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Astronaut Sirisha Bandla will be the second Indian woman to go to space after Kalpana Chawla. She will be on board Richard Branson's VSS Unity
Global IndianstorySirisha Bandla: The second Indian-origin woman to fly to space
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Sirisha Bandla: The second Indian-origin woman to fly to space

Written by: Global Indian

As a child, Sirisha Bandla was always fascinated with the sky. Perhaps that is what drove her to delve into the mysteries of deep space. Today, the 34-year-old astronaut is the second Indian-origin woman, after Kalpana Chawla, to travel to space aboard Virgin Galactic’s VSS Unity. Bandla will be one of the six crew members aboard the spaceship which is set to take off on July 11 from New Mexico.  

Bandla presently works as Vice Present of Government Affairs at the British-American spaceflight company owned by Richard Branson. When the flight was announced last week, Bandla took to Twitter to announce: 

I am so incredibly honored to be a part of the amazing crew of #Unity22, and to be a part of a company whose mission is to make space available to all. https://t.co/sPrYy1styc

— Sirisha Bandla (@SirishaBandla) July 2, 2021

 

Journey to space 

Born in Guntur, Andhra Pradesh, in a Telugu family, Bandla’s dreams got wings when her father Muralidhar Bandla, an agriculture scientist, migrated to the US; she was 4 at the time. The family settled in Houston, Texas and their many field trips to the Johnson Space Centre, proved to be a catalyst for Bandla’s love for space.  

She completed her Bachelor of Science in Aerospace, Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering from Purdue University in West Lafayette, Indiana, in 2011. Incidentally, former astronauts Neil Armstrong, Gene Cernan, and Gus Grissom are some of the notable alumni of this university. Bandla then obtained an MBA from George Washington University in 2015 before joining Branson’s Virgin Galactic where she rose to her current position. She had earlier worked as Associate Director for Commercial Spaceflight Federation, an industry association of commercial spaceflight companies.  

Astronaut Sirisha Bandla

Sirisha Bandla with her fiance Sam Hu

 

In an interview with Astronautical, Bandla said: 

 “I was one of those kids that wanted to be an astronaut and go into space, and that’s something that I never grew out of.” 

 She initially wanted to become an Air Force pilot and eventually a NASA astronaut; however, her poor eyesight threw a spanner in the works. “In 2004 SpaceShipOne won the Ansari X Prize and became the first private vehicle to travel into space multiple times. That accomplishment really put me back on my path; it showed me that NASA was not the only way, and that I could still follow my passion,” she said.  

While in college, Bandla was part of the Purdue Zero-Gravity Team and had the opportunity to fly one of her experiments in microgravity. She now helps in coordinating the Mathew Isakowitz Fellowship Program, an internship, mentorship, and networking opportunity for exceptional college students who are keen to pursue careers in the commercial spaceflight industry.  

Bandla is also on the board of directors for the American Astronautical Society and Future Space Leaders Foundation and is a member of the Young Professional Advisory Council at Purdue University. Strongly connected to her Telugu roots, Bandla has been actively associated with the Telugu Association of North America (TANA), the oldest and biggest Indo-American organizations in the American continent.  

To Earth with Love 

Astronaut Sirisha Bandla

Sirisha and four other will fly along with Richard Branson

 

As part of her space voyage, Bandla will be in charge of the researcher experience profile on the Unity 22 mission. This will be Virgin Galactic’s fourth crew-manned flight to space. Branson had announced the flight earlier in June; meanwhile Jeff Bezos, Amazon and Blue Origin’s founder, will fly into space on his New Shepard rocket on July 20. Both the billionaires, are competing in the race to take paid passengers on short flights to the edge of space. According to UBS, the space tourism market size could be around $3 billion per annum by 2030.  

Commenting on how the space industry is evolving, Bandla told Astronautical: 

 

 “I think the big pull about commercial space is that it’s an industry that is its own marketplace, so it’s going to need specialized lawyers and people in charge of branding, marketing, and outreach. It’s a lot more than just engineering. In the future, I hope to see the space industry grab more of these diverse types of people and pull them into the industry.”  

 

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  • Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering
  • Amazon
  • American Astronautical Society
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Astronauts
  • Bachelor of Science in Aerospace
  • Blue Origins
  • Commercial Spaceflight Federation
  • Future Space Leaders Foundation
  • Gene Cernan
  • George Washington University
  • Guntur
  • Gus Grissom
  • Houston
  • Indiana
  • Jeff Bezos
  • Johnson Space Centre
  • Mathew Isakowitz Fellowship Program
  • MBA
  • NASA
  • Neil Armstrong
  • New Mexico
  • New Shepard
  • Purdue University
  • Purdue Zero-Gravity Team
  • Richard Branson
  • Sirisha Bandla
  • Space tourism
  • Telugu Association of North America (TANA)
  • Texas
  • VSS Unity
  • West Lafayette
  • Young Professional Advisory Council

Published on 05, Jul 2021

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How Michelin star chef Vikas Khanna turned pandemic hero for millions of Indians

A week into the pandemic saw scores of people left helpless and at the mercy of others. With the entire nation in lockdown, things started spiraling down for poor Indians who couldn't arrange two meals for themselves and their families. That's when Michelin star chef Vikas Khanna extended a helping hand right from his apartment in the US. The New York-based chef turned out to be a saviour for millions of Indians with his Feed India Initiative. Vikas, who knows how to cook up a storm in the kitchen, couldn't turn a blind eye to his dying countrymen. This concern led to the germination of Feed India Initiative where he provided more than 50 million meals for the poor. With his army of volunteers and bags full of ration kits, Vikas made sure that he helped as many poor Indian affected by the pandemic sleep on a full stomach. Hero for the masses The 49-year-old, under his initiative, set up make-shift kitchens alongside highways and roadsides. People who had no access to kitchens were served warm meals, while free ration kits were distributed from door to door. In addition, he donated over 5,00,000 slippers, 3.5 million sanitary pads, and 2 million

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door to door. In addition, he donated over 5,00,000 slippers, 3.5 million sanitary pads, and 2 million masks.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Vikas Khanna (@vikaskhannagroup)

The international chef credits his mom for the inspiration behind Feed India Initiative. The campaign was started as a promise to his mother.

"She was in quarantine back in Amritsar and would constantly update me about the hunger crisis in India, and how she wanted me to help," he told Forbes India.

"Her words to me were, 'All your successes are a contribution from the entire India. We celebrated you as ours and now we need you more than ever. It's your duty to stand up and feed India'. That was enough for me to put everything on the back burner and focus on this.”

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Vikas Khanna (@vikaskhannagroup)

Today, Khanna is a global culinary icon but his journey to the top was anything but smooth.

From bylanes of Amritsar to the streets of New York

Born in a simple Punjabi family of Amritsar with a club foot (a condition in which leg bones are not aligned properly at the joint), Khanna’s childhood wasn’t close to anything normal. At a tender age, he started to wear wooden shoes to align his feet properly. It was this accessory that made him feel like an outcast as everyone laughed at him. To avoid being teased by other children, Khanna spent most of his time with his grandmother as she cooked food for the family. And he instantly fell in love with cooking. His escape route soon turned into a passion.

By the age of 13, Vikas was able to walk properly, and he finally felt liberated. Like most Indian dads, Khanna’s father, who owned a video cassette library, too expected his son to take up engineering. However, Vikas had his eyes on opening a restaurant. At 17, his career took off as a chef with a catering business called Lawrence Garden Banquets. Located in an unused space behind his house, he started rolling out deliveries to kitty parties at Rs 40 per head.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Vikas Khanna (@vikaskhannagroup)

But Khanna's perspective on food shifted with a visit to Delhi's ITC Maurya Sheraton. His uncle saw the potential in Khanna and took him to sample the midnight buffet at the five-star. In a conversation with the Hindustan Times, he said:

"I remember falling to my knees and crying - I have never before seen food that could be art. I kept repeating that I have never had such lovely food."

His uncle challenged him to beat this benchmark, which turned out to be the beginning of his professional training.

American dreams

He soon joined the Welcome Group Graduate School of Hotel Management, Manipal, and worked with many well-known chefs. After completing college, he went to work with Leela Kempinski in Mumbai for three years only to return to Amritsar to take charge of his catering business.

It was his older brother who planted the seed of the American dream in Khanna's mind. He asked Khanna to take his talent to a global stage, which inspired the MasterChef India judge to apply for the US visa.

It wasn’t essentially a smooth start and he had his share of hiccups in the Big Apple. From waiting tables to dish washing, he did every possible chore. Khanna, who was patiently waiting for his golden ticket, finally found it in the form of a 300 portions appetiser order. The dish landed him a position of executive chef at Salaam Bombay Restaurant.

This was the beginning of his American dream. In 2006, Khanna made an appearance on Gordon Ramsay's show Kitchen Nightmares that changed his life forever as he was the first Indian to be on prime time on Fox. Within three years of his TV debut, Khanna's restaurant Junoon opened in 2010.

During his college days, Khanna had read a news article about how India doesn't have a single Michelin star chef, and the idea stuck with him for a long time. "I have a very bad habit of getting obsessed about things people tell me I won't be able to achieve. So I thought, why not take up this challenge? Also, Americans were not so aware of our country and cuisine, so that moved me even more, and finally, since I wasn't that well-known, I started playing with Indian food," he added.

Within ten months of its opening, Junoon received a Michelin star. "I think that when someone from a small town makes a mark on the world map, it truly feels great. I’m really thankful to that person who wrote that we don't have a Michelin star chef."

Junoon became an instant hit with celebrities with the likes of Tom Cruise, Andre Agassi, and Sarah Jessica Parker being its regular customers.

In 2012, Khanna cooked Satvik food for President Barack Obama.

Filmmaker and Author

He is not only a culinary artist but also a filmmaker and an author. He penned The Last Color which was later made into a motion picture and made its debut at Cannes Film Festival. Khanna belongs to the league of those rare chefs who have put Indian cuisine and philanthropy on the global map.

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(November 16, 2021) Science and art have been as different as chalk and cheese for centuries now. If one is based on facts and logic, the other plays with creativity. But Priyanka Das Rajkakati is one of those rare people who is enjoying the best of both worlds by being a space scientist and an artist. The 29-year-old, who hails from Assam, is now a part of the Moon Gallery project wherein she will be sending her artwork to be showcased on the moon in 2022. This Global Indian, who has made it to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list, for her work in science and innovation is one of the most promising scientists in the field of space. But Rajkakati took a while to find a balance between the two things that she love the most to reach the top. [caption id="attachment_15859" align="aligncenter" width="682"] Priyanka Das Rajkakati is a space scientist.[/caption] Torn between science and art Originally from Assam, Rajkakati grew up in Delhi and had her heart both in science and art. If the colors and designs fascinated her, she was equally captivated by the stars and the moon. It was hard for her to choose between the

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aption]

Torn between science and art

Originally from Assam, Rajkakati grew up in Delhi and had her heart both in science and art. If the colors and designs fascinated her, she was equally captivated by the stars and the moon. It was hard for her to choose between the two as she loved both of them. So when she decided to graduate, Rajkakti found herself in a fix. While she did graduate in Physics from St Stephens College, she had almost come close to studying product design at the National Institute of Design, Ahmedabad. She did attend NID for a month but something gnawed within her. She was unable to shut her equally strong calling for science, so she left her creative journey to jump onto the bandwagon of science.

After completing her graduation, Rajkakati moved to France at 21 to explore new horizons, learn a new language and eat French food. In between, she joined Ecole Polytechnique in France where she did a double master's in Artificial Intelligence and Aerospace Engineering.

Dreams of entering the space

Rajkakati, who was always interested in space, knew that her next step towards her dream was a degree in Aerospace Engineering for which she enrolled in the ISAE-Supaero.
This helped her bag an assignment to work for the satellite navigation wing of Rafale Fighter Jets of France. While pursuing her PhD, she contributed her expertise in satellite navigation for the French Defence Company, Safran. Not just this, she even constructed a micro-satellite in Paris. In 2018, she added another feather to her cap by becoming the ambassador of 'For Girls and Science' to inspire scientists of the future. Talking about the initiative, she told PTI, "As part of the programme, we meet middle school and high school students, and through talks and presentations, we try to clear the misconceptions about scientists and women in science."

[caption id="attachment_15860" align="aligncenter" width="759"]Priyanka Das Rajkakati Priyanka Das Rajkakati experiencing zero gravity.[/caption]

The very next year brought another opportunity for this 29-year-old who became one of the youngest women of Indian origin to be selected for the fifth edition of Homeward Bound, a global initiative that conducts leadership expeditions for women in science to Antarctica. A stepping stone to her dream of being an astronaut, the programme provided her with the perfect training. Rajkakati, who dreamt of exploring space, soon co-founded The Exploration Company that develops and operates Nyx, a modular and reusable vehicle that can be refuelled in the orbit and carries cargo.

Art on its way to the moon

The scientist is also an artist who explores the art-science harmony through exhibitions and residencies, drawing inspiration from mathematics, space, scientific projects, travel, and Indian roots. "When I discovered that one of the angles of an obsession of mine is Space, which is, in fact, a highly interdisciplinary field, I finally found a valid context for experimenting with Art and Science," she told TIME8. Now she is set to send her artwork to the moon in a compact form by 2022. Called Bhedadipika - an illustration of duality, her artwork is inspired by her Indian roots and Vedic influence. "It is to showcase to the world that art and culture are core elements of humanity. Future human settlements in space, if we ever reach such a stage, will therefore also require us to integrate art and culture to have stable and functional space societies," she added.

Well! If hasn't been a great start to 2021!

I owe this one big to all the people - friends and family - who've believed in my crazy dreams and constantly motivated me to touch the stars!@FranceinIndia @ISAE_officiel @Polytechnique #WomenInScience #artscience #womenintech https://t.co/FAmaDrISVb

— Priyanka D. Rajkakati 🚀 (@PriyankaSpace) February 5, 2021

Her artwork will be sent to the moon as part of The Moon Gallery which is a project that brings together a gallery of ideas that are worth sending to the moon.

[caption id="attachment_15862" align="aligncenter" width="725"]Priyanka Das Rajkakati Artwork by Priyanka Das Rajkakati.[/caption]

Rajkakati, who has made it to the Forbes 30 Under 30 list, is one of those rare scientists who have beautifully fused science with art. The 29-year-old is an inspiration for many women who are looking to immerse themselves in the field of science but also keep their creativity intact.

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(October 21, 2021) Nine years ago two young men shook up the world of investing in America with the launch of their app Robinhood. The investment app, geared towards the millennials, wanted to equalize the world of investing through a unique no-brokerage stock trading model. The concept caught on and pretty soon Robinhood was the go-to app for most Americans when it came to trading in stocks. Before the turn of the decade, it was valued at over $6 billion, was racing towards an IPO and its founders were catapulted into America’s big league. One of them is Indian-American billionaire entrepreneur Baiju Bhatt, who is credited as the creative one with a focus on product development.  As it successfully listed on Nasdaq, it also made Bhatt the latest entrant in the Forbes 400 list for 2021 with a net worth of $2.9 billion.  Today the app has over 21 million active users and is valued at over $40 billion and continues to enjoy popularity among America’s younger investors and traders who enjoy the fact that they can invest in some of the country’s top stocks of major companies in an otherwise seemingly intimidating stock market.  The Indian connect  Born in 1984 in a Gujarati family to Indian immigrant parents, Bhatt grew up in small town Poquoson, Virginia as an only child. His parents

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ct that they can invest in some of the country’s top stocks of major companies in an otherwise seemingly intimidating stock market. 

Indian American entrepreneur Baiju Bhatt

The Indian connect 

Born in 1984 in a Gujarati family to Indian immigrant parents, Bhatt grew up in small town Poquoson, Virginia as an only child. His parents migrated to the US when his father was accepted into a PhD program in theoretical physics at University of Huntsville, Alabama. Bhatt followed in his father’s footsteps and went on to study Physics at Stanford University. He stayed on at Stanford to do his Master’s in Mathematics and it was during this time that he met and befriended Vlad Tenev, his roommate and future co-founder. In an interview with Life Hacker, Bhatt said, “In college, I met Vlad Tenev, who at the time was a long-haired, string-bean kid with a quirky sense of humor and a penchant for late-night games of chess. The two of us would become the best of friends and go on to co-create two companies in New York together before starting Robinhood in California.” 

Like Bhatt said, he and Tenev together launched two companies in New York: high-frequency trading company Celeris in 2010 which they closed in 2011 to create Chronos Research to sell low-latency software to trading firms and banks. By 2013, the duo co-founded Robinhood, a disruptive new trading platform that let people trade easily in some of the country’s top stocks and with no-brokerage costs involved. They struck gold with Robinhood and a funding round in 2018 increased the company’s valuation to $6 billion, making both Bhatt and Tenev billionaires.  

[caption id="attachment_13572" align="aligncenter" width="1200"]Indian American entrepreneur Baiju Bhatt Baiju Bhatt with his co-founder Vlad Tenev[/caption]

Protests that inspired 

Bhatt’s idea for Robinhood stemmed from the 2011 Occupy Wall Street protests; offering no-brokerage stock trading, the app cut out the high fees charged by stockbrokers, which otherwise made investing in stocks feel like an intimidating experience for those with low funds. They also moved back to California to launch Robinhood (named after the legendary outlaw who stole from the wealthy to give to the poor) with the mission to democratize finance for all. 

What made Robinhood also click was its efficient and frictionless interface that made trading in stocks feel like a game to the younger investors. It offers an expansive range of investments, including stocks, options, and cryptocurrencies. Given that there are no commission fees involved, Robinhood makes revenue from back-end payments. So popular was Robinhood’s no-brokerage model that it forced other major brokers to eliminate commissions as well. The app opened the door to trading to millions of people, mostly millennials. Bhatt estimates that nearly half of all new US brokerage accounts in the last few years are by Robinhood accounts.  

[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjPNwhSP8Jg[/embed]

The COVID-19 pandemic has only helped the app see a surge in users and business with millions of first-time investors signing on. However, in 2020, this Global Indian decided to step down as co-CEO of the company as it headed towards an IPO and decided to focus on product development.  

A focus on self 

Over the years, Robinhood has been battered by controversies, most of which it has managed to emerge from and Bhatt continues to ride the wave. The 37-year-old, who is married to Adrienne Sussman with whom he has a son, is an avid runner who’s participated in several half marathons over the years. He told Life Hacker, “I run outside almost every day of the week. I’ll usually step out during lunch for an hour-long jog around the neighborhoods of Palo Alto and through Stanford campus. It helps me clear my head and put all the things I’ve been thinking about back together in creative ways. Also, by the time I get back, I’m energetic and generally feeling awesome.” 

[caption id="attachment_13573" align="aligncenter" width="490"]Indian American entrepreneur Baiju Bhatt Baiju Bhatt with his father[/caption]

What keeps him ticking is his strong willpower, which he says has helped him overcome several challenges over the years. “A personal but very important example comes from my childhood. As a kid, I had always struggled with being overweight. When I was a sophomore in high school, I decided I wanted to change that once and for all. That spring, I started exercising every single day, and by the time I started junior year, I had lost nearly 70 pounds. I looked and felt like a completely different person.” 

That same willpower is what helped this Indian American entrepreneur launch Robinhood, disrupt a centuries-old industry and see it through its share of rough patches.  

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Parag Agrawal: IIT-Bombay alum takes over as Twitter’s CEO after Jack Dorsey’s exit 

(November 30, 2021) For months now speculation has been rife that Twitter’s founder Jack Dorsey was to step down as CEO. The search was on for a suitable successor, and it finally ended on Monday when the company announced that its Indian-origin Chief Technical Officer Parag Agrawal will helm the social media giant as Chief Executive Officer. The news sent cheer across the subcontinent as one more US major appointed a person of Indian origin into a leadership role. Agrawal, at 37-years of age, is also one of the youngest Indian-origin executives in the US. He joins the august club that includes Microsoft’s Satya Nadella, Alphabet’s Sundar Pichai, IBM’s Arvind Krishna, Adobe’s Shantanu Narayen, VMWare’s Raghu Raghuram, and Deloitte’s Puneet Renjen. The news has been lauded by several industry leaders such as Elon Musk, Tesla and Patrick Collison, CEO, Stripe. While Collison tweeted, “Google, Microsoft, Adobe, IBM, Palo Alto Networks, and now Twitter run by CEOs who grew up in India. Wonderful to watch the amazing success of Indians in the technology world and a good reminder of the opportunity America offers to immigrants.” Musk replied saying, “USA benefits greatly from Indian talent!” USA benefits greatly from Indian talent! —

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witter-tweet">

USA benefits greatly from Indian talent!

— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) November 29, 2021

Man of the hour

Parag Agrawal was born and raised in Mumbai, and is an alum of IIT-Bombay. His father was a senior official at the Indian Department of Atomic Energy and his mother, a school teacher. As a student, his brilliance was already noticeable when he bagged a gold medal at the 2001 International Physics Olympiad in Turkey. He schooled at Atomic Energy Central School, and graduated in computer science engineering from IIT Bombay in 2005. A PhD from Stanford University in computer science, his depth of experience working for majors like Microsoft, AT&T Labs and Yahoo! during his research avatar gave him an edge that he has since embellished.

Parag joined Twitter in 2011 as a distinguished software engineer, and gradually rose up the ranks of CTO in 2017. In fact, Parag was the company’s first distinguished engineer, and his work across revenue and consumer engineering, including his impact on the re-acceleration of audience growth in 2016 and 2017 added a notch to his resume. As CTO, he was responsible for Twitter’s technical strategy, leading work to improve development velocity while advancing the state of machine learning across the company, a company release stated.

What also worked in Parag’s favour was that he is well-liked across the company, including Dorsey. “He’s been my choice for some time given how deeply he understands the company and its needs. Parag has been behind every critical decision that helped turn this company around. He’s curious, probing, rational, creative, demanding, self-aware and humble,” Dorsey wrote in a message to Twitter.

not sure anyone has heard but,

I resigned from Twitter pic.twitter.com/G5tUkSSxkl

— jack⚡️ (@jack) November 29, 2021

Bolstered by arduous work and talent

According to a report published in Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Indian Americans form the second largest immigrant group in the US with population well past the 4 million mark. In fact, the Bay Area, where Parag now lives, is home to the second largest Indian American population in the US, after New York area.

The talent and innovation brought to the table by Indian Americans has been propelling several to leadership roles. Anand Mahindra, of the Mahindra Group too tweeted, “This is one pandemic that we are happy and proud to say originated in India. It’s the Indian CEO Virus… No vaccine against it.”

This is one pandemic that we are happy & proud to say originated in India. It’s the Indian CEO Virus… No vaccine against it. 😊 https://t.co/Dl28r7nu0u

— anand mahindra (@anandmahindra) November 29, 2021

The Indian formula to success

R Gopalakrishnan, management veteran, former Tata Sons honcho and author of The Made in India Manager concurs that Indians are primed for management and leadership roles. “This is a trend that is getting clearer by the day. At least 10 of the major companies in the US have persons of Indian origin helming them. The principal reason for this is the fact that Indian management executives are like gladiators. They’ve been training for management roles their entire lives without even being aware of it. They are extremely competitive and are unfazed by the constant hurdles that come their way,” says R Gopalakrishnan, adding how management is like a performing art, and with an Indian’s ability to adapt to any scenario. Their critical thinking skills using relationship orientation make them prime candidates for management roles.

Brand India for the win

As more Indians take on leadership roles across the globe, especially in the US, they are adding heft to Brand India and the pool of talent that the subcontinent offers.

[caption id="attachment_17027" align="aligncenter" width="600"]Parag Agrawal
Parag Agrawal with his undergrad research mentor Frederic Cazals[/caption]

This move will help Twitter smoothen ties in India where it has been running into troubled waters. Industry veteran Tiger Ramesh, former CEO, CSS Corp, avers that this could also be an attempt to build a better relationship with India, and arrest the downward spiral. “Home grown Koo is gaining market share over Twitter as well. By making its CTO the CEO, Twitter will want to be able to defend and protect its platform and architecture from the growing demand from many countries for regulating it. Twitter has become very controversial around the world spurred by the arrogant attitude and image of Jack Dorsey. By making an Indian-born the CEO, it will be seen as a move to change this image. The world has seen Sundar Pichai, Satya Nadella, and many others build more credible images for their respective organisations worldwide, especially with India, which is the largest emerging market.”

Personally speaking

Destiny too had a role to play in Agrawal’s personal life. His wife Vineeta Agarwala also studied at Stanford University, and after a happy courtship, the couple was married at Amber Vilas in Jaipur in a colourful and jubilant traditional Indian wedding. Vineeta has a BS in biophysics from Stanford University, with an MD and PhD from Harvard Medical School/MIT. Vineeta is a physician, and works as adjunct clinical professor at Stanford School of Medicine. They have a son Aansh who was born on Thanksgiving. A love for travel, an eye for the perfect shot, and a profound belief in family, Parag often posts pictures of his travels and family on social media.

[caption id="attachment_17018" align="aligncenter" width="633"]Parag Agrawal Parag Agrawal is the new CEO of Twitter.[/caption]

As he takes on the mantle of CEO, Agrawal has a slew of tasks cut out. In his note to the company before inviting all employees for a hands-on meeting on November 29, Agrawal wrote, “Thank you, Jack. I'm honored and humbled... Our purpose has never been more important. Our people and our culture are unlike anything in the world. There is no limit to what we can do together. We recently updated our strategy to hit ambitious goals, and I believe that strategy to be bold and right. But our critical challenge is how we work to execute against it and that's how we'll make Twitter the best it can be for our customers, shareholders, and for each of you.”

The other Indian on Twitter

Incidentally, Twitter also has an Indian-origin lawyer Vijaya Gadde who was in the limelight earlier this year for helping suspend Donald Trump’s Twitter account. Gadde, a corporate lawyer, spearheaded the suspension of Trump’s account after his posts encouraged and supported rioters in the US.

With inputs from TEAM GLOBAL INDIAN

Follow Parag Agrawal on LinkedIn and Twitter

 

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Subashini Iyer : The India-born engineer who will give wings to NASA’s ambitious deep space project

(Our Bureau, June 14) Coimbatore-born Subashini Iyer is the backbone of NASA’s ambitious Artemis mission that will take humans to the Moon and planet Mars. Subashini, who is a Spacecraft Engineering Integrator at Boeing, has been associated with Space Launch System (SLS) for two years. She is responsible for the core stage of Artemis I which will take the spacecraft, Orion, into deep space. Subashini was one of the first women to graduate in mechanical engineering from her college VLB Janakiammal College in 1992. She is now leading a diverse team of mechanical and electrical engineers to support NASA once the core stage is built and handed over to the space agency. In an interview with the Times of India, Subashini said the SLS is the most powerful rocket in the world and she is responsible for building the rocket’s core stage which contains propulsion and electronic systems. It is designed to reach a height of 530,000 feet before breaking away and Artemis I is slated to launch in November this year. Sole woman in the batch Incidentally, when Subashini first enrolled for her engineering class she was the only woman in her batch; she was asked to find another woman

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to reach a height of 530,000 feet before breaking away and Artemis I is slated to launch in November this year.

Sole woman in the batch

Incidentally, when Subashini first enrolled for her engineering class she was the only woman in her batch; she was asked to find another woman “for safety” and had to convince a friend to join the course with her. She now heads a diverse team with several women in it. "My manager, the director of production, test and launch is a woman and so is her boss. The NASA SLS launch director and core stage element leader are also women. It has been great seeing more women in the field,” she told ToI.

"Involved with the SLS launch is a diverse team … I also have the pleasure of leading women and people from different countries."

[embed]http://twitter.com/NASA/status/1403448958794584064?s=20[/embed]

[embed]http://twitter.com/NASAGroundSys/status/1403771000316174338?s=20[/embed]

Artemis project details

The lunar exploration program uses new technologies and systems to explore the moon and NASA’s new rocket SLS will send astronauts to the moon and beyond, 50 years after humans last stepped on the lunar surface. The space agency will fly two missions around the moon to test its deep space exploration systems: Artemis I is an uncrewed flight to test SLS and Orion, Artemis II will test SLS and Orion with the crew. According to NASA's website, when the SLS rocket takes off it will produce a maximum thrust of 8.8 million pounds, more power than any rocket in history.

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Global Indian – a Hero’s Journey is an online publication which showcases the journeys of Indians who went abroad and have had an impact on India. 

These journeys are meant to inspire and motivate the youth to aspire to go beyond where they were born in a spirit of adventure and discovery and return home with news ideas, capital or network that has an impact in some way for India.

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