While experts claimed that Patanjali's Swadeshi messaging app was removed form Google Play over security concerns, Kimbho declared that it was removed because of heavy traffic.
Many other Indians are heading the businesses at companies abroad.
Snow blankets Games, delays Gu's return to competition
Keeping a company on the cutting edge is about more than making workers happy.
Karan Choudhury asks Uber India president Amit Jain what the company's global problems mean for its India operations.
Valieva dominates the ice despite doping scandal
Trump trying to divide us, cries NBA star LeBron James even as Cowboys, Cardinals link arms amid anthem protests
'We look forward to providing great customer experiences in India.'
Sikka ranks 35th in the list.
Steve Case's book is filled with insightful scenes that describe how the modern online industry was put together, notes Ajit Balakrishnan.
The news of the week gone by that shaped the world
Still, the earliest India will get to experience Apple online will be early 2020 and the company's first fully-owned signature store should be up around 2022 -- almost two decades after it had opened its first store worldwide, writes Nivedita Mookerji.
Wrist bands range from leather and stainless steel to sports models in hues from pink to blue.
With both the Nexus phones touted to be the first to carry Android's Marshmallow edition, the latest offerings from Google seem tempting, but surely, gone are the days of cheap Nexus phones, says Himanshu Juneja
Traders have all but given up attempting to predict where the new-year rout will end
An interview with Sridhar Ramaswamy,Senior vice-president, ads and commerce, Google.
Shortage of top engineering talent in Silicon Valley is inflating paychecks.
Pune, the city that made it to second spot in the Smart City Challenge competition earlier this year, is not new to the concept.
Here's your weekly digest of the most weird, true and funny news from the across the world.
Surging value of dollar may be posing the biggest threat to US corporate earnings.
Ellison and the two new co-CEOs each stressed that nothing would change under the new management structure, with Ellison staying on as executive chairman and chief technology officer.
Nilanjana S Roy compiles a list of the most eagerly awaited books next year.
The reason for the windfall: the soaring value of their stock awards.
The spectacular Milky Way over the picturesque Bavarian mountain, Herzogstand, the remarkable Horsehead Nebula and the Flame Nebula, a vast cloud of gas and dust where new stars are being born; the Royal Observatory's Insight Investment Astronomy Photographer of the Year 2019 has once more received thousands of outstanding images. The competition, which is run by the Royal Observatory Greenwich, sponsored by Insight Investment and in association with BBC Sky at Night Magazine, is now in its eleventh year and has broken the record number of entries once more, receiving over 4,600 entries from enthusiastic amateurs and professional photographers, taken from 90 countries across the globe. The winners will be announced on September 12, and an exhibition of the winning images from the past years of the contest will be on show at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich from September 13.
The San Francisco-based giant has acquired a Delhi-based company.
Rediff.com republishes an old interview of the cartoonist on politics
With a slew of product releases this time, Apple has made it very difficult for its competitors to survive in the market with its state-of-the-art products and software. It will be interesting to see how competition answers with their upcoming products.
Winners of the 2016 National Geographic Nature Photographer of the Year.
Babulal 'Bob' Bera, US Congressman Ami Bera's 83-year-old father, faces five years in prison.
Have you heard of the Burning Man festival? Or the Monkey Buffet festival?
The jury of the 58th annual World Press Photo Contest has selected an image by Danish photographer Mads Nissen as the World Press Photo of the Year 2014.
'I always used to say ignore the trolls and move on and focus on your fans and friends,' Sreenath Sreenivasan tells Rediff.com's Monali Sarkar. 'That was easy for me to say. But now when I say it, I really mean it.'