May 18, 2026
1 min read
Forget severance packages; the true measure of corporate panic at Meta's 'doomsday' layoff night was apparently the communal snack pantry. Who needs dignity when there are artisanal chips and free energy drinks on the line? This wasn't just about sustenance; it was a primal, almost comically tragic, act of securing the last vestiges of corporate comfort before the axe fell. It's a stark reminder that even in the glistening towers of Big Tech, Maslow's hierarchy of needs still begins with a very urgent desire for 'can I get a protein bar for the road?'
Eric Schmidt, tech's venerable oracle, has dropped a bombshell: "Stop coding, you Luddites!" Okay, maybe not in those exact words, but his declaration that the traditional era of writing code is "over" certainly feels like a mic drop on thousands of developer careers. It's less about abandoning logic and more about outsourcing the grunt work to our silicon overlords, turning developers into orchestra conductors rather than individual musicians. The true challenge now isn't mastering a syntax, but mastering the prompts that make the AI sing (or debug).
For years, India's intellectual capital has been like dark matter – we knew it was there, immensely powerful, but impossible to weigh. Now, MoSPI, bless their diligent hearts, wants to slap a price tag on our collective genius, from AI algorithms humming in Bangalore to that brilliant, unspoken *jugaad* in a village workshop. It's about time our brainpower stopped being just a vague 'potential' and started contributing to GDP figures beyond just software export receipts. Let's just hope they don't accidentally measure the collective sigh of every engineer stuck in traffic as 'negative innovation dividend'.
Well, well, well. It seems the changing of the guard at Berkshire Hathaway isn't just about succession planning; it's about a full-blown philosophical pivot, complete with a market-shaking cannonball into sectors Warren Buffett famously treated like a plate of brussels sprouts – utterly unappetizing. Greg Abel, in his inaugural year, has seemingly declared 'new sheriff in town,' not by tearing down the old structures, but by decidedly building new ones in the very sandboxes the Oracle of Omaha once warned us away from. Is this heresy, or merely the sensible evolution of an investing behemoth? Only time, and a few quarterly reports, will tell.
The American tech founder isn't just whistling Dixie; he's echoing a sentiment many outside (and perhaps inside) India silently nod to. While parents envision IIT entrance exams as the intellectual Olympics, it often feels more like a scholastic Hunger Games, where creativity is the first tribute sacrificed at the altar of rote learning. Perhaps the 'lock-in' isn't just about hours spent studying, but a mental straitjacket that values perfection in known answers over audacious questions, potentially stifling the very maverick spirit required for tech innovation.
Well, what do you know? The squeaky wheel — or rather, the multi-billion-dollar foreign portfolio investor — actually got the grease! For a moment there, it seemed India was determined to make its onboarding process for global capital as opaque as a monsoon morning, complete with bureaucratic hurdles designed for maximum head-scratching. But thankfully, common sense, or perhaps the sheer economic imperative of attracting foreign investment, has prevailed, proving once again that money talks, even if it has to clear a few forms first.
Remember when polytechnics were all about blueprints, circuits, and getting your hands delightfully greasy? Well, apparently, the future of engineering now involves perfecting your Warrior II pose and sketching out a pitch deck for your next big unicorn, right after you've debugged a line of code. Maharashtra's new diploma curriculum seems to be prepping students not just for industry, but for the entire human experience – because who doesn't need emotional intelligence and entrepreneurial spirit when troubleshooting a hydraulic system, or finding inner peace amidst a server meltdown?
Well, bless their ambitious hearts! Just when you thought the AI chip arena was firmly under Nvidia's emerald thumb, a couple of seasoned gladiators from the Intel and AMD coliseums decide to throw their own hat — or rather, a $100 million gauntlet — into the ring. Agrani Labs isn't just building another chip; they're aiming to tango with CUDA, essentially inviting themselves to Nvidia's notoriously exclusive party. It's either brilliant strategy or glorious hubris, but either way, grab your popcorn, because the silicon showdown just got a lot more interesting.
Well, isn't this just the most on-brand plot twist for the former (and perhaps future) President? While much of the world debates geopolitics and semiconductor supply chains, Donald Trump is apparently playing real-life fantasy stock market with some of the biggest names in tech and aerospace. It's almost too perfect: the man who once railed against 'big tech' is now quietly (or not so quietly, thanks to disclosures) betting big on them. One has to wonder if his next rally will feature a chart analysis of NVDA's Q1 performance alongside the usual political rhetoric. Talk about diversified interests!