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Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Mary (Magnificent) Kom

Mary Kom highlights
M.C. Mary Kom, popularly known as "Magnificent Mary" won the first ever boxing gold for India at the 17th Asian Games in Incheon on October 1, 2014. The five-time World Champion has punched her way to earn 13 yellow metals so far in her illustrious career.

Mangte Chungneijang Mary Kom (born 1 March 1983), also known as MC Mary Kom, or simply Mary Kom, is an Indian boxer. She is a five-time World Amateur Boxing champion, and the only woman boxer to have won a medal in each one of the six world championships. Nicknamed "Magnificent Mary", she is the only Indian woman boxer to have qualified for the 2012 Summer Olympics, competing in the flyweight (51 kg) category and winning the bronze medal. She has also been ranked as No. 4 AIBA World Women's Ranking Flyweight category.

Kom co-wrote an auto-biography called Unbreakable (2013) and was portrayed by Priyanka Chopra in the film Mary Kom (2014). Kom also has started a female-only fight club at Imphal to teach girls to defend themselves against sexual violence in India. To spread her academy all over the country Mary Kom wants Priyanka Chopra to become its brand ambassador.

Kom was born in Kangathei, in Churachandpur district of Manipur. Her parents, Mangte Tonpa Kom and Mangte Akham Kom, worked in jhum fields. She completed her primary education from Loktak Christian Model High School, Moirang, up to her class VI standard and attended St. Xavier Catholic School, Moirang, up to class VIII. She then moved to Adimjati High School, Imphal, for her schooling for class IX and X, but was unable to pass the matriculation exam. Not wishing to reappear for them, she quit her school and gave her examination from NIOS, Imphal and graduation from Churachandpur College.

Although she had a keen interest in athletics from childhood, it was the success of Dingko Singh that inspired her to become a boxer in 2000. She started her training under the close eye of M. Narjit Singh, Manipur State Boxing Coach at Khuman Lampak,Imphal.

She is married to K. Onler Kom and has twin sons, Rechungvar and Khupneivar. They first met in 2001 when Kom was at New Delhi on her way to National Games in Punjab while Onler was studying at Delhi University. They married in 2005 after 4 years of dating. In 2013,she gave birth to her third baby boy and has named him Prince Chungthanglen Kom.

Source: Wikipedia






































India's Mary Kom (in Red) is declared winner in the final bout of women's flyweight boxing at the Asian Games in Incheon on October 1, 2014. Photo: PTI



























Boxer Mary Kom holds the Tricolor as she celebrates her 'golden' win in women's flyweight (48-51kg) category at the Incheon Asian Games. Photo: PTI
Mary Kom defeated Vietnam's Le Thi Bang in the semifinal match at the Asian Games in Incheon on September 30, 2014. Photo: PTI
In this Aug. 22, 2012 file photo, India's London Olympic bronze medal winner in boxing M.C. Mary Kom speaks at an event celebrating her victory, in Bangalore. The cricket-crazy country has been improving in the Olympic sport of boxing due to more exposure in international competition. Photo: AP
Mary Kom kisses her child after winning her round of 16 bout against Kim Yeji of Korea in Incheon on September 27, 2014. The 31-year-old champion is a mother of three, including twin sons She is married to K. Onler Kom. Photo: PTI
Boxers Mary Kom and L.Sarita Devi practice during a training camp for the upcoming Incheon Asian games, in New Delhi on September 09, 2014. While Mary Kom won the first boxing gold for India, Sarita Devi lost a controversial bout against the Korean opponent Jina Park and she refused to accept the bronze medal awarded to her. Photo: Sandeep Saxena
Mary Kom, a five-time world champion, had won several medals in the 46 and 48 kg categories. She was forced to shift to this category and gain weight two years ago after the world body decided to allow women’s boxing in only three weight categories -- the lowest one being 51 kg. Photo: Special Arrangement

Reel 'Mary Kom' Priyanka Chopra with the real Mary Kom during a promotion of her biopic in Mumbai. Kom co-wrote an auto-biography called Unbreakable in the year 2013, which was made into a Hindi movie the next year. Photo: PTI
Mary Kom celebrates her bronze medal in boxing of the London 2012 Olympic Games at Olympic Stadium. Photo: PTI
President Pranab Mukherjee felicitates Olympic bronze medalist boxer M.C. Mary Kom during a felicitation ceremony in New Delhi on August 18, 2012. Photo: R.V. Moorthy
In this June 14, 2012 Mother of three Mary Kom, otherwise known as "Magnificent Mary", practices hard for the Olympic Games. Although she had a keen interest in athletics from childhood, it was the success of Dingko Singh that inspired her to become a boxer in 2000. She started her training under the close eye of M. Narjit Singh, Manipur State Boxing Coach at Khuman Lampak,Imphal. Photo: AP
Mary Kom receives Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award from the then President of India Pratibha Patil at the Sports and Adventure Awards 2009 presentation function in New Delhi on August 29, 2009. Photo: Rajeev Bhatt
Boxer Mary Kom with her twin sons Rechungvar and Khupneivar at an event in Mumbai. Mary Kom was awarded Arjuna Award in 2003; Padma Shree in 2010 and Padma Bhushan in 2013. Photo: PTI



Meet Lily Thomas the lady behind clipping of wings of convicted politicians

Thomas is behind clipping of wings of politicians such as Jayalalithaa and Lalu Prasad who have been accused of accumulating wealth through unfair means.  
















AIADMK'S Jayalalithaa has often said her dream was to be a lawyer but last Saturday when a court convicted her in the disproportionate assets case, it was a woman lawyer, 87-year-old Lily Thomas, who was whisked away by anxious family members from her apartment in Delhi to a 'safer location.'

"Seeing the reaction of people in Tamil Nadu, we were worried about her safety as she lives alone in Delhi. So we brought her to live with us," said Thangam, her niece who lives in Gurgaon.

Lily Thomas is behind clipping of wings of politicians such as Jayalalithaa and Lalu Prasad who have been accused of accumulating wealth through unfair means. She was the petitioner in the case - now referred to as the Lily Thomas judgment - where Supreme Court struck down Section 8(4) of the Representation of the People Act. Following the verdict, a legislator stands disqualified immediately when convicted for two or more years' prison.

"She (Jayalalithaa) looked so powerful when in power but now she stands betrayed and alone. Why didn't her party stop her? Where is the wealth now? Shouldn't it be confiscated? Our law should be so clear that there should be no ifs and buts," Thomas said.

Last week, while coming down the stairs of her New Delhi apartment, she broke her arm and has been asked to take rest. Sitting with a bandaged arm, she recalls it was in 2005 that she filed the petition first, enraged at the sight of convicted getting stay from courts, contesting elections and winning them. The petition was rejected and it was only in her third attempt that she succeeded.

"Earlier, a convicted politician could file an appeal which could result in a stay on the conviction. It encouraged tainted leaders to contest elections," she says. When the UPA government last year prepared an ordinance to nullify the judgment, Thomas quickly prepared a review petition and was all set for another fight, but it was withdrawn. "Krishna in Bhagwad Gita says he will be born for restoring Dharma whenever it is in danger. Here, Dharma gets broken every day. Judiciary has become the correcting mechanism. What we need is a satvik Parliament devoid of corrupt politicians, so that democracy is run on principles." Thomas says she got help from other experts, including Fali Nirman, who argued for the case on her request.

Originally from Kerala's Kottayam, Thomas grew up in Trivandrum and enrolled in the Madras High Court in 1955, after pursuing a law course in Madras University. She then joined the Supreme Court where only three women lawyers were in active practice. Thomas has been filing petitions since 1964 on a variety of issues - from questioning the validity of government exams and sorting out issues of railway employees to one in which the Supreme Court came down heavily on conversion to Islam for the express purpose of entering into a second marriage. Her hero is her father, also an advocate, who fought all his life to demolish a church meant only for Dalits, she says.

For Thomas, age is only a number. Her courage and enthusiasm have not dimmed nor has her sense of humour. Even now, she goes to the court every day and works for 8-10 hours. With over 55 years of experience, she has people coming over for legal advice every day. She can be consulted on any legal issue, except divorce, which she believes should be avoided.

"I read Mills and Boon for fun. I have read all 600 of them. I like the simplicity and warmth of these books." Single at 87, Lily has few regrets. "All the men I liked were already married. I was a romanticist. I wanted Lincoln, James Bond and Churchill in one man." She recalls a judge asking her if she was a miss or a Mrs, "I told him I am a miss but I don't miss much. He laughed so hard that even it would have been audible at India Gate."

She is thorough with the Bible and the Vishnu Sahasranam. "Most Hindus and Christians have not understood their religions well," she says. Niece Thangam and her husband Issac said that their aunt would often give away food and clothes to rag pickers. On a regular day, she is busy preparing PILs to make government answerable for the time-frame of each trial. "I am believer. Jesus is with me all the time, asking me answers to all my actions. As an advocate, I have many responsibilities which I am trying to fulfill," she concludes.

(TOI)

Malala Yousafzai

As a young girl, Malala Yousafzai defied the Taliban in Pakistan and demanded that girls be allowed to receive an education. She was shot in the head by a Taliban gunman in 2012, but survived.

“If I win Nobel Peace Prize, it would be a great opportunity for me, but if I don't get it, it's not important because my goal is not to get Nobel Peace Prize, my goal is to get peace and my goal is to see the education of every child.”
—Malala Yousafzai

Synopsis

Malala Yousafzai was born on July 12, 1997, in Mingora, Pakistan. As a child, she became an advocate for girls' education, which resulted in the Taliban issuing a death threat against her. On October 9, 2012, a gunman shot Malala when she was traveling home from school. She survived, and has continued to speak out on the importance of education. She was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 2013, and again in 2014.

Early Life

On July 12, 1997, Malala Yousafzai was born in Mingora, Pakistan, located in the country's Swat Valley. For the first few years of her life, her hometown remained a popular tourist spot that was known for its summer festivals. However, the area began to change as the Taliban tried to take control.

Initial Activism

Yousafzai attended a school that her father, Ziauddin Yousafzai, had founded. After the Taliban began attacking girls' schools in Swat, Malala gave a speech in Peshawar, Pakistan, in September 2008. The title of her talk was, "How dare the Taliban take away my basic right to education?"

In early 2009, Yousafzai began blogging for the BBC about living under the Taliban's threats to deny her an education. In order to hide her identity, she used the name Gul Makai. However, she was revealed to be the BBC blogger in December of that year.

With a growing public platform, Yousafzai continued to speak out about her right, and the right of all women, to an education. Her activism resulted in a nomination for the International Children's Peace Prize in 2011. That same year, she was awarded Pakistan's National Youth Peace Prize.

Targeted by the Taliban

When she was 14, Malala and her family learned that the Taliban had issued a death threat against her. Though Malala was frightened for the safety of her father—an anti-Taliban activist—she and her family initially felt that the fundamentalist group would not actually harm a child.

On October 9, 2012, on her way home from school, a man boarded the bus Malala was riding in and demanded to know which girl was Malala. When her friends looked toward Malala, her location was given away. The gunman fired at her, hitting Malala in the left side of her head; the bullet then traveled down her neck. Two other girls were also injured in the attack.

The shooting left Malala in critical condition, so she was flown to a military hospital in Peshawar. A portion of her skull was removed to treat her swelling brain. To receive further care, she was transferred to Birmingham, England.

After the Attack

Once she was in the United Kingdom, Yousafzai was taken out of a medically induced coma. Though she would require multiple surgeries—including repair of a facial nerve to fix the paralyzed left side of her face—she had suffered no major brain damage. In March 2013, she was able to begin attending school in Birmingham.

The shooting resulted in a massive outpouring of support for Yousafzai, which continued during her recovery. She gave a speech at the United Nations on her 16th birthday, in 2013. She has also written an autobiography, I Am Malala: The Girl Who Stood Up for Education and Was Shot by the Taliban, which was released in October 2013. Unfortunately, the Taliban still considers Yousafzai a target.

Despite the Taliban's threats, Yousafzai remains a staunch advocate for the power of education. On October 10, 2013, in acknowledgement of her work, the European Parliament awarded Yousafzai the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought. That same year, she was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. She didn't win the prize, but was named a nominee again in March 2014. In August of the same year, Leanin.Org held a live chat on Facebook with Sheryl Sandberg and Yousafzai about the importance of education for girls around the world. She talked about her story, her inspiration and family, her plans for the future and advocacy, and she answered a variety of inquiries from the social network’s users. 

(Source: Biography.com)

30-year-old billionaire Elizabeth Holmes revolutionizes blood testing

The next time you get a blood test, you might not have to go to the doctor and watch vials of blood fill up as the precious fluid is drawn from your arm. 

No more wondering to yourself - "ah, how much more can they take before I pass out?" 

Instead you might be able to walk into a Walgreens pharmacy for a reportedly painless fingerprick that will draw just a tiny drop of blood, thanks to Elizabeth Holmes, 30, the youngest woman and third-youngest billionaire on Forbes's newly-released annual ranking of the 400 richest Americans. 

Revolutionizing the blood test is a golden idea. 

Because of new testing methods developed by Holmes's startup Theranos, that lone drop can now yield a ton of information. 

The company can run hundreds of tests on a drop of blood far more quickly than could be done with whole vials in the past - and it costs a lot less. 

A Billion Dollar Idea 


Holmes dropped out of Stanford at 19 to found what would become Theranos after deciding that her tuition money could be better put to use by transforming healthcare. 

Traditional blood testing is shockingly difficult and expensive for a tool that's used so frequently. It also hasn't changed since the 1960s.



It's done in hospitals and doctors' offices. Vials of blood have to be sent out and tested, which can take weeks using traditional methods and is prone to human error. And, of course, sticking a needle in someone's arm scares some people enough that they avoid getting blood drawn, even when it could reveal lifesaving information. 

Holmes recognized that process was ripe for disruption. 

It took a decade for her idea to be ready for primetime, but now it seems that her decision to drop out was undoubtedly a good call. Last year, Walgreen Co. announced that it would be installing Theranos Wellness Centers in pharmacies across the country, with locations already up and running in Phoenix and Palo Alto, California. And Holmes has raised $400 million in venture capital for Theranos, which is now valued at $9 billion (Holmes owns 50%). 

The other two 30-year-olds on Forbes' List, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his former roommate and Facebook CEO Dustin Moskovitz, also have access to a wealth of information about people — but their data is less likely to directly save a life. 

How It Works 


One closely guarded secret is what MedCityNews calls "the most interesting part of [the Theranos] story": how exactly the technology behind its blood test works. The company's methods are protected by more than a dozen patents filed as far back as 2004 and as recently as last week. 

In an interview with Wired, Holmes hinted at some of the key ideas behind Theranos. 

"We had to develop ... methodologies that would make it possible to accelerate results," she said. "In the case of a virus or bacteria, traditionally tested using a culture, we measure the DNA of the pathogen instead so we can report results much faster." 

While we can't yet assess independently how well that method works when compared with traditional blood tests, it already seems to be upending the old way of doing things. 

Why Blood Tests? 


Holmes told Medscape that she targeted lab medicine because it drives about 80% of clinical decisions made by doctors. 

By zeroing in on the inefficiencies of that system, the Theranos approach completely revolutionizes it. 

The new tests can be done without going to the doctor, which saves both money and time. Most results are available in about four hours, which means that you could swing by a pharmacy and have a test done the day before a doctor's visit, and then the results would be available for the physician. 

Quick tests that can be done at any time are already a total change, but the amount of data the company can get from a single drop of blood is amazing. 

Blood samples have traditionally been used for one test, but if a follow-up was needed, another sample had to be drawn and sent out — making it less likely that someone would get care. The Theranos approach means the same drop can be used for dozens of different tests. 

It's cheap, too. One common criticism of the healthcare system is that the pricing structure is a confusing labyrinth that makes it impossible to know how much anything costs. Theranos lists its prices online, and they're impressive. 

Each test costs less than 50% of standard Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates. If those two programs were to perform all tests at those prices, they'd save $202 billion over the next decade, Holmes said in an interview on Wired. 

Plus, people get access to their own results. 

As an example of how helpful that can be, Holmes told Wired that Theranos charges $35 for a fertility test, which is usually paid for out-of-pocket and costs up to $2,000. 

But she also said that this data could be useful for anyone looking to gain a better understanding of his or her health. 

"By testing, you can start to understand your body, understand yourself, change your diet, change your lifestyle, and begin to change your life," she said. 

(TOI)

Friday, September 26, 2014

CEO quits after daughter lists ‘missed events’

While at the top of world finance, Mohamed El-Erian juggled $2 trillion of investments and wrestled with the knottiest economic problems. But it has now emerged his greatest dilemma arose from asking his daughter to brush her teeth. 

When the Oxbridge-educated economist stepped down last year as the chief executive of the PIMCO investment fund, one of the largest on the planet, rumour was rife that he had fallen out with its founder Bill Gross. But El-Erian on Wednesday revealed one main reason for leaving his post was a conversation with his then 10-year-old daughter about brushing her teeth which led to her writing him a note listing the 22 important events in her life he had missed due to work. 

The document presented to the financier included missing the child's first day at school, her first football match and a Halloween parade. 

El-Erian, whose earnings at PIMCO reportedly reached as much as $100m a year, said the incident showed him instantly that he had allowed his relationship with his daughter to suffer at the expense of his globetrotting job. In an interview with Worth magazine, he said, "About a year ago, I asked my daughter several times to do something — brush her teeth I think it was — with no success. I reminded her that it was not so long ago that she would have immediately responded. 

"She asked me to wait a minute and then went to her room and came back with a piece of paper. It was a list that she had compiled of her important events and activities that I had missed due to work commitments. Talk about a wake-up call." 

He continued, "I felt awful and got defensive: I had a good excuse for each missed event! Travel, important meetings, an urgent phone call, sudden to-dos. But it dawned on me that I was missing an infinitely more important point. 

"As much as I could rationalize it ... my work-life balance had gotten way out of whack, and the imbalance was hurting my relationship with my daughter. I was not making nearly enough time for her," he added. 

The 56-year-old investment guru last year swapped his role at PIMCO's California headquarters for a "portfolio of part-time jobs", including a role as chief advisor to the fund's German parent, Allianz.

(Source: TOI, Sept 26, 2014)

SECURITY GUARD SUPERVISOR IN COGNIZANT, JOTHI RANJAN BAGARTI CLEARS IAS FINAL


He was security guard and cracked IAS exam ! That is not less than “Mangalyaan” for a poor chap. Jothi Ranjan Bagarti is from Orissa and has been security guard for the last 14 years. His first attempt for IAS was 10 years ago and he achieved the milestone this year with 2 years of continuous preparation and hard work.He has been posted at Madurai for training.

I salute him from the deep bootom of my heart.

Monday, September 22, 2014

Whenever you think life is unfair ... think again!

 This story is truly amazing. Must Read.























My name is Nick Vujicic and I give God the Glory for how He has used my testimony to touch thousands of hearts around the world! I was born without limbs and doctors have no medical explanation for this birth 'defect'. As you can imagine, I was faced with many challenges and obstacles. 
'Consider it pure joy, my Brothers, whenever you face trials of many kinds.' 

The awesome thing about the Power of God, is that if we want to do something for God, instead of focusing on our capability, concentrate on our availability for we know that it is God through us and we can't do anything without Him. Once we make ourselves available for God's work, guess whose capabilities we rely on? God's! 


'And we know that in all things God works for the best for those who love Him.' That verse spoke to my heart and convicted me to the point where that I know that there is no such thing as luck, chance or coincidence that these 'bad' things happen in our life. 

I now see that Glory revealed as He is using me just the way I am and in ways others can't be used. 
I am now twenty-three years old and have completed a Bachelor of Commerce majoring in Financial Planning and Accounting. I am also a motivational speaker and love to go out and share my story and testimony wherever opportunities become available. I have developed talks to relate to and encourage students through topics that challenge today's teenagers. I am also a speaker in the corporate sector. 

I have a passion for reaching out to youth and keep myself available for whatever God wants me to do, and wherever He leads, I follow. 

I have many dreams and goals that I have set to achieve in my life. I want to become the best witness I can be of God's Love and Hope , to become an international inspirational speaker and be used as a vessel in both Christian and non-Christian venues. I want to become financially independent by the age of 25, through real estate investments, to modify a car for me to drive and to be interviewed and share my story on the ' Oprah Winfrey Show '! Writing several best-selling books has been one of my dreams and I hope to finish writing my first by the end of the year. It will be called 'No Arms, No Legs, No Worries!' 











































The awesome thing about the Power of God, is that if we want to do something for God, instead of focusing on our capability, concentrate on our availability for we know that it is God through us and we can't do anything without Him. Once we make ourselves available for God's work, guess whose capabilities we rely on God's! 

May the Lord Bless you!

*THIS CHALLENGING MESSAGE IS GOING AROUND THE WORLD 
What ever be your situation in your life be thankful to GOD till the END........

Yahoo buys out Bangalore startup Bookpad

After Facebook and Google acquired Little Eye Labs and Impermium respectively, here comes yet another acquisition of an Indian startup by a global technology major, underlining the growing innovativeness of the country's startup ecosystem.

Yahoo has bought Bangalore-based Bookpad, a startup that's barely a year old and founded by three youngsters who passed out of IIT-Guwahati over the past three years. The precise value of the deal could not be ascertained, but sources said it's a little under $15 million (Rs 90 crore).

Bookpad's enterprise software product, DocsPad, allows users to view any document (like PDF, Word, Powerpoint), as also edit and annotate it, within a website or app. It works across devices, and does not require downloading of plug-ins or desktop software. For Yahoo, a content provider, the technology can potentially be embedded in many of its services. IT industry body Nasscom's 10,000 Startups programme had identified Bookpad as a promising idea and the venture was incubated at the Startup Warehouse established by Nasscom and the Karnataka government in Bangalore. It was later part of the Microsoft Accelerator programme in the city. 
Rajan Anandan, Google India MD and who has been a key figure in the Nasscom 10,000 Startups programme, said Bookpad is a very focused product that has got good traction with virtually no money raised. "The acquisition by a global technology firm is a big validation for India's product ecosystem. Over the next few years, we will have many $1-billion product companies as India's capability to build product companies become prevalent and proven," he said.

Yahoo had not responded to TOI's request for a comment till the time of going to print.

Bookpad's founders include Aditya Bandi, 25, Niketh Sabbineni, 24, and Ashwik Battu, 23. Bandi graduated with a degree in design from IIT-Guwahati in 2011 and had brief stints at Microsoft, Cognizant and Symantec. Sabbineni graduated in computer science in 2012, and worked briefly in Amazon. The youngest, Battu, graduated as a chemical engineer just this year.

They wanted to solve a pain point they faced as students. They used to upload various document formats to the cloud, but they couldn't edit or annotate them in real time.

Bookpad's big break came when they participated in Nasscom's Innotrek, a trip to Silicon Valley earlier this year that was designed to help Indian startups to meet US technology giants and familiarize them with the startup environment there. During the trip, they met M&A consultant Rob Schram, who later helped broker the deal between Yahoo and Bookpad.

Ravi Gururaj, head of Nasscom's product council, said, "Our nurturing process is clearly working. Mynoticeperiod (another startup that's part of the Startup Warehouse) received funding from IDG, and now this. We will take this template forward."

Srivatsa Krishna, IT secretary in the Karnataka government, said, "Bookpad has done us proud by being acquired by Yahoo. It is disruptive technology at its best. Bangalore is inching its way up to becoming the startup capital of the world." All the six full-time Bookpad employees, including the three founders, will join Yahoo's engineering team in Bangalore. The deal includes cash, earnouts and stock options.

Currently, Bookpad supports 15 different document formats. The potential is huge considering that 2.5 billion people browse the internet and 53 billion documents are on the cloud today and the number is expected to touch 200 billion within the next two years. (Source: TOI)

KBC gets its first Rs 7 crore winner in two brothers

MUMBAI: The Narula brothers, Achin and Sarthak, became the first ever contestants to win the highest prize of Rs 7 crore in reality game show 'Kaun Banega Crorepati', hosted by Bollywood megastar Amitabh Bachchan.

The Narula brothers, who hail from Delhi, emerged victorious after answering all the 14 questions correctly with the help of four lifelines.

Achin is a marketing manager and Sarthak is a student. Achin has been trying to be a part of the iconic show for the last 10 years but always fell short of being selected for the fastest finger first contest.

Bachchan, 71, hinted about the big win on his official blog and Twitter handle while posting his pictures from the show.

He wrote, "It is a topsy turvy world tonight and KBC is the one that needs to be blamed!! What incredible moments, what brilliance and what an incredible play ...! That is all I am permitted to say."

"The beauty and the excitement of KBC at its very maximum! Just an incredible moment," Bachchan tweeted, followed by a photograph from the sets of the show featuring the winners.

"Bazuumbaaa," the actor posted along with the snap adorned with the Rupee symbol.

Bachchan, who has been hosting the show for 14 years, was reportedly speechless as the brothers made it to the top prize.

Siddhartha Basu, who is the producer of the show, said the jackpot win was a moment to cherish.

"We have been waiting for a moment like this since the inception of this show. It is a pleasure to see bright brains like Achin and Sarthak battle it out for the Maha Jackpot."


Gaurav Seth, senior vice-president marketing, Sony Entertainment Television called the win a "momentous occasion" while congratulating the brothers on their win.

(Source: TOI)

This 8-year-old makes $1.3 million a year via YouTube


What were you up to when you were 8-years-old? Probably something less impressive than Evan.

Evan is the kid behind EvanTubeHD, which is a family-friendly YouTube channel where Evan (and occasionally his sister or mom) reviews toys and video games. And Evan rakes in $1.3 million a year from posting his toy reviews to YouTube.

It started out as a fun project Evan and his dad embarked on together. The pair would make Angry Birds stop-motion videos, and according to a Newsweek interview with Jared, Evan's father, "all of the proceeds from the channel goes into investment and savings accounts for their children."

Tech-savvy and smart. Not a bad combo.


In an interview with Newsweek, we learn a little more about the business behind Evan's viral videos. Jared says they have a dedicated sales team that sells ads and negotiates deals with brands and businesses.

"These include both ads that appear in and around each video as well as products actually featured in our videos. The majority of the revenue is generated by the ads placed on the video itself," he says. "Outside of the networks, YouTube/Google handles all ad placement within the site. Content creators have a few options regarding the format of ads they would like to allow on their videos. But the actual ads are chosen by some higher power."

Take a look at this review, which has over 50 million views. 50 million!


Meet the 19-year-old developer who turned down Apple


Last week, 19-year-old John Meyer dropped out of a prestigious university computer science program to work full-time on his tech startup, Fresco News. His parents weren't happy at first. He was attending NYU where his mom is a professor, he said. But they eventually came around to support him, because they had to admit: Meyer is already a successful independent computer programmer. He's been writing apps since his freshman year in high school, 2008, after teaching himself the programming language Objective C. And he's been making money at it since his sophomore year of high school, he says. "Money-wise, I've been pretty fortunate. I've been able to support myself since just a year after I got started," he said. He's making so much money writing iPhone apps that during his first year of college he could afford to live alone, pay NYU tuition while bootstrapping Fresco, he said. Fresco News is a sort of intersection between Instagram, Twitter and Flipboard that turns photos from ordinary people on the scene of big news events into news stories. We pressed him to reveal his income but promised not to share it. Let's just say it's on par with what software engineers earn at some of the best tech companies. Despite his young age, Meyer's app portfolio is impressive. He's written about 40 apps, mostly through his app company TapMedia, he says. This includes the popular iPhone 4 flashlight app Just Light (which may have been the very first flashlight app). It went nuts, downloaded about 2 million times, he said. Apple now includes a flashlight app with the iPhone. He's just had another huge hit called Perfect Shot, too, released about a year ago for iOS 7. It was downloaded 60,000 times in the first four days and is now at over 1 million, he says. It uses the smile and eye detection features in the iPhone camera for taking the perfect group photo. Hold the phone up and wait. The app takes the shot in the perfect millisecond when everyone is smiling, no one is blinking. A very smart idea. So smart, that Meyer nabbed the attention of Apple. The company asked him to become an intern, he says. That's a dream come true for most students. And it pays. Apple interns can make $5,723 a month. But he turned Apple down. "I get emails from recruiters all the time, and this past summer an offer to intern at Apple," he says. But, he explains, "I am, at heart, an entrepreneur. I won't be happy working for someone else."


   

 Apple's developer conference every year," he says. "I'm in a field where I've done a lot of things already, an expansive portfolio of projects I've worked on." He's actually been attending the developer's conference since he was 16, sneaking in the first time with his dad's help. His dad flew him to San Francisco, registered himself for the conference, and then handed the pass to his son to attend. "I was 16 and anyone under 18 wasn't allowed. It was right after the successful flashlight app. My dad got the ticket from Apple, flew back home and left me in San Francisco," he laughs. Since then, Apple has created a teen program at the conference he says. It's been great for meeting other programmers his age, he says. If all that wasn't impressive enough, Meyer was also a finalist in the Thiel Fellowship, he says. That's a program by billionaire venture capitalist Peter Thiel in which gifted young people drop out of school to start companies. Only 40 people become finalists, flown to the Valley for mingling. 20 are accepted, and Meyer wasn't one of them. That doesn't bother him at all. He's focused on turning Fresco into a money maker, talking to potential clients for it like New York Times and Wall Street Journal. And he hasn't ruled going back to college someday. But for now, he's writing apps for fun and profit.