienic practices in order to provide a comfortable experience for our patients. Highlights of MedLinks Hair Transplant Clinic: ✔️ 20+ Served patients from 20+ countries across the world ✔️ 7,500+ Hair Transplants by AIIMS Trained Doctors ✔️ 100% of Bacteria & Fungus free operating rooms ✔️ 5 Star Interiors ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Dr. Gaurang Krishna(MD)- Consultant Dermatologist & Best Hair Transplant Surgeon. Get premium skin treatment from the top dermatologists.
This episode is part of a special series in collaboration with Gastronomica: The Journal for Food Studies https://online.ucpress.edu/gastronomica, whose forthcoming issue is entirely devoted to COVID Dispatches—in it, authors from around the world offer short, intimate portraits of early responses to the food crises of this pandemic, and hosts from the journal’s editorial collective will be joined by some of the featured authors to share their stories, and to hear how things have or haven't changed in the past few months.Shalini Sinha joins guest host Krishnendu Ray to discuss the influence that the pandemic has had on street food culture and its industry in Delhi.For 30% off a single-print issue, use promo code GASTROAUG2020 at checkout.Photo Courtesy of Shalini Sinha.Meant To Be Eaten is powered by Simplecast.
So after a considerable amount of time, I finally completed my Podcast with Football Writer Kaustubh Pandey who's featured in well renowned European outlets. So in this episode I took a trip to Delhi (India) to talk about his journey of getting into journalism / writing, the story of an article making to an outlet, Use of Analytics & data in modern day football and we spoke a load of things about the top 4 teams of the top 5 European leagues of the 2019/20 season. It was a real pleasure to have him on and hopefully I can get him on sometime again for talking on another topic. I truly enjoyed this one and surely this was one of my most high profile podcast interviews till date! Thanks to this episode, my Podcast channel is more or less going to cross 2000 overall plays across all platforms, which is something I never really saw happening so quick, so huge thanks to Kaustubh for that again. Make sure you follow Kaustubh on Twitter: @Kaus_Pandey17 . Hope you enjoy the Podcast and pls feel free to let me know your thoughts/opinions/ reviews on the social platforms mentioned below. You can send me a tweet on Twitter:- @Tiru_hemanth or send me a DM on Instagram:- @utd_official
Instagram link: https://www.instagram.com/nascent_carbon/ Chandrakant jha, a serial killer wo killed 7 people and throws their head less dead body around Tihar jail Delhi. It is a crime story, thriller story, hindi story. It is a crime story based in Delhi India. Sociopath or psychopath or mental killer. This is an Indian new podcaster who is exploring this new world of story telling. Particularly telling Dark stories, real stories of real life serial killer, trying to solve unsolved mystery of crime world in India.Chandrakant Jha is a serial killer and probable psychopath who befriended, then killed and dismembered 7 victims in west Delhi between 1998 and 2007. His first killing took place in 1998 for which he was arrested and held in jail until 2002, when he was released due to lack of evidence.[1] Following his release, he embarked upon a spate of killings. First Shekar and Umesh in 2003, Guddu in 2005, Amit in 2006 and Upender and Dalip in 2007. He would befriend migrant labourers from Bihar and Uttar Pradesh and help them get small jobs. Later, petty disputes over things like smoking, lying or being non-vegetarian would lead him to murder them by strangulation.[2] Chandrakant took pleasure in taunting the police by leaving dismembered body parts around the city and outside the Tihar Jail with notes daring the police to catch him. He was found guilty on three counts of murder and received two death sentences and life imprisonment until death in February, 2013[3] His death sentences were commuted to life imprisonment without remission in January 2016.[4] Chandrakant worked as a hawker in Delhi weekly bazaars. He married twice, abandoning the first within one year. He has five daughters with his second wife. He mostly lived away from his family. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/abhishek-tiwari007/message
अभिवादन छात्र(Greetings Students)As always, I know this is a difficult time to travel and the safety of you and your family is paramount. That being said, I thought it might be enjoyable to travel vicariously with some of our guests to again, give you the opportunity of what is "out there" for you to explore once the situation regarding Covid-19 (The Corona Virus) gets addressed and society starts to get back to a normal sense of being. If you have any questions on this, kindly let me know and I will do my best to guide you to the most helpful resources.On this week's episode of The Professor Travel Podcast, we are visited for a second time by our Visiting Professor Chad Swaney as he helps us discover the wondrous land of India!!! Join us as we explore the foods, and ancient history of this beautiful country.You can download for FREE on Apple Podcasts or wherever you receive your podcasts from.Enjoy and make every day a travel adventure!!!
Richard Colman was born in 1984 with Spina Bifida. Richard took to sport at a young age he was involved in many sports before the love of athletics took his full attention. Richard continues to play wheelchair basketball in the local Geelong league and regularly swims as part of his cross-training. Richard started athletics in 1995 quickly developing. He made his first state team in 1996 for the Pacific School Games. Richard has competed regularly since at major national and international level competitions. Richard first competed for Australia at the 2002 IPC world athletics championships in Lyon France where he came away with a Bronze medal in the T53 400m, two years later Richard won a Gold in the T53 800m and a Silver medal in the 4x100m at his first Paralympic Games in Athens. In 2006 Richard won a Bronze medal in the T53 800m at the IPC World Athletics Championships in Assen, The Netherlands. In 2008 Richard won a Silver medal in the T53 200m and a Bronze in the T53 400m at the Beijing Paralympic Games. In early 2009 Richard spent six months travelling Europe competing in a number of countries. During this trip, Richard managed to visit thirty-two countries. Richard has now visited sixty countries with the aim of reaching 100. In 2010 Richard competed at the commonwealth games in Delhi India in the T54 1500 winning a silver medal. In early 2011 Richard won his first IPC World Athletics Championship Gold medal winning the T53 800 and also a silver medal in the T53 400m. Also in 2011, Richard won the T53 400m Gold medal at the IAAF world championships in Deagu South Korea. Recently at the 2012 London Paralympic Games, Richard won a Gold medal in the T53 800m and two Bronze medals in the T53 400 and in the T53/54 4x400 relay. During the 2013 IPC World Athletics Championships Richard stepped up in distance in which he races winning a bronze medal in the 5000m and 400m and a narrow 4th in the 1500m. 2013 saw Richard focus on the marathon finishing 9 Marathon with 3 Personal bests while recording the 5th fastest time for the year in the world. Richard currently holds a number of Australian and Oceania Records. Away from the track Richard has completed a Bachelor of Commerce at Deakin University and has also completed a number of other qualifications. Richard became the first person in a wheelchair to umpire an AFL match when he officiated as a goal umpire in the Geelong Football League in 2007. Richard also spends countless hours coaching and mentoring new and developing athletes to help them achieve their dreams whatever that may be. During 2014 Richard became the first person in a wheelchair to travel down the famous Death Road in Bolivia during his postseason holiday to South America. Richard coaches regularly at various locations around Victoria and is helping the next generation of athlete achieve their dream. Richard has set himself a number of goals he is slowly working towards not just in the sporting world but in all walks of his life. Richard will continue to try and prove to people that anything is possible if you have a go and always dream big. www.colman.com.au @RichardColman84 www.facebook.com/RichardColmanAthlete www.youtube.com/user/richardcolman84 https://instagram.com/richcolman84/
Stephen Henderson is a journalist. While on assignment covering fashion in Delhi India he visited a Sikh soup kitchen where they serve 20,000 people a day. This led to his new book The 24 Hour Soup Kitchen explores how people feed the hungry all over the world. Now more than ever we need to help feed people who are hungry. As the world economy teeters on the brink of disaster we can learn a lot from this book. Feast Yr Ears is powered by Simplecast.
Brilliance and resilience, best describe this super energetic corporate leader celebrated in the Real Estate industry, for three decades.A TEDx speaker and recipient of over 35 prestigious awards and accolades. Ananta has spear headed leadership challenges, as the Executive Director -DLF, Chief Executive -Emaar MGF and Country Head (India & Nepal) as Senior Director -Damac. She is presently the Senior Executive Director at Experion Developers, India. A science graduate from Miranda House , Delhi University. An insatiable hunger for knowledge has equipped her with Masters in English Literature, Education, Computer applications and Management. She is a MRICS, UK and PhD in Marketing Management. A multifaceted personality and a trained musician, dancer and author. She holds a Sangeet Prabhakar in Hindustani Classical Vocal Music, trained in Guitar, Garbha, Shaimak's contemporary and Bollywood dance. She authors Real Estate research trends and personal life experiences too. Ananta is passionate about the safety and education of children. She guides women in Realty entrepreneurship. She is the proud mother of a son who keeps her grounded. Featured amongst the “Most powerful women in Business & Economy 2018“ by Business Today. Her journey and views are covered by Indian Express, Hindustan Times, Mail today, Business today, Realty plus, Outlook, Savvy, Atelier, Khaleej times, Hindi Hindustan,Tribune etc. Also, Harvard business school in their projects on ‘ How star women succeed' & ‘Managing your own Human capital‘.She stepped out of the enmeshment of her comfort zone seeking new challenges and is crowned with 6 glamorous titles as an International & National Beauty Pageant Queen. She aspires. She inspires. A journey of fortitude, attitude, gratitude, solitude and altitude. She is an “ Exclusive. Extraordinary. Savvy Corporate Woman Warrior “.
Welcome to the Spirit Box podcast, a podcast exploring folklore, magick and the spirit world. Originally a video of a lecture I did at the world famous Treadwell's bookshop in London, covering my photo documentary work on belief in the Jinn or Djinn in Delhi India. This show explains the origin of the Jinn, their history and who the major figures are in Jinn mythos. Sources and further reading: 'Legends of the fire spirits' by Robert Lebling. 'One thousand and one nights' by Robert Irwin. For the full video visit this link https://youtu.be/RUv6Mo3jqFI. To see the photographic essay https://www.darraghmasonfield.com/index/G0000VFRBfQCfShI Music by Obliqka https://soundcloud.com/obliqka --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/spirit-box/message
Delhi is a big and wild place. As part of a recent around the world trip, this episode dives into all things Delhi, from an unexpected visit to a local hospital to seeing chickens slaughtered with bare feet. I thought I was ready to travel in India. I wasn't. The city has major issues, but it's uniqueness is appreciated even after leaving. Enjoy!
Today’s episode is a little extra special — it is Getting Smart’s TWO HUNDREDTH episode of the podcast! This week, the team will be hearing from Tara C. Chklovski, the CEO and founder of Iridescent. Tara grew up in a small town outside Delhi India. Inspired by a tinkering father, Tara wanted to be an aerospace engineer. After a master’s degree at Boston University, Tara launched into a Ph.D. at USC. But the pull to help more girls experience powerful science, engineering, and technology education drew her away. In 2006, she launched the non-profit Iridescent, to create and deliver powerful STEM learning to empower underrepresented young people everywhere. Iridescent’s newest initiative, the AI Family Challenge, invites families to learn about Artificial Intelligence and use it to solve a problem in their community. Over 7,500 people from 13 countries participated in the first year of the program! Join Tom and Tara to hear about the strides Iridescent is making for thousands of young people, about their incredible programs and initiatives, as well as Tara’s advice for educators on how they also can become more involved with AI and begin incorporating it into their teaching! Key Takeaways: [:15] About today’s episode. [1:57] Tom welcomes Tara to the podcast. [2:04] Tara speaks about her early education and what first drew her to STEM. [4:02] What originally prompted Tara to launch Iridescent? [5:48] How did Tara go about launching a global campaign for a new non-profit? [9:06] About one of Iridescent’s programs, Technovation. [10:03] About one of Iridescent’s initiatives, the AI Family Challenge. [12:25] When did Tara begin to realize that AI was having profound implications in the world? [14:07] Is it realistic for young adults and their parents to learn enough about AI in 15 weeks to deploy simple models and solve real community problems? [15:36] Tara’s advice for educators in getting more involved with AI and incorporating it into their teaching. [17:45] About the AI for Good Global Summit that Tara will be in attendance for! [19:05] Where to find Tara online. Mentioned in This Episode: Iridescent AI Family Challenge Technovation Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence AI for Good Global Summit (May 28th-31st) Tara’s Twitter: @TaraChk Tara’s Email: Tara@IridescentLearning.org For More on Spreading Equitable Access to Computer Science: Listen to: Episode 190 with Amon Millner on exposing engineering to underrepresented groups! Get Involved: Check out the blog at GettingSmart.com. Find the Getting Smart Podcast on iTunes, leave a review and subscribe. Is There Somebody You’ve Been Wanting to Learn From or a Topic You’d Like Covered? To get in contact: Email Editor@GettingSmart.com and include ‘Podcast’ in the subject line. The Getting Smart team will be sure to add them to their list!
This hour we talk to Augustin aka Mr.WaddleSplash from the Haiku Project. The Haiku project is a Haiku is a free and open-source operating system compatible with the now discontinued BeOS. Its development began in 2001 under the name OpenBeOS, but rebranded as Haiku in 2004. We talk about the Project History and their aim for the future. Project Links: Website: https://www.haiku-os.org/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/haikuos IRC: irc://chat.freenode.net/haiku GSOC: https://summerofcode.withgoogle.com/organizations/5972111219228672/ Outreachy: https://www.outreachy.org/communities/cfp/haiku/ --Side Notes-- --LUG Alert-- Already took place but keep an eye out for their future events: March 4 - Zürich, Switzerland : https://www.meetup.com/Embedded-GNU-Linux-Developer/events/xgtstpyzfbgb/ March 4 - Annapolis, MD : https://www.meetup.com/AnnapolisLUG/events/djjqhgyzfbgb/ March 5 - Montréal, Quebec : https://www.meetup.com/Linux-Montreal/events/kxlpjlyzfbhb/ March 5 - Chicago, IL : https://www.meetup.com/wclug-org/events/qnffmfyzfbhb/ March 5 - Dublin IR : https://www.meetup.com/Dublin-Linux-User-Group/events/259423935/ Upcoming: March 7 - Huntsville, AL : https://www.meetup.com/hsvlug/events/dbwqnpyzfbkb/ March 7 - Chelmsford, MA : https://www.meetup.com/linux-393/events/wkrshqyzfbkb/ March 7 - Akron, OH : https://www.meetup.com/Akron-Linux-Users-Group/events/qrnxmfyzfbkb/ March 7 - Saint Louis, MO : https://www.meetup.com/Saint-Louis-Unix-Users-Group/events/gmkjzpyzfbkb/ March 7 - Fort Wayne, IN : https://www.meetup.com/Fort-Wayne-Linux-Users-Group/events/rpxvnpyzfbkb/ March 8 - Moscow Russia : https://www.meetup.com/Moscow-Linux-User-Group/events/xbgccqyzfblb/ March 9 - Lawrence, KS : https://www.meetup.com/Lawrence-Linux-User-Group/events/258918528/ March 9 - Perth Australia : https://www.meetup.com/Perth-Linux-Users-Group-PLUG/events/259321538/ March 9 - Delhi India : https://www.meetup.com/ilugdelhi/events/jkbtdqyzfbmb/ March 9 - McLean, VA : https://www.meetup.com/novalug/events/pjhmrqyzfbmb/ March 12 - Morgandown, WV : https://www.meetup.com/Bridgeport-WV-Linux-User-Group-Meetup/events/nbcvcpyzfbzb/ March 13 - London UK : https://www.meetup.com/londonlinux/events/dcsdmlyzfbrb/ March 14 - Landshut Germany : https://www.meetup.com/LALUG-Landshuter-Linux-User-Group-Stammtisch/events/gsmfnlyzfbsb/ March 14 - Phoenix, AZ : https://www.meetup.com/Phoenix-Linux-Users-Group/events/hhkbdlyzfbsb/ March 14 - Austin, TX : https://www.meetup.com/linuxaustin/events/jbxcnqyzfbsb/ March 14 - Raleigh, NC : https://www.meetup.com/trilug/events/zmzvnqyzfbsb/ March 18 - Seattle, WA : https://www.meetup.com/seattlelinux/events/cgrpkpyzfbxb/ March 19 - Lauderdale, FL : https://www.meetup.com/South-Florida-Linux-Users-Group-FLUX/events/dsxbqqyzfbzb/ March 20 - Jacksonville, FL : https://www.meetup.com/JaxLUG/events/258935524/ March 21 - Lancaster, PA : https://www.meetup.com/LancLUG/events/rcfmbnyzfbcc/ March 21 - Baltimore, MD : https://www.meetup.com/CharmCityLinux/events/259402356/ March 28 - NYC, NY : https://www.meetup.com/nylug-meetings/events/258140602/ March 29 - Syndey Australia : https://www.meetup.com/Sydney-Linux-User-Group/events/259189085/ March 29 - Grand Forks, ND : http://www.gfklinux.org -- Calls -- Chaz from NY - "How to disasble Ubuntu Keychain" Kyle from MSP - "WiFi / network diagnostic tools" Kyle from MSP - " NextCloud & Collabora" -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/117) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #AskNoahShow on Freenode! -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they’re excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
Mohatma Ghandi was born October 2, 1869 in Porbandor India. He died in January 30, 1948 in Delhi India. He was a lawyer, politician, social activist and writer who became the leader of the nationalist movement during the British rule of India. He spend three years in England studying English and Latin in university of London. He was vegetarian and he practiced Hinduism . He was a racist . He never like so called black people. During his time in South Africa working for the British government. He faces a lot of discrimination. He was kicked out first class while he travel in to Durban . During those time coloure people were not allowed to sit in first class. He never cared for black people. According to Indian historians he was a child Molester . Most people in the west are not aware of those facts. He was catalyst of partition of India. There’s three major religions in Hindu, Siek , Islam. He hated the Muslim he made them fled to north India. Now know as Pakistan. Nevertheless he was n --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/johnrosemberg/support
What is Hinduism Visitors have a template in their mind on what Hinduism is. They might have seen Christianity or islam or Judaisim. Its important to not look at Hinduism with the lens of both religions. We talk about “isms” and why language limits our understanding of Hinduism. Ism is a particular kind of thought. A narrow view point or the thoughts of a person. Its not a good idea to call it an “ism” but we understand that Hinduism as a name has stuck. In this episode we try to explain Hinduism, its rituals and goals. ...
Global Trance Grooves: Edition 119 This months show is swamped with Progressive Trance. Looks like my favourite style is making a comeback, Deep mix and Turbo mix both dusted with this wonderful feeling + Guest mix from CID inc. 2 hours of bliss. Featuring tracks from: Marcus Decay, Jeremy Rowlett, Dark Soul Project, Lyctum, Tegma, Astral Projection ----------------------------------------------------------------------- John 00 Fleming's artist album, One.Hundred.Ten WKO out now! Listen and buy here: Beatport: http://www.beatport.com/release/one-hundred-ten-wko/1038787 Limited edition double CD here: http://www.psyshop.com/shop/CDs/joo/joo2cd141.html --------------------------------------------------------------- Gigs for March: 2nd J00F Editions/Album Tour- Passion- Emporium- Coalville- (UK) 8th Album Tour, Blue Frog, Delhi (India) 9th Album Tour, Blue Frog, Mumbai (India) 16th Fleming & Lawrence, Seattle (USA) 22nd Yost theatre, Santa ana (USA) 23rd Pure Trance- Room Service- Miami (USA) 30th J00F Editions/Album Tour- H Club- Brighton- (UK) 31st Goodgreef FOF @ Empire- Middleborough- (UK)
Global Trance Grooves: Edition 118 This month I showcase two tracks from my forthcoming artist album released March 4th. Teaser from Stimpack. Turbo mix is a heads down affair, very deep and hypnotic, yet driving featuring Manmachine, E-Clip and Sonic entity. One of my favourite tracks ever as the track of the month and newcomers Insert Name are on the guest mix creating a serious slab of Progressive Trance. Make a date for: March 4th: Release date of John 00 Fleming's artist album; one.hundred.ten WKO Gigs: March 2nd J00F Editions/Album Tour- Passion- Emporium- Coalville- (UK) 8th Album Tour, Blue Frog, Delhi (India) 9th Album Tour, Blue Frog, Mumbai (India) 23rd Pure Trance- Room Service- Miami (USA) 30th J00F Editions/Album Tour- H Club- Brighton- (UK) 31st Goodgreef FOF @ Empire- Middleborough- (UK) Tour dates: https://www.facebook.com/john00fleming/events For more info and Tracklists visit: www.facebook.com/john00fleming www.john00fleming.com www.joof.co.uk
'Transforming the slums of Delhi' - Part 2, with Dr. Kiran Martin, Delhi, India ------------------------ Dr. Kiran Martin lives in Delhi, India, and began the ministry of ASHA - which means 'hope' in the Hindi language - more than 21 years ago, in the slums of Delhi. Her work has brought her into contact with the Indian Government, major banks and with criminal slumlords - straight out of 'Slumdog Millionaire!' I interviewed her when she visited Holywood, Co. Down, a few months ago. Website: http://www.asha-india.org ------------------------ Includes NEWS from 'Bread NEWS International' and music from: Craicmore, (California, USA) - 'The Fermoy Lasses/Brenda Stubberts', (From Hill & Hoolie); Danny and Seth Jeffery, (Missouri, USA) - 'Awesome In This Place', (single); Calaveras, (California, USA) - 'Ready to Fly', (Ready to Fly) Produced by Precious Oil Productions Ltd, for Kingdom Come Trust.
'Transforming the slums of Delhi' - Part 1, with Dr. Kiran Martin, Delhi, India ------------------------ Dr. Kiran Martin lives in Delhi, India, and began the ministry of ASHA - which means 'hope' in the Hindi language - more than 21 years ago, in the slums of Delhi. Her work has brought her into contact with the Indian Government, major banks and with criminal slumlords - straight out of 'Slumdog Millionaire!' I interviewed her when she visited Holywood, Co. Down, a few months ago. Website: http://www.asha-india.org ------------------------ Includes NEWS from 'Bread NEWS International' and music from: David Leinweber, (Georgia, USA) - 'Whiskey before breakfast', (Simple Songs and a Box Guitar); Debbie Zepick, (British Columbia, Canada) - 'Bend Like a Willow', (Not Like in the Movies); Shake Russell, (Texas, USA) - 'Anam Cara', (What This Heart Holds) Produced by Precious Oil Productions Ltd, for Kingdom Come Trust.