
COVID-19 patients can now order home-cooked food directly through WhatsApp
India Today
Popular celebrity chef Saransh Goila has partnered with WhatsApp, Facebook to help COVID-19 positive patients in finding meals in their locality.
Popular celebrity chef Saransh Goila has partnered with WhatsApp, Facebook to help COVID-19 positive patients in finding meals in their locality. The second wave of COVID-19 has wreaked havoc in India with over 4 lakh active cases. To top it all, there is an acute shortage of oxygen cylinders which is making matters worse. So for now hospitals are only admitting serious and critical patients while the people with mild symptoms are advised to isolate at home. The COVID-19 positive patients who are isolating at homes are finding it hard to source food. To make things easier for them, Saransh has collaborated with a startup and launched a platform to deliver food to people who are suffering from COVID. He has launched a website called covidmealsforindia.com. The website has witnessed an onslaught of visitors within 72 hours of going live. Over 2 Lakhs users from 300+ cities visited the platform to find meals.
Students who appeared for the Bihar School Examination Board Class 12 exams can now access their results through multiple platforms, including the India Today Board Results page for smoother and quicker access. With heavy traffic expected on official websites, this alternative option ensures students can check their scores without delays or technical glitches.

After fight with US Military, Anthropic starts searching for policy expert on weapons and explosives
Anthropic, the AI startup that found itself at odds with the Pentagon over unrestricted AI use, is now looking for an expert in chemical weapons and explosives. However, the company is not planning to build such weapons, but instead wants to formulate its policy in regard to weapons.

Reddit is exploring biometric verification methods such as Face ID and Touch ID to ensure users are real humans, not bots, while pledging to maintain the platform's tradition of anonymity. CEO Steve Huffman said the company is planning to address the rising influence of AI-generated content and protect authentic user engagement.










