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#Indian IT companies
newspatron · 5 months
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45 Amazing Facts: Why the Indian IT Industry Dominates Globally 🚀
Share your thoughts about the Indian IT industry! What do you think the future holds? #IndianITindustry 💭
India’s information technology (IT) industry is a force to be reckoned with, propelling the country’s economy and leaving an indelible mark on the global tech landscape. [Previous article The Changing Landscape of the Jubilant IT Industry Intellectuals Readily Embracing Flexibility in the Age of AI] The Indian IT Industry: A Global PowerhouseKey MilestonesGlobal Reach and ImpactWhat is…
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webmethodology · 1 year
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When it comes to outsourcing IT companies, India remains the first choice for many companies! Cost-effective Solutions, Government Policies, a Talented workforce, etc., are some of the attractions. Here, Find out more reasons.
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transtracksblog · 2 years
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How do Indian IT Companies Do a Background Check of Job Candidates?
Indian IT companies typically conduct a thorough background check of job candidates to ensure they have accurate information and are hiring the right person for the job.
Here are some common steps that Indian IT companies take during the background check process:
Education Verification: Companies verify the educational qualifications of the candidate through universities and colleges. This is done to ensure that the candidate has the educational qualifications necessary for the position.
Employment Verification: Companies verify the candidate's past employment history by contacting their previous employers. They also verify the reasons for leaving, the duration of the job, and salary history.
Reference Check: Employers contact the references provided by the candidate to confirm their job-related skills, experience, and character.
Criminal Background Check: Employers conduct a criminal background check to ensure that the candidate has not been convicted of any criminal activities.
Address Verification: Companies verify the candidate's current and permanent address to ensure that the candidate has provided accurate information.
Identity Verification: Companies verify the candidate's identity by checking their ID proofs, such as PAN card, Aadhaar card, or passport.
Drug Test: Some companies also conduct a drug test to ensure that the candidate does not have a history of drug abuse.
Overall, Indian IT companies take background checks very seriously to ensure that they are hiring the right candidate who is trustworthy, honest, and capable of performing the job responsibilities.
I hope you have got your answer here😊
Thank You.!!
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becomingher-era · 1 year
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Wishing a successful business to all entrepreneurs out there 💕
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annagxx · 3 months
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I've my CSEET exam tomorrow and my mood is 'excited, anxious and Jo hoga dekha jayega'.
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ayoyoungg · 29 days
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Because I got sucked into the drama on Twitter, I watched Popstar Academy (would not have otherwise):
First, I hate survival shows. I’m just like keep that stuff within the company and start showing us material once you’ve chosen the people for the group. I know every company goes through that process of selecting people for the debut group but I’m not a fan of seeing it.
Reason I say this is because I understand & get people having star power or certain people always being in the lineup because they fit what the company is looking for. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that. In fact I think that’s the industry. But the way this show was formatted and presented to the girls, they went in thinking something else. Which I’m not sure what they were pitched vs if it was naïveté. (Also, it seems like only a small percentage of the girls were actually familiar with or fans of kpop, just an observation).
Having like 8 or so trainees join LATE, and picking trainees that didn’t even have singing or dancing background was certainly a choice. Like the show made the initial training group feel like a pre-training to get the girls where they need to be for the actual training/show. It’s a typical Netflix thing but I feel like some of the later trainees could’ve really benefitted from being there from the start. Especially since the show had some of the girls really starting from ground 1.
It turning into a survival show halfway through was VERY messed up, especially considering how many girls kept asking before they agreed to the program if it would be a survival show. That contract must have either been very vague with the wording or small font or something.
As the program was happening live, I think I only saw the Buttons performance. I wasn’t paying much attention to the program because I wasn’t interested. That said, the survival show didn’t even make sense if it was solely based on the performances & whatever content the girls chose to post on social media. I understand wanting to gauge fan interest in the girls but like idk have test groups? They should know any time there’s fan voting it’s biased as hell. There should always be a percentage taken into account with fan voting vs judge voting. But anyways, what makes this survival show weird is that part of what affects choosing favorites in other survival shows (like p101) is that you get to see the trainees interact with each other. Even though mnet evil edits, you see through the show who has leadership skills, who’s caring, who’s hardworking, who gets along, who’s improved, etc. All of that was missing when the program was live?! (unless I’m wrong) We’re only learning this stuff through the documentary. I’m only using this as an example but the girls were so shocked Manon scored high, but viewers didn’t know about the missed practices & stuff. Had viewers known, would Manon have scored so high? Who knows (she def has it girl + charisma, so very likely, but you see my point)
On Manon, as I alluded to before, I think it def would’ve been better if she were in that starting trainee group. While some things were missed due to covid which is excusable, it seems that other classes/training were missed just because. It has me curious if something serious irl was going on or what the cause was, but I suppose that’s her business. Classes/training are important. Personally, it would affect my choice of a bias if I knew that they skipped a lot and broke rules such as missing curfew a lot. That said, I do appreciate that she does show up & out when the time calls for it. I’m not sure if the girls really did isolate her or if anyone at least made an attempt to check on her. I understand the frustration of someone who consistently breaks the rules not getting penalized in some way. I’m glad Manon held herself accountable and really showed up at the end.
This program being in partnership with Hybe is so…🙃 to me. For example, Bang PD discussing the plateau in trainee growth and urging them to debut faster. Meanwhile Hybe groups are on blast about their short trainee times and the need to develop skills further. We start seeing more & more injuries in the girls and it’s like maybe if they took the time to further their training and learn how to properly do things, the amount of injuries could lessen. And then the emphasis on social media, developing a fandom, and discussing the parasocial relationship — felt very Hybe. Like yes social media skills are needed but the way they discussed creating the fandom was kinda 🙃 to me. Like the fandom is going to form. Those who were less comfortable/confident/familiar with posting on social media were at a disadvantage. And with them suddenly being thrown into a survival show, it’s not like they were prepared to appeal themselves to the public yet. I don’t think it should have been so important for them to necessarily be good at social media yet. That’s something I think could have been saved for the debut group (or maybe if they KNEW from the beginning it’d be a survival show with that type of format, more of the trainees would be those good at social media). But with how this survival show was formatted, social media was the only way to learn anything about their character.
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garadinervi · 1 year
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Björk, Possibly Maybe, (3 x CD Singles), One Little Indian, 1996 [Covet The Cover]. Designed by Me Company
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afishcalledwanda1988 · 5 months
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fit check from my thesis presentation yesterday 🌿🤎
[ID/ two pictures of op, a white masc person with a buzzcut. he is wearing wide leg brown pants and a bright green semi-sheer button down with a leaf pattern on it. he is also wearing yellow headphones and a yellow carabiner is clipped to her beltloop. in the first photo it is smiling and posing with its hands in its pockets. in the second photo he is holding up a grey and white kitten, who looks vaguely alarmed. /end ID
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thebaffledcaptain · 1 year
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Kanhoji Angre: the 18th-Century Maratha Admiral, Pseudo-Pirate, and All-Around Badass
So this post got more notes than I expected it to, so I figure I may as well follow through on my promise to make a post about him! You want to know about the aforementioned badass 18th-century Maratha navy admiral and pseudo-pirate who repeatedly fended off Western invasion in India? Then you shall. I wrote a paper about this guy, so here we go.
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Let me introduce you to Kanhoji Angre. Information is scant on his early life and career—sources tend to disagree about his true origins and we don’t know a lot about his family status, but modern historians tend to trace his lineage to Tukoji Angre, his father, who distinguished himself in the early Maratha navy. We know Kanhoji was descended from a long line of Maratha mariners, which meant he fought in a number of naval raids and became acquainted with naval tactics as he grew up. As an adult, he began hiring out his own fleet to the Maratha navy itself, which, at the time, consisted only of numerous small ships and sought Angre’s heavier armament, which would become essentially the centerpiece of the naval force. In a sense he single-handedly built the Maratha navy into quite a formidable force, becoming Sarkhel, or admiral in 1698, and establishing numerous insurmountable forts along the coast.
Of course, the turn of the 18th century also coincided with growing European colonial intentions in India, and Angre’s presence is well-documented in East India Company records as a nuisance, a pirate, and a warlord in different capacities. To the English, he was a formidable pirate, a scourge to European ships on the west coast of the Indian subcontinent, and a menace to the Company, who suffered significant losses at his hand. Their interactions would eventually escalate into full-on military altercations, and the Company would go as far as to seek allyship with the Portuguese and the Viceroy of Goa, but Angre would remain undefeated throughout his lifetime, which consisted of many other interactions with various Western powers. He was arguably the most powerful maritime figure on the Indian coast by the time he died, but the European primary sources tend to play that down as far as they can for obvious reasons.
But I know you’re wondering—was he, then, a pirate? Well, it depends on who you ask. While Kanhoji Angre did, in certain ways, engage in actions that could be considered piracy from an English perspective, he still operated by a clear code of conduct. One account from 1716 tells of an interaction during which Angre detained an East India Company ship to determine whether they had a pass from the governor of Bombay, with whom he was bound to a nonaggression agreement, but otherwise did them no harm when he discovered they did. On the other hand, that same account quickly makes sure to mention how Angre would pursue vessels from Madras and Calcutta, the governments of which he had no agreements with. In the words of Patricia Risso in her excellent article about the topic, Angre “did not share the English legal definition of maritime violence,” which led to the inevitable branding of him as a pirate by the British, despite the fact that he did operate legally in accordance with those with whom he had such legal agreements. Whether this makes him a pirate or not is ultimately a matter of perspective, but in my humble opinion it certainly does not make him less cool.
Regardless of his status as a pirate or a military leader, Kanhoji Angre is a fascinating, highly overlooked, and pretty damn awesome figure in maritime history, and it’s a shame we don’t have more information on him. If you’re interested in more of the primary source material, I’d recommend checking out Clement Downing’s A Compendious History of the Indian Wars: With an Account of the Rise, Progress, Strength, and Forces of Angria the Pyrate, published in 1737 (free on Google Books!), for one such English perspective, which is the source I based my initial paper on. This is mostly my excuse to infodump about a guy I think history Tumblr would love, and who stands to be appreciated more for being an interesting dude and an all-around badass.
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nando161mando · 3 months
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Bogus condition
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slowlypalewinner · 1 year
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fbcelebrations1 · 6 months
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Do theme-based events really kick in the fun at Weddings? 
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Traditional themed weddings are declining, but the concept of themes has evolved. Couples are now incorporating subtler, more personalized themes, such as motifs or inspirations from favorite destinations or eras.
There is a new 'it' trend for weddings every year, but it doesn't have to be in style. A theme is a specific subject matter or concept that informs wedding design and style elements, such as a vintage theme incorporating classic styles and antique decor.
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neelnetworks · 2 months
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How Indian Startups are Revolutionizing Web Design
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becomingher-era · 1 year
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annagxx · 4 months
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Ek entrance exam dekar aati nahi hoon ki dusra sar par ajaata hai
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soniez · 2 months
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