Meet the Indian American comics spreading that funny feeling. A series of portraits.
Bezos wears it on his sleeve, Nadella keeps it quiet
The Forbes 30 Under 30 list is harder to get into than Stanford or Harvard University. Meet the desis who made the cut this year.
Nandita Shetty left an exclusive job in Boston behind and moved back to India to participate in the growth story of this country.
Career guidance counsellor chatted with GA readers about their career goals and how to achieve them.
Leading players realise that the best way to source the skilled manpower required to fuel their ambitious growth plans is to develop it themselves by working with leading education institutes.
Srinidhi Shetty on her journey from small town girl to the toast of the world.
'Every educational institution should have incubating centres so that students will get exposed to entrepreneurship early.'
Frilp will help you discover and share valuable information through word-of-mouth recommendations.
The AICTE is about to blow the whistle on all private education institutions straying from its norms.
'These are foods that are very common in the Indian diet... Naan, chapatti, rice...' 'Those processed carbohydrates are far worse for body weight and heart health than the fats they replaced.' 'The problem with these foods is that even if there isn't any obvious sugar in them, they turn to sugar very quickly.'
The younger you are, the better are the prospects of building a large corpus for sunset years.
Indian-born Sanjai Kohli has won the prestigious European Inventor Award 2010 for making GPS a consumer product
The Wright State University College of Engineering and Computer Science unveiled its new Krishan and Vicky Joshi Research Centre.
In an online chat with readers, Harshala Chandorkar of CIBIL answered their queries on education loans.
Unrecognised private schools, which cater to the poor in slums and villages of India, have been under threat for a long time.
Overseas education consultant NNS Chandra offers advice on how to pick the right international career for you.
An industry of scamsters is operating in the guise of call centres in India.
A drunken conversation tipped off Thane Crime Branch detectives to the unprecedented scam targeting unsuspecting Americans from call centres in Thane.
Three Indian entrepreneurs build a software product that promises to give a tough fight to the world's best in the space of domain storage.
'We have been getting e-mails for assignments and events. People from random islands, like Seychelles, called us to perform for India's independence day. It's crazy to see how the internet affects the world. We feel blessed that so many people recognise us. We have even got mails from low-budget feature film makers in the South -- like they want us to be the heroines!' Twins Poonam and Priyanka Shah give us a jhalak into their lives!
'Chinese arsenal and capabilities can be swivelled against India.'
The Madoff case has become a powerful symbol. The odd thing is, no one is exactly sure what it is a symbol of.
'Every Ali obituary I read made the point that he 'transcended his sport' -- a reference to the many battles he fought with America even as he fought in America.' 'What the obituaries leave out is that Ali equally transcended the boundaries of geography and of information -- as witness the Chennai teen who assimilated that most mobile of fighters through still images shorn of context.'
'Of the countless protagonists I encountered at the movies in 2015,' says Sukanya Verma, 'these seven are enduringly unique and notable. They possess that extra something that's not always on paper but earns distinction on the silver screen.'
Working all but alone from his hardware-strewn office, Jeff Han is about to change the face of computing. Not even the big boys are likely to catch him.
Does your favourite city feature in the list? Find out.
Intel's Young Scientist Karan Jerath talks about inventing, innovating and life.
A Marvel film so good it makes all the others feel like a prologue, gushes Raja Sen. (Also, stay for the two end-credit scenes.)
Imagine if people could use gestures to run computers and household appliances? Now, global information technology giant Hewlett-Packard has named two Indian-Americans researching this technology as recipients of its innovation research award.
The delegation, comprising leader of Opposition in Lok Sabha Sushma Swaraj, her counterpart in Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley and others, said Mukherjee had assured them that DTC was only at the drafting stage and discussions were still on.
He is truly fascinated with advances in science related to computing. And he has a good eye for seeing how those advances can be integrated together in powerful ways in a combination of software and hardware, says Steve Hamm.
India has many military academies that take promising young cadets and mould them into the fighters and commanders of tomorrow. All expenses, including mess and books, are paid for by the military. Here'a a look at some of them and how you can get in.