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Frederick Winslow Taylor: The Man Who Taught the World to Work Smarter

The title “Father of Scientific Management” is given to Frederick Winslow Taylor (1856–1915), an American engineer who fundamentally changed how work is organised.

Before Taylor, most work was done based on habit, experience, or trial and error. He introduced a simple but powerful idea:
👉 Work should be studied scientifically to find the most efficient way to do it.

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Vantara University: India’s Bid to Become a Global Hub for Wildlife Science

India is stepping into a space that very few countries have fully systematised: integrated wildlife education + conservation practice.The proposed Vantara University in Jamnagar, Gujarat, envisioned under Anant Ambani, aims to build exactly that bridge.

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NASA’s PACE Satellite: Seeing Pollution and Oceans in Unprecedented Detail

A quiet but powerful upgrade has just happened in Earth observation. NASA’s PACE satellite can now detect nitrogen dioxide (NOâ‚‚) at a much finer spatial scale, to the point where scientists can trace emissions back to specific factories and highway corridors.

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Gucchi Goes Lab-Grown: Why SKUAST’s Breakthrough Matters

 

For decades, Gucchi (morel) mushrooms have been a gamble of nature. You either find them in the wild after the right mix of snowmelt, rain, and temperature… or you don’t.
That’s why the report that Sher-e-Kashmir University of Agricultural Sciences and Technology (SKUAST), Srinagar has cultivated Morchella under controlled conditions is a big deal. It moves Gucchi from chance-based foraging to science-driven production.

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Woolly-Necked Stork Spotted in Tamil Nadu: Why This Matters

Recent sightings of the Woolly-Necked Stork near Thanjavur are more than just a birdwatching highlight. They point to something larger: working agricultural landscapes like paddy fields are still functioning as ecological habitats, not just food-producing zones.

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