CATEGORIES
Dynasty Under Watch
After Nawaz, PML-N has to walk a tightrope—hold on to power and keep the army quiet
Rightward Is The Glance
A tainted AIADMK could be the new NDA ally, provided the party’s warring factions merge first.
For Bharat, A Free 4G Buffet
After the Jio SIM changed India’s smartphone world, the Jio Phone is here to transform and rule over rural telecom
Right Tied In Tangles
It’s not whether there’s such a thing as privacy, but its limits are what Supreme Court is set to spell out
Great Speakers None
Left titans from Bengal once lit up Parliament. Now, the Left can have no new elders.
In The Continuous Battlefield
The first Dalit novel in Oriya is also a clash of generational views— education and radical action as an armature and counter to prejudice
Ideals Know No Boundary
Any business has a direct effect on the social condition. In a society such as ours, where the divide between the rich and the poor is gigantic, it becomes the responsibility of entrepreneurs to act ethically and give back in some way.
The Cow Protector's Justice
A brutal public beating of Dalits by gau rakshaks in Una sets off protests across Gujarat - the BJP feels the heat
Pokemonia! Pokemon Go Takes A Children's Game Outdoors
By combining cuteness, nostalgia and Augmented Reality, Pokémon GO has taken over the world.
Path Yet To Take A Turn
Reactions to the Kannada editor’s killing continue to be loud. The investigations have made no headway.
Into The Vale Ride Three Players
Supporting Pakistan-based groups in Kashmir reeks of old policy, but can’t be fully abandoned too. Lone wolf attempts at peace also won’t work.
Kingdom Of Crooked Mirrors
Like the fabrication behind ‘Pakistan Defence Day’, Bajwa’s solemn jeremiad about their good intentions is a bare-faced lie. Only a strategic shift can correct it.
'The Tech's There, Not The Political Will'
Magsaysay award winner Bezwada ­Wilson has been at the forefront of a spirited campaign for many years, working relentlessly for the total eradication of manual scavenging in the country. In conversation with Giridhar Jha after the recent landfill tragedy at Ghazipur in Delhi, the 51-year-old crusader talks about the civic scenario, death of sanitary workers, the prime minister’s pet Swachh Bharat campaign and the reasons why we, as a nation, have failed to deal with sanitation in a scientific manner.
A Universal Net To Hold All Workers
A dramatic draft moots a single social security system for all workers, formal and informal. Sceptics fume.
General Peacenik?
A Pakistani general and a dove? It would usually be an oxymoron. But AfPak, BRICS all set a new context.
The Master's String
When the Congress, which still doesn’t know how far to use Hindutva, swears by the ‘sacred’ janeu, the theatre turns absurd and the humour dark
To Unknot The Yajnopaveeta
The sacred thread is rich in history and many-faceted in its meanings
Here, The Charge Is Neutral
The story of the sacred thread takes a twist in Karnataka, as Lingayat men and women sport it with a small Shivalinga
Bollywood's Own Shakespeare Wallah
How I came to know Shashi and made New Delhi Times
The Doctor's Swansong
With the PDP silent on its ‘self-rule’ agenda, NC’s Farooq Abdullah goes all out for autonomy in J&K
From Cradle To Saddle
As Rahul takes over from his mother, the 132-year-old Congress seems to need the dynasty more than the dynasty needs it
In A Migratory State
In a district cursed by economic barrenness, men like Mohammad Afrazul have to offer their labour elsewhere, despite discomfort or danger
Time To Cross The Bridge
Immigrants issue will lay a new path, but bilateral ties cannot afford to tilt
Aditya Chopra: Fall Of The DDLJ Man
Aditya Chopra conceived Befikre as a modern antithesis to DDLJ. But it has been a modern disaster.
Tech Graduates In India Have Zero Hands-on Experience
For the past seven years, Dr Vinay Viswa­nathan has been plugged into India’s engineering education system trying to fill a gap in hands-on learning through his firm JED-I Technologies. It’s far from a promising situation, reckons the co-inventor of the Simputer—the hand-held, multilingual computer which preceded India’s telecom boom and which, even after 15 years, still remains one of the few examples of a novel product that came out of Indian academia. Vinay, a former computer science professsor at the Indian Institute of Science (IISc), tells Ajay Sukumaran that one of the main problems is that students are typically burnt out by the time they reach an engineering course. Edited excerpts:
NEET Controversy: This Test Is Only Getting Uglier
NEET popped up issues this time too. Is the exam proving to be a disaster than failure?
The Effects Of The Trump Presidency and China's Strategies Shaping The Future Of The Asia Pacific
The Asia Pacific’s future hinges on nuanced Chinese strategy and the unknown factors of a Trump presidency.
Circle The Wagons Around Drag on Hole
An Australian perspective on strategic developments in the Indo-Pacific.
The Times Are a-Taxin'
Post-demonetisation, states have hardened their stances on the proposed GST. A delay is inevitable.
J Jayalalithaa: The Worshipful Leader
Mass adulation is universal. But the hero worship that’s deeply ingrained in Tamil public life is akin to a relationship with divinity.