'Rishi Kapoor was a complete original.' 'He dazzled the screen and stayed a livewire off it as well,' remembers Sukanya Verma.
The prime minister's tough talk assumed significance in view of protests against the CAA in various parts of the country.
'You have to work for the development of the people; stay connected with them; be available for your voters so they can come to you for redressal of their problems and don't rely on the brand equity of the central government.'
India's Internet economy has two choices: An immediate $30 billion Sale-and-Leaseback or a $3 trillion value harvesting over decades, observes Vibhu Arya.
P Rajendran finds out how Himanshu Asnani, a winner of the Marconi Society's Paul Baran Young Scholars Award, swiftly moved from wanting to become a neurosurgeon or cricketer into engineering
The biggest challenge all three faced was that they had had no prior experience in taking an online test, Roshni, Manish and Karan tell Geetanjali Krishna.
Here's how you must teach financial literacy to your children.
Neil Nitin Mukesh talks about his new film David, and his career so far.
'My mother had a vivacious personality and it had to come out, and Vidya was our only choice.' 'She is mummy on screen!'
Karim Benzema scored his sixth goal in four games as Real Madrid beat Alaves 3-0 on Sunday for a fourth successive La Liga victory which took the European champions to within eight points of leaders Barcelona.
It's official. Indian students are better than their British counterparts in schools, even in subjects like English.
One should appreciate the sagacity and audacity of JRD and Nani Palkhivala in founding TCS on April 1, 1968. At that time there was no Microsoft or Intel, SAP or Accenture, much less Google.
They needed a person who could build and execute their vision: A frontiersman; a problem solver and an institution builder. It was their and India's good fortune that Faqir Chand Kohli more than measured up to their requirements and indeed laid the foundation to take TCS to unimaginable heights and to the giant success that it is today. Shivanand Kanavi salutes the incomparable F C Kohli, who passed into the ages last week.
Millions of Indian children lack access to online education as they do not have smartphones, computers or an Internet connection.
The biggest challenge with public sector banks is the processing time, which is why starting early helps.
It's a dip that India can probably relate to given that the country went from two gold, three silver and four bronze in Guangzhou 2010 to a mere two bronze at Incheon 2014.
Aniruddha Jaju, a non-IITian who cracked the Common Admission Test and made it to the prestigious Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad shares his experience with us.
Jaipur-based start-up Logic Roots aims to teach children math skills through board games.
Asking employees whether they would prefer to work under a man or woman amounts to asking them to discriminate, positively or negatively, on the basis of gender.
After she failed in her grade ten examinations, Aarti Naik would've ended up being a domestic help like most of her classmates but chose to fight the situation she was in. Today she teaches schoolgirls from her neighbourhood for free lest they fail in their examinations and in life.
'We all live very intense lives. S*** goes down all the time.' 'This 'eureka moment' doesn't really happen.' 'The discipline of writing and polishing a song is way harder,' Prateek Kuhad, the singing sensation, tells Veer Arjun Singh.
Ramji Raghavan is using this principle to help village children from government schools enjoy science and maths. Indulekha Aravind reports
It's also among the top five most valuable Internet companies in India, reports Yuvraj Malik.
'It might get worse. We don't really know what is it that is resulting in the high value of R now.'
'They suck talent and dump elsewhere,' says ZohO founder Sridhar Vembu.
This is just a tedious exercise in studio filmmaking.
The company hires postgraduate and PhD students from A+ grade institutes to be part of its research team.
Some of the performances are ordinary, but even that does not affect the magic of this film, says S Saraswathi.
'Every disease has traits and we have found out that actually 99 per cent of people who have got COVID-19, should recover.'
Actor-director Roopa Iyer on her award-winning Kannada film Mukhaputa.
'Success is not easily gained. Even if it is, it's very hard to sustain it.'
'Learning to learn should be given more importance than what is actually being learnt,' recommends Zaki Ansari.
'The similarities between the blockbusting Avengers: Endgame and Election 2019 cannot be starker. So who plays who?' asks Saisuresh Sivaswamy.
Where do Indian IT firms stand compared to their global peers in this journey of transformation? Ayan Pramanik seeks answers from IT services analyst Phil Fersht.
'The majority of transmission will be via people who are within two metres of one another.' 'The closer you are, the more likely that you'll be infected.'
'The Budget targets are achievable, but they require continued discipline and that the government sticks with the efforts to cut red tape and make business in India more efficient.'
An investor would pay much less when he invests through a registered investment advisor than a distributor.
If you want your children to inherit true wealth, make them financially literate, says Amar Pandit
International education consultant NNS Chandra shares advice on how to pick the right international education.