The Indian government's push for capex and the overhaul of railways have been under the spotlight for quite some time. One of the beneficiaries of these efforts is Jupiter Wagons. Vivek Lohia, MD, Jupiter Wagons, has kept up with the changing times, which has helped the company become the third-largest wagon maker in India. The company is now gearing up to make containers that house data centres, wheelsets, and brakes for metro and Vande Bharat coaches. Manu Balachandran gives detailed insight into this side of the manufacturing industry and the role of Jupiter Wagons
In today's episode, we bring you an update from Nakul Aggarwal, co-founder and CTO of BrowserStack, a leading SaaS company from India, providing software app and browser testing infrastructure and products. Aggarwal talks about the rationale behind the acquisition of Bird Eats Bug, in Berlin, which BrowserStack announced yesterday. He also talks about evaluating building BrowserStack's own large language model, as the SaaS company progresses on its journey of transforming from a test infrastructure provider to a testing platform
Forbes India's newest issue chronicles family businesses that have stood the test of time, sometimes over a century. It also focuses on how the next generations of these families are taking forward this legacy on their terms. One such gen-next member is Nyrika Holkar of Godrej & Boyce MFG Co Ltd. In this podcast, Jasodhara Banerjee discusses one of the cover stories featuring Holkar and her approach to combining startup learnings with legacy lessons
Bhavina Patel has been on crutches since she was diagnosed with polio at one year old. That didn't stop her creating history, by winning India's first silver medal in her category at the Tokyo Paralympics. As she sets her sights on the Paris Paralympics, the table tennis athlete, who is known for her smashes, speaks exclusively to Forbes India. She talks to Naandika Tripathi about the need for government support, mental health issues, and how things have changed for para-athletes, or sportspersons who are differently abled, over the years in India
Ahead of Nvidia's fiscal Q2 earnings results, on Aug. 28 (Aug. 29 2:30 a.m. local time in India) we look at the stunning rise of the $2 trillion chip maker as the tech backbone for the explosion of generative AI over the last two years. Alvin Nguyen, senior analyst at Forrester Research, and Neil Shah, vice president of research at Counterpoint Technology Market Research, explain Nvidia's dominance and the growing complexities in the broader ecosystem
The Supreme Court on Tuesday appealed to protesting doctors to resume work, in a suo moto hearing on Tuesday. Doctors, however, say they won't let up protests until a Central Protection Act is passed. What is this act, and why is it important? Find out in this explainer
India's performance at the recently concluded 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris had strong support from Parth Jindal, founder of JSW Sports and IIS. It is the result of focused efforts made by the scion of the JSW group to change the Indian mindset towards the sports ecosystem from 'Idhar toh aisa hi hota hai' (this is how it works in India) to 'Duniya mein kaise hota hai' (How it works as per global standards). In this cover story podcast, Kathakali Chanda takes us through Jindal's work so far and what lies in the future
The fourth edition of Forbes India's annual Regional Goliath issue has a remarkable collection of regional players making the mark in their respective territories. In this podcast, Rajiv Singh, who anchored the issue, gets into the details of what drives a regional goliath, and stories you can't miss
Watch our expert panel decode the Finance Minister's proposals for FY25, as stock markets fall. Joining Forbes India deputy editor Salil Panchal are Rajiv Anand, deputy MD, Axis Bank, and Mousami Nagarsenkar, partner, Deloitte India
Forbes India spoke with a range of women who hope that the Union Budget 2024 will pave the way for better credit opportunities, last-mile connectivity, skill development, and reforms that allow women to join (and rejoin) the workforce. Watch what they have to say
Due to a paper leak before the National Eligibility cum Entrance Test or NEET exam this year, a scam of a massive scale, which resulted in inflated ranks and a high-cut off score, medical students are worried about not being able to secure a seat in any decent government college. As aspirants await the Supreme Court's decision on ReNEET, the uncertainty surrounding it has left them with no motivation to pursue their dreams or the momentum to study again. Here's their story, straight from India's coaching capital, Kota