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How The Geniuses Behind The 3 Idiots Drone Bagged A $20 Million UAV Deal From The Indian Army

How the geniuses behind the 3 Idiots drone bagged a $20 million UAV deal from the Indian Army Back in 2008, Ankit Mehta, Rahul Singh and Ashish Bhat had been working on drone technology for fun. The 26/11 attacks, however, made them determined to develop UAVs that would help the defence forces in hostage and siege situations. Today, their company, ideaForge, has bagged a $20 million contract from the Indian Army to supply high-altitude drones. Ankit Mehta is the co-founder and CEO of ideaForge. In 2008, Ankit Mehta and friends watched in horror as the Mumbai terror attacks played out on live television. The mass killing and plight of hundreds trapped inside hotels and the Jewish Chabad house spurred the team to develop unmanned aerial vehicles, better known as drones, to assist security forces during hostage situations.

Op-ed: Even as Calls for Equality Grow Louder, Antisemitism Remains a Problem in U S

December 24, 2020 As Chanukah 2020 came to a close, unsurprisingly it was less Adam Sandler s Eight Crazy Nights and more stay at home, gather with family through Zoom, and anticlimactically open gifts over FaceTime. But unfortunately what didn t change in 2020 was an onslaught of antisemitism during the holiday. In just the past few weeks, the Anne Frank Memorial in Iowa was vandalized with swastikas, a Jewish Chabad member in Kentucky was attacked and hit by a car, and a Jewish school on Long Island was hacked and swastikas uploaded onto its website. This doesn t even scratch the surface.  By any measure, antisemitism is on the rise, both globally and here in the United States. 

Carter would make history lighting a Hanukkah menorah But first, he needed a longer match

Carter would make history lighting a Hanukkah menorah. But first, he needed a longer match. Michael Kranish, The Washington Post Dec. 10, 2020 FacebookTwitterEmail 3 1of3President Jimmy Carter lights a menorah in Lafayette Square across from the White House on Dec. 17, 1979.Karl H. Schumacher, White House photograph/National Archives..Show MoreShow Less 2of3A large crowd gathers at the Ellipse near the White House in 2018 to celebrate the annual National Hanukkah Menorah lighting.photo for The Washington Post by Astrid Riecken.Show MoreShow Less 3of3 WASHINGTON - President Jimmy Carter put on a dark overcoat on the evening of Dec. 17, 1979, walked across Pennsylvania Avenue and arrived at Lafayette Square to perform an act no president had ever publicly done.

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