June 13, 2026
1 min read
Norton's Atlas GT has rolled into view, promising middleweight adventure, but let's be real: "adventure" often means navigating the Monday morning commute or finding the fanciest cafe in the next state. With 69 bhp from its 585cc parallel-twin, it's certainly got the oomph for a spirited jaunt, but the real question isn't whether it can handle the Himalayas; it's whether it can handle the expectations of riders looking for both heritage and hustle. The electronics suite sounds promising, but will it translate to genuine trail-blazing prowess or just more buttons to fiddle with while stuck in traffic?
Forget haggling with humans; your next great deal might just be struck by two algorithms shaking digital hands over a cup of chai (or more likely, a secure server connection). Pine Labs' new agent-to-agent payment capability, enabling autonomous AI transactions via UPI mandates, isn't just a technological leap; it's the beginning of the end for our feeble human negotiating skills. Soon, your toaster might just decide it's a good day to buy more bread, initiating a UPI transfer without so much as a polite 'if you please.' We're not just automating tasks; we're delegating judgment, and frankly, I'm here for the chaos (and efficiency).
Forget crystal balls; India's now funding orbital oracles! SatSure just snagged a cool $2.6 million, not for a fancy new office plant, but to build AI models that essentially give Earth a smarter pair of glasses. It seems the best way to predict the future of crops, climate, and probably who's *actually* working, is to pay robots to stare at us from space. Good luck hiding that extra slice of pizza now.
Ah, the siren song of the 'bottomed out' market, sung by none other than Porinju Veliyath! While many investors are still nursing the bruises from the mid-cap mauling, Veliyath, the 'small-cap czar,' is out there, basket in hand, ready to 'cherry pick' the next multi-bagger – with Thomas Cook leading the charge, no less. It's a classic contrarian play, or perhaps just a very confident punt, reminding us that fortune often favors the bold... or the terribly mistaken. Either way, his pronouncement has certainly got the market buzzing, wondering if his crystal ball is truly polished or simply reflecting a potent brew of optimism.
So, Anthropic's Fable 5 is here, and apparently, it's not just coding; it's practically *agentic* coding. Which, let's be honest, sounds less like a helpful assistant and more like your future IT department's benevolent dictator. Get ready for autonomous task completion so advanced it might start negotiating its own compute budget – likely with your firstborn as collateral. While Fable 5 promises to free up human developers for more strategic thinking, one has to wonder if 'strategic thinking' will mostly revolve around how to afford Fable 6.
Forget the sleek, sci-fi visions of AI; the true frontier isn't just building sentient code, it's digging through digital dustbins for corporate wisdom. It turns out that while AI can process petabytes of data faster than a speeding thought, it's utterly baffled by the human decision-making chaos that underpins most businesses. We're busy training the machines, only to realize the machines are asking, 'But *why* did you do it that way in 2008?', and everyone's shrugging. Suddenly, the most valuable skill isn't writing algorithms, but uncovering the ghost of process past.
India's deep-tech ambitions are soaring, yet we're trying to fund quantum computing with the same rulebook used to buy paperclips. It's like asking a Formula 1 car to obey school zone speed limits – admirable intent, but utterly impractical for winning the race. We're knee-deep in a global innovation sprint, but our financial bureaucracy seems more interested in auditing every experimental capacitor than enabling the next big breakthrough. If we want to innovate, we can't treat discovery like just another purchase order; it requires a leap of faith, backed by a smart, flexible financial safety net.
Super Micro Computer's audacious plan to raise $7 billion in equity isn't just a smart move; it's a mic drop in the ongoing AI arms race. While everyone else is scrambling for chips, Super Micro is saying, 'We'll build the entire digital factory floor, just tell us how many zeros you need.' This isn't just about meeting demand; it's about cementing their position as the undisputed kings of the AI infrastructure plumbing, turning silicon dreams into cold, hard cash faster than you can say 'large language model.' The market is hot, the appetite for AI insatiable, and Super Micro is striking with the precision of a master chef delivering a five-course meal to a starving crowd.
India's AI multibaggers are currently performing a gravity-defying act, seemingly immune to the laws of financial physics. While investors are high on the heady fumes of projected exponential growth, one can't help but wonder if these 'next big things' have forgotten that even rockets need tangible fuel – and that fuel, eventually, must be robust earnings, not just speculative stardust. It's less 'multibagger' and more 'multi-baggage' when the underlying fundamentals are whispered, not shouted, against a backdrop of global jitters.