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Narasimha Jayanti Special: Introducing Our New Lakshmi Narasimha T-Shirt

Anmol JainMay 21, 2024, 09:09 PM | Updated 09:09 PM IST
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Image from Swarajya store.

Dear Readers,

Today is Narasimha Jayanti. And to celebrate the occasion, we've launched a special new t-shirt in our store, ICYMI yesterday. It features a stunning print of Lakshmi Narasimha, inspired by the famous statue in Hampi.

  • This launch kicks off The REVIVE Series, a collection of merch celebrating the revival and rejuvenation of our rich cultural heritage.

  • This one's the first piece in this series. Watch out, because we plan to bring out one new T-shirt every month in this series, throughout the year.

  • We've added simple, clear graphics of the missing parts – Lakshmi, the Shankh, and Chakra.


  • This brand new shirt is limited edition. Get it here now!

  • It comes in three colors, five sizes, and for both men and women.

  • Stay tuned for more in The REVIVE Series as we celebrate our cultural icons all year.

  • Moving on, today's newsletter has a primer on the Phase 5 elections and a moot point that India mustn't give up fundamental innovation in AI.

    Read on!



    When OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman (aka Sama) was in India, he was posed a question by Rajan Anandan, MD at the venture capital firm Peak XV Partners.

    • He asked, "If you want to build foundational models, how should we think about that? Whether a team from India, you know, three super-smart engineers with not a 100 million but let’s say 10 million, could build something truly substantial?"

  • Sama did not mince his words — "we’re going to tell you it's totally hopeless to compete with us on training foundational models, you shouldn’t try."

  • "AND," here comes the crucial part, "it’s your job to try anyway, and I believe both of those things."

  • Many in India took the former part home while completely ignoring the latter.

  • My colleague Karan Kamble moots and counters this second-guessing in his pieceIndia must seize the opportunity across the entire AI ecosystem.

    Anandan & Nandan's recent statements: reflected this self-doubt (or evasion, if you want to call it that).

    • "I am much more interested in asking Nandan (Nilekani) how do we go 10x faster in making India the AI use-case capital of the world," Anandan said to a journo.

    • He was referencing Nilekani's earlier statement that "Indian path in AI is different; we are not in the arms race to build the next LLM".

  • Let people with capital, who want to pedal chips do all that stuff.

  • India must aim to make a difference and give this technology in the hands of people.


    • The primary focus of San Francisco's AI is to achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI).

  • But as an ecosystem in India… we want to uplevel humans, we don’t want to build machines.

  • India would leverage technology from whoever builds it to devise solutions that better the lives of 1.4 billion Indians.

  • Karan, in his piece, argues that India's large population reflects its potential to deliver original and path-breaking research, not just a need for solutions.

    • As if pushing Indians to focus on the latter part of his answer to Anandan, Sama had posted on X — "The right question is what a startup can do that’s never been done before."

  • "I have no doubt Indian startups can and will do that! and no one but the builders can answer that question."

  • That India lacks capacity and talent to build foundational AI models from the ground up, is a common lament.

  • Karan cites Pune's Prafulla Dhariwal, whose central role in developing OpenAI’s latest GPT-4o was acknowledged by Sama himself.

  • This isn’t a zero-sum game for Indiaeither build AI foundational models or build applications using existing models. Both are up for grabs at the moment!



    Phase 5 of the 2024 Lok Sabha elections was held on May 20 in 49 constituencies in 6 states and 2 UTs.

    Voting was conducted in Bihar (5), Jharkhand (3), Maharashtra (13), Odisha (5), UP (14), West Bengal (7), Jammu & Kashmir (1), and Ladakh (1).

    • In Odisha, voting was also held on 35 assembly seats.

  • Bengal witnessed the highest voter turnout at 75.9%, whereas at 54.3% Maharashtra registered the lowest.

  • Elsewhere: Odisha (72.8%), Ladakh (70.5%), Jharkhand (63.1%), Uttar Pradesh (57.8%), Jammu and Kashmir (58.2%), and Bihar (54.9%).

  • J&K's Baramulla recorded all-time high voter turnout of 59 per cent.

  • EC will release the final turnout figure by Friday (May 25).

  • Prominent candidates and seats in contest:


  • Rahul Gandhi who left Amethi to replace his mother from Raebareli against BJP's Dinesh Pratap Singh.

  • Union Defence Minister Rajnath Singh is looking at a fourth term from Lucknow Central.

  • BJP’s Rajiv Pratap Rudy and Lalu Prasad’s daughter Rohini Acharya in Saran, Bihar.

  • High-profile ccandidates in Bengal — Kalyan Banerjee, Arjun Singh, Locket Chatterjee, Partha Bhowmick, and Rachna Banerjee.

  • Other prominent candidates (seats) — Union minister Piyush Goyal (Mumbai North, Maharashtra), Sadhvi Niranjan Jyoti (Fatehpur, UP), LJP's Chirag Paswan (Hajipur, Bihar), Shiv Sena’s Shrikant Shinde (Kalyan, Maharashtra), former Jammu & Kashmir CM Omar Abdullah (Baramulla), Odisha CM Naveen Patnaik, and Lallu Singh (Ayodhya, UP).

    That's all for today. Until tomorrow,

    Anmol N Jain

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