Panaji, June 21 (Ians) Citing a quote from Bhagavad Gita that Yoga is the journey of the self, through the self to the self, Goa Governor P. S. Sreedharan Pillai on Wednesday said that Yoga provides many health benefits due to which most of the people have started practicing it regularly.
He was speaking during the International Day of Yoga celebrated at the Raj Bhavan.
International delegates attending Fourth Tourism Working Group and Ministerial meeting headed by Union Minister for Tourism G. Kishan Reddy and Minister of State for Defence & Tourism Ajay Bhatt along with other G20 delegates also participated in the celebrations at the Raj Bhavan.
“Today, we hear people talk about the various benefits of yoga everywhere. Yoga provides many health benefits due to which most of the people have started practicing yoga regularly,” Pillai said.
The Governor complimented G20 delegates for participating in Yoga Day celebrations at Raj Bhavan.
He was speaking during the International Day of Yoga celebrated at the Raj Bhavan.
International delegates attending Fourth Tourism Working Group and Ministerial meeting headed by Union Minister for Tourism G. Kishan Reddy and Minister of State for Defence & Tourism Ajay Bhatt along with other G20 delegates also participated in the celebrations at the Raj Bhavan.
“Today, we hear people talk about the various benefits of yoga everywhere. Yoga provides many health benefits due to which most of the people have started practicing yoga regularly,” Pillai said.
The Governor complimented G20 delegates for participating in Yoga Day celebrations at Raj Bhavan.
- 6/21/2023
- by Agency News Desk
- GlamSham
How Sean Maloney and brand guru Deborah Conrad are helping Intel's first carpet-dweller CEO reengineer the company once known as Chipzilla -- and free the bong.
When Paul Otellini, Intel's famously reserved CEO first heard the news, he got quiet. "The madder I get, the quieter I get," he says, an important footnote for any Otellini user manual. He was hushed via press conference by Neelie Kroes, the European commissioner for competition. "Intel used illegal anticompetitive practices to exclude essentially its only competitor and thus reduce consumer choice in the worldwide market for x86 chips," Kroes read last May from the 542-page decision on an antitrust case charging Intel with unfair trade practices. The fine: a record 1.06 billion euros, about $1.45 billion U.S.
Kroes ended pointedly: "Finally, I would like to draw your attention to Intel's latest global advertising campaign, which proposes Intel as the 'Sponsors of Tomorrow.
When Paul Otellini, Intel's famously reserved CEO first heard the news, he got quiet. "The madder I get, the quieter I get," he says, an important footnote for any Otellini user manual. He was hushed via press conference by Neelie Kroes, the European commissioner for competition. "Intel used illegal anticompetitive practices to exclude essentially its only competitor and thus reduce consumer choice in the worldwide market for x86 chips," Kroes read last May from the 542-page decision on an antitrust case charging Intel with unfair trade practices. The fine: a record 1.06 billion euros, about $1.45 billion U.S.
Kroes ended pointedly: "Finally, I would like to draw your attention to Intel's latest global advertising campaign, which proposes Intel as the 'Sponsors of Tomorrow.
- 10/15/2009
- by Ellen McGirt
- Fast Company
In his recent post, "Design is Too Important to be Left to Thinkers," Robert Brunner made a good point about how every Tom, Dick, corporate strategist, and engineer is now calling himself a "design thinker." This issue needs a deeper look.
In 1921, Albert Einstein won a Nobel Prize for his work on the photoelectric effect, based on a paper he published in 1905. The physics behind every solar panel was effectively described and understood by Einstein. Does that mean Einstein was a designer?
I'm guessing if he were living today, many design institutions and pundits would rush to declare him "The Grand Designer of All Things Solar!" However, I would disagree. Einstein is obviously one of humanity's greatest minds, absolutely the gold-standard for creative thinking, and one seriously interesting character.
Still, not a designer.
Think of another example: Rembrandt's fabulous painting, The Night Watch. It was commissioned by Captain Frans Banning...
In 1921, Albert Einstein won a Nobel Prize for his work on the photoelectric effect, based on a paper he published in 1905. The physics behind every solar panel was effectively described and understood by Einstein. Does that mean Einstein was a designer?
I'm guessing if he were living today, many design institutions and pundits would rush to declare him "The Grand Designer of All Things Solar!" However, I would disagree. Einstein is obviously one of humanity's greatest minds, absolutely the gold-standard for creative thinking, and one seriously interesting character.
Still, not a designer.
Think of another example: Rembrandt's fabulous painting, The Night Watch. It was commissioned by Captain Frans Banning...
- 6/23/2009
- by Gadi Amit
- Fast Company
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