In this episode, Jaspreet Bindra, founder of Tech Whisperer, a UK-based consultancy, and Sudhir Tiwari, global head of the digital engineering centre at ThoughtWorks India, talk about their idea for a "Jan AI" as a digital public good for India. They talk about the need for such an AI stack, how we might build it, and what our challenges are in bringing the benefits of AI to the masses without compromising on how their data is used
A five-judge Constitutional bench of the Supreme Court refused to grant marriage rights to same-sex couples, saying that the Court has the power only to interpret laws, not make them, therefore deferring the decision to amend the Special Marriage Act to the Parliament. While marriage equality was not granted, the judgment contained some significant steps of progress for the LGBTQ community, our guest today says. Parmesh Shahani, author, LGBTQ activist and head of the Godrej DEI Lab, speaks with Forbes India's Divya Shekhar on this episode
In interesting news for film lovers, PVR-INOX has launched a new 'Passport': You pay Rs 699 and you can watch 10 movies a month at the cinema chain, from Monday to Thursday, with certain conditions. Is this what the cinema industry needs, when only big-ticket films are able to draw people away from their Netflix screens? Naini Thaker joins us to unpack
Among uncertainty, with an erratic monsoon, and looming fallout of geopolitical crises, corporate earnings will have to play catch up. Forbes India's Nasrin Sultana joins us to talk about the past quarter and the outlook for the festive quarter coming up, discussing Wipro's high-profile exits, heavy lifting by BFSI and Auto sectors, profitability of oil marketing companies and more
From BPO to the rise of the SaaS product companies from India, the tech landscape has seen big changes over the last 30 years. And deep tech is green shoots today. Our latest issue is dedicated to these startups and venture capitalists working in the deep tech ecosystem. It explores some fascinating organisations across the board. In this podcast, Harichandan Arakali, who anchored the issue, gives an overview of the book this fortnight and talks about the stories you can't miss
Since 2015, Infosys has partnered with the ATP, and Grand Slams Australian and French Opens, to enhance their tech and digital offerings for both players and fans. This August, it roped in icons Rafael Nadal and Iga Swiatek as its brand ambassadors. Sumit Virmani, the company's executive vice-president and global chief marketing officer, who has been at the forefront of the project, shares how the IT behemoth is shaping the global sport
The annual listing of India's 100 richest Indians is now live, with a dramatic shift in the pecking order at the top. Mukesh Ambani has regained his top spot from Gautam Adani. Eight people have dropped off the list including Vedanta's Anil Agarwal, BYJU's Byju Raveendran and Info Edge's Sanjeev Bikhchandani. Forbes India's Samar Srivastava and Salil Panchal discuss the highlights, and the stories behind them, on this special episode
The latest suitor to buy Disney+'s Indian streaming business, Hotstar, is reportedly Blackstone. News reports say that Disney has also been in talks with Reliance Industries (for its JioCinema business) and Sun TV. What makes Hotstar, which has been bleeding subscribers since it lost IPL rights, an attractive asset? Media analyst Karan Taurani, senior vice president, Elara Capital, explains, and talks about how even streaming the ICC World Cup for free might help lift Hotstar's fortunes
Swiggy riders have been on indefinite strike for a few days now, protesting against a rate change and allegedly, the fact that their delivery radius has increased from 4 km to 6 km, while the base pay remains the same. When the gig economy first came to India, it seemed to have higher payouts and happier workers. What changed? Osama Manzar, founder, Digital Empowerment Foundation, gives us the ground realities
The global economy, previously impacted by the Russia-Ukraine war, is faced with another crisis. How will the conflict between Israel and Palestine affect crude prices, inflation, currency and Indian markets, including foreign inflows? Forbes India's Samar Srivastava and Nasrin Sultana take a look on today's episode
In this episode, Bernard Charlès, CEO of Dassault Systemes, talks about how companies are taking software services back in-house, and on the other hand, how the no-code and low-code model is rising. He also talks about plans for Dassault's operations in India, which include the country's biggest conglomerates as customers, India's largest IT companies as partners, and the French company's own large global capability centres in cities including Pune and Bengaluru, with thousands of professionals