- Make-In-India? Yes, No, Maybe: India won’t go ahead with building Russian helicopters locally opting for off-the-shelf purchases instead. IAF needs to make immediate replacements to its fleet of over 320 aging helicopters.
- Has Israel become a top Chinese ally? Not surprisingly, China appears to have a vested interest in the Israeli tech sector, especially its advances in quantum technology. Chinese investment in Israeli technology “could lead to leaks of sensitive technology and cyber-espionage.”
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Ascendant China: Toyota turns to Chinese tech to reach its electric holy grail
Chinese stranglehold: Tesla has concluded that no company in the United States is currently capable of producing artificial graphite to the required specifications and capacity needed for Tesla’s production. It said only mainland China could provide the quantity of graphite it needs in flake or powder form to manufacture its batteries in the U.S. -
Global Gateway: BRI rival from EU. Can Europe compete with China?
Why US, EU are pitching an alternative to Chinese ‘hidden debts’
Contaminated fertilizer: Sri Lanka bows to Chinese pressure again - Remittance seeking mindset: Retaining - and attracting - talent is critical for India's future.
- RISC-V phones: SiFive's new chip could lead to revamped phone brains in 2023
- Semiconductor Independence Is Impossible: The EU produces cars, consumer electronics, and other things that do not need chips made using the latest nodes. Thus, the bloc wants to expand production of chips for these products to protect its economy.
- New game in town: Ola's electric scooter
- Vaccine durability: Antibody levels fall quickly in the months after people get their Pfizer and Moderna shots. The RNA in these vaccines does not last very long in the body. DNA is more stable than RNA, and might allow for a more prolonged, low-level activation of our immune system that provides longer-lasting protection.
- Not White Man's Burden: UK 'nowhere near' meeting targets agreed at Glasgow climate summit
- The return of ‘naati’ ragi: Karnataka farmers revive forgotten ragi varieties. Hundreds of local ragi varieties disappeared with the arrival of the high-yielding indaf variety of ragi.
- Why soil is one of the most amazing things on Earth: Due to intensive farming, we are losing soil 50 to 100 times faster than it is able to rebuild.
A lot has changed / is changing in India. What hasn’t change much is the Government’s remittance seeking mindset.
— Rajeev Mantri (@RMantri) November 29, 2021
When GDP was <$1T it made sense to export human capital. With GDP at ~$3T, and India aiming to boost it to $10T+, retaining - and attracting - talent is critical. https://t.co/ZVwygfXpdM
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