Tag: founder

  • Tech consultant arrested in killing of Cash App founder Lee

    Tech consultant arrested in killing of Cash App founder Lee

    [ad_1]

    cash app founder slain 55384

    San Francisco Board President Aaron Peskin announced the suspect’s arrest in Emeryville, a San Francisco suburb.

    Police found Lee with stab wounds in the Rincon Hill neighborhood of San Francisco at 2:30 a.m. April 4. He died at a hospital.

    Lee is known for creating the widely used mobile payment service Cash App while working as chief technology officer of the payment company Square, now known as Block. He was the chief product officer for the cryptocurrency firm MobileCoin at the time of his death.

    On his LinkedIn profile, Momeni describes himself as an “IT Consultant/Entrepreneur” as well as “owner” at a company called Expand IT.

    It was not immediately clear whether Momeni has an attorney who can speak on his behalf.

    “I hope today’s arrest can begin a process of healing and closure for all those touched by this tragedy,” Matt Dorsey, another San Francisco supervisor, tweeted Thursday morning.

    Prominent tech leaders took to social media to mourn Lee’s death and blame San Francisco for what they call the city’s lax attitude toward crime. Scott and Jenkins pushed back against that narrative on Thursday, with the prosecutor specifically naming tech billionaire Elon Musk for commenting on the case.

    “This doesn’t have to do with San Francisco, this has to do with human nature,” Scott said.

    Mission Local first reported Momeni’s arrest.



    [ad_2]
    #Tech #consultant #arrested #killing #Cash #App #founder #Lee
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Cash App founder Bob Lee dies at 43

    Cash App founder Bob Lee dies at 43

    [ad_1]

    1423628571

    Bob Lee, founder of Cash App and the former chief technology officer of Square, died Tuesday in San Francisco.

    The San Francisco Chronicle and other outlets reported 43-year-old Lee died after being fatally stabbed early Tuesday morning, citing unnamed sources and police.

    MobileCoin, a cryptocurrency and digital payments startup where Lee had been serving as chief product officer since 2021, issued a statement confirming Lee’s death without naming a cause.

    “Our dear friend and colleague, Bob Lee passed away yesterday at the age of 43, survived by a loving family and collection of close friends and collaborators,” said Josh Goldbard, CEO of MobileCoin. “Bob was a dynamo, a force of nature. Bob was the genuine article.”

    The San Francisco Police Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    The department said in a Tuesday evening statement that officers responded earlier that morning to a report of a stabbing and found a 43-year-old male victim, who was taken to a hospital and succumbed to his injuries there. The report did not identify the victim and stated that no arrests have been made in the case.

    [ad_2]
    #Cash #App #founder #Bob #Lee #dies
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Remembering Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah, the founder of Hyderabad

    Remembering Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah, the founder of Hyderabad

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Most cities in the world, especially great civilisations, revere their founders and make it a point to remember them. But our city seems to be an exception, given that in popular culture the metropolis is known today for pearls, and is associated with the Nizams, who in fact had nothing to do with the foundation of Hyderabad.

    It is to correct that wrong, or rather our forgetfulness as grateful citizens of Hyderabad, that we should remember our founder Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah, who laid the foundations of our city in 1591. Born on April 4, 1566, he was the fourth king of the Golconda dynasty that existed from 1518 to 1687. It is only fit that we remember him for having the vision to build a new city, which would eventually go on to have over four centuries of continuous history.

    The Charminar, which is the first monument built to mark the new city of Hyderabad, today is world famous and still stands as an example of the grandeur that Hyderabad was surrounded with right from its foundations. It may be noted that Mohammed Quli is rather more known for his association with the legend of his lover Bhagmati.

    MS Education Academy

    Much before Hyderabad was built by Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah, it was his grandfather Sultan Quli who settled in Telangana after migrating from Hamadan (Iran) in the late 15th century. The Golconda fort in Hyderabad was a walled city from which the first three Qutb Shahi kings ruled.

    The Golconda Fort’s origins are traced back to the 14th century when the Rajah of Warangal Deo Rai (under the Kakatiya Kingdom which ruled from Warangal) built a mud fort, which was later taken over the Bahamani empire between (1358-75). It was later developed into a full-fledged citadel by Sultan Quli, who founded the Qutb Shahi (or Golconda) kingdom in 1518, when the last sovereign Bahamani emperor Mahmud Shah Bahamani died. 

    IMG 20191109 WA0003
    A view of the Golconda fort from atop the Bala Hissar area, which shows the number of houses that have cropped up over the last four decades. (Photo: Siasat)

    Prior to that, Sultan Quli was a commander and later governor of Tilang (Telangana), under the Bahamani empire (1347-1518), when its second capital was at Bidar. Sultan Quli had risen to the level of governor under the Bahamanis. At this point of time he was given the fort, which he began developing into a walled-city. It eventually came to called Golconda Fort (name derived from Golla-conda, or shepherds hill). 

    Sultan Quli’s youngest son Ibrahim Qutb Shah was the third monarch of the Qutb Shahi kingdom. Mohammed Quli was one of the younger ones Ibrahim had with his wife named Bhagirathu. Mohammed Quli eventually would would become the fourth king in 1580 after his father died. The young monarch would decide to move out of the Golconda fort in 1591 due to a host of reasons, including the lack of infrastructure or lack of space inside the fort.

    The Golconda fort was historically famous for its diamond markets, and trade. Diamonds were historically mined in the Andhra region (then under the Golconda empire), and were sold in the fort’s markets, and later in Hyderabad.

    New City

    When Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah founded Hyderabad city in 1591, it was designed with grand edifices and fueled by global trade. The city’s centrepiece undoubtedly was the Charminar, built as the foundational monument. We know for a fact that aside from the Charminar and other monuments that towered the new city of Hyderabad (built after Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah decided to move out of the walled-city of Golconda), the main area or the Bazars were what attracted foreign merchants alike in the 16th and 17th centuries.

    In fact, one of the handful of structures from Mohammed Quli’s period that remains today is the Badshahi Ashurkhana. It was built a year after the Charminar in 1592, and is a Shia Muslim place of mourning for remembering the martyrdom of Imam Hussain. The Qutb Shahi kings were also orthodox Shias.

    WhatsApp Image 2022 07 31 at 5.15.45 PM
    Hyderabad’s historic Badhshahi Ashurkhana displaying all of its Muharram Alams. (Image: Abinaya Sivagnanam)

    Apart from Indian traders, Mohammed Quli Qutb Shah’s Hyderabad drew Persian, Armenian, Portuguese and British traders. The French traveller Monsieur Thevenot in fact gives us a glimpse of what Hyderabad was like under its sixth king Sultan Abdullah Qutb Shah (1626-72).

    An excerpt from his travelogue tells us what he thought of Hyderabad (which he called Bagnagar) then: “The gardens without the Town are the loveliest, and I shall only describe one of them, that is reckoned the pleasantest of the kingdom. At first, one enters into a great place called the first Garden; it is planted with Palms and Areca trees, so near to one another that the sun can hardly pierce through them.”

    “The Tradesmen of the Town, and those who cultivate the Land, are Natives of the Country. There are many Franks also in the Kingdome, but most of them are Portuguese who have fled for Crimes they have committed: However the English and Dutch have lately setled there, and the last make great profits,” wrote Thevenot of his travels to Hyderabad.

    Mohammed Quli in fact wrote in Dakhni, the language which is spoken in the Deccan, and which is often mistaken as Urdu. He was a Dakhni poet, who compiled thousands of lines in his lifetime. He has written about 50000 or more lines of poetry.

    Charminar – As architectural masterpiece and Mohd Quli’s legacy

    Undoubtedly, to this day, the Charminar is still Hyderabad’s main attraction. It’s intricate designs and magnificence can’t be easily paralleled in the Deccan or even the country easily. It is after all the foundation of Hyderabad. It also reflects the globalisation of the 16th century in the Deccan.

    Apart from its Persian and local influences in terms of design, the Charminar also has pineapple motifs on it. The fruit was imported to the Deccan via trade with the Portuguese (who brought it from Brazil originally). Aside from that, it also has Shirdal (or griffins) motifs in its central arcade.

    Untitled design 2023 04 05T194633.088

    Many also often mistake the Charminar to be a religious monument, but that is not the case. The first mosque of Hyderabad is the Jama Masjid that is just across the monument. The Charminar is exactly what it is meant to be – a monument for the city. Historian HK Sherwani also points out that what’s believed to be a mosque on the second floor was originally used as a school or seminary for both Hindus and Muslim children.

    All in all, regardless of religious or political affiliations, it is the least that we as a city can do to remember our founder Mohammed Quli, without whom Hyderabad would not have existed.

    Unfortunately today we do not know how does the city looked like thanks to the Mughals, who under Aurangzeb destroyed most of the original structures, including palaces, in 1687 over an eight month long battle. We have only an idea of the grandeur thanks to history books and whatever remains from what Mohammed Quli and the Golconda kings built.

    [ad_2]
    #Remembering #Mohammed #Quli #Qutb #Shah #founder #Hyderabad

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hyderabad: Deccan Development Society founder PV Satheesh passes away

    Hyderabad: Deccan Development Society founder PV Satheesh passes away

    [ad_1]

    Hyderabad: Founder and Executive Director of Deccan Development Society (DDS) P V Satheesh passed away, at the age of 77 on Sunday after undoing treatment at a private hospital in the city for a prolonged illness.

    His last rites are to be performed on Monday at 10:30 am in Pastapur Village of Sangareddy district.

    Satheesh was an icon of civil society activism in India, who, through the Zaheerabad-based organisation in rural Telangana, championed issues of agri-biodiversity, food sovereignty, women’s empowerment, social justice, local knowledge systems, participatory development, and community media.

    The women’s sanghams of DDS with a steadfast adherence to millet cultivation and organic agriculture led the way nationally in offering demonstrable alternatives to the dominant agricultural paradigm. Satheesh led the recent efforts to incorporate millets into the public distribution system.

    Born on June 18, 1945 in Mysore, Periyapatna Venkatasubbaiah Satheesh was a graduate of the Indian Institute of Mass Communication, New Delhi and started out as a journalist.

    He went on to work as a television producer for nearly two decades for Doordarshan, making programmes related to rural development and rural literacy in the then-united Andhra Pradesh. He played an important role in the historical Satellite Instructional Television Experiment (SITE) in the 1970s.

    In the early 1980s, Satheesh, along with a few friends, initiated the Deccan Development Society in the semi-arid Zaheerabad region by collectivizing poor Dalit women in the villages for a range of programmes that together challenged hunger, malnutrition, land degradation, loss of biodiversity, gender injustice, and social deprivation.

    He led the organisation for nearly four decades to become an internationally acclaimed NGO and an inspiring example that has motivated similar experiments in millet revival and promotion across the country.

    PV Satheesh’s efforts at DDS resulted in improved livelihoods of thousands of poor women across 75 villages in Telangana.

    He also led several national and international networks like Millet Network of India (MINI), South Against Genetic Engineering (SAGE), AP Coalition in Defence of Diversity and was also the India Coordinator for SANFEC, the South Asian Network for Food, Ecology and Culture, a five-country South Asian network with over 200 ecological groups.

    He was formerly Board Member, Genetic Resources Action International (GRAIN), Barcelona, Spain and was also a member of the International Panel of Experts on Sustainable Food Systems (IPES-Food), Brussels, Belgium.

    Sateesh is also credited with the initiation of India’s first Community Media Trust, a grassroots media centre where non-literate Dalit women were trained in film-making to democratize media spaces, and also with the launching of India’s first rural, civil society-led community radio station, Sangham Radio.

    He was recently honoured for his lifetime contributions to making millets a people’s agenda.

    [ad_2]
    #Hyderabad #Deccan #Development #Society #founder #Satheesh #passes

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Karni Sena founder Lokendra Singh Kalvi dies in Rajasthan

    Karni Sena founder Lokendra Singh Kalvi dies in Rajasthan

    [ad_1]

    Jaipur: Rajput leader and Karni Sena founder Lokendra Singh Kalvi passed away at a state-run hospital here on Tuesday.

    Family sources said he suffered a cardiac arrest late in the night and breathed his last. Kalvi was admitted to the Sawai Man Singh Hospital for the past few days.

    His funeral was conducted at his ancestral village, Kalvi, in Nagaur district.

    His elder son Bhawani Singh lit the funeral pyre.

    Food and civil supplies minister Pratap Singh Khachariyawas, RTDC chairman Dharmendra Rathore and other leaders paid floral tributes to Kalvi before the funeral.

    Earlier, Governor Kalraj Mishra, BJP state president Satish Poonia, former chief minister Vasundhara Raje, Shri Kshatriya Yuvak Sangh patron Bhagwan Singh Rolsahabsar and other leaders expressed condolences on the demise of Kalvi.

    Kalvi suffered a brain stroke in June last year and he was not well since then.

    The son of former Union minister Kalyan Singh Kalvi, Lokendra was the patron of Shree Rajput Karni Sena, which had led the 2018 protests against Sanjay Leela Bhansali’s film “Padmaavat” for alleged distortion of historical facts.

    He had also been a national-level basketball player.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Karni #Sena #founder #Lokendra #Singh #Kalvi #dies #Rajasthan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Amit Shah pays tribute to RSS founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar in Nagpur

    Amit Shah pays tribute to RSS founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar in Nagpur

    [ad_1]

    Nagpur: Union Home Minister Amit Shah on Saturday paid tribute to Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh (RSS) founder Keshav Baliram Hedgewar at RSS Smriti Mandir in Nagpur.

    The Home Minister is on a two-day visit to Maharashtra from today.

    “Paid floral tributes in Nagpur to Revered Dr. Hedgewar ji, who founded RSS and respected Guruji, who made the Sangh nationwide, to inculcate the values of national service among the youth. Today, following the path shown by him, innumerable

    youths are selflessly engaged in the service of the nation,” Shah said in a tweet.

    He will engage in nearly a dozen public events during his hectic visit to Maharashtra’s Nagpur and Kolhapur cities.
    Earlier in the day, Home Minister paid tribute to Dr Bhim Rao Ambedkar at Deeksha Bhoomi in Nagpur.

    He also participated in the celebration organized on the completion of 50 years of Lokmat Group at Nagpur’s Suresh Bhatt Auditorium.

    Later on, Shah will interact with the children of soldiers, policemen and civilians who were martyred in Jammu and Kashmir at the J. W. Marriott hotel in Pune.

    The minister will later release the Marathi translation of the ‘Modi@20’ book at Pandit Farms in Pune. Shah’s hectic day-long schedule will end will Darshan and worship in Omkareshwar temple in Pune by late Saturday evening.

    On Sunday, the Home Minister will inaugurate the first phase of the theme park ‘Shiv Srishti’ based on the life of Shivaji Maharaj in Pune’s Ambegaon to mark the 393rd birth anniversary of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj.

    He will later worship in Mahalakshmi Temple in Kolhapur as well as garlanding of statues of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj and Shahu Ji Maharaj in the area.

    He will later participate in the closing ceremony of the centenary festival organized on the completion of 100 years of the New Education Society in Kolhapur at Lohia High School in Kolhapur.The two-day visit of Shah will culminate with a ‘Vijay Sankalp Rally’ at BJP Office on Sunday evening in Kolhapur. (

    [ad_2]
    #Amit #Shah #pays #tribute #RSS #founder #Keshav #Baliram #Hedgewar #Nagpur

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Hindu Conclave: Kerala Governor recalls words of Aligarh Muslim University founder

    Hindu Conclave: Kerala Governor recalls words of Aligarh Muslim University founder

    [ad_1]

    Thiruvananthapuram: Kerala Governor Arif Mohammed Khan on Saturday recalled the words of Sir Syed Ahmed Khan, founder of the Aligarh Muslim University who was said to have urged to call him a “Hindu” over a century ago.

    While speaking at a Hindu conclave here, the Governor quoted the reported words of Sir Syed Khan that “you must call me a Hindu” which he had made during an Arya Samaj meeting.

    Khan said Sir Syed was given a reception by the Samaj members when he completed his tenure in the Legislative Council during the colonial regime.

    Recalling the words of the reformer-educationalist, Khan said he had asked the Samaj members why they didn’t call him a Hindu and made it clear that he did not consider “Hindu” as a religious term.

    “But, my serious complaint against you (Arya Samaj members) is that why don’t you call me a Hindu? I do not consider Hindu as a religious term…Hindu is a geographical term,” the Governor said recalling Syed Ahmed Khan’s words.

    Anybody who is born in India, anybody who lives on the food which is produced in India, anybody who drinks water from the rivers of India is entitled to call himself a Hindu and so “you must call me a Hindu”, Khan said quoting the Aligarh University founder’s words.

    Arif Mohammed Khan also said it was “perfectly fine” to use the terminology like Hindu, Muslim and Sikh during the colonial era because the Britishers had made the communities as the basis for deciding even the ordinary rights of citizens.

    The conclave was organised by the outfit Kerala Hindus of North America (KHNA).

    Union Minister V Muraleedharan took part in the concluding session of the conclave held at Muscat hotel here.

    He alleged a conspiracy has been going on in the state to make it feel that it is wrong to say “I am a Hindu”.

    Even before independence, the kings and rulers of the country, who believed in “sanatana dharma”, had accepted all religious groups with open arms, he said.

    In the same manner that the union government under Prime Minister Narendra Modi is opening the door for people suffering persecution in neigbouring countries, he said.

    The union minister also stressed the need to bring all those who believe in “Sanatana Dharma” under one roof.

    [ad_2]
    #Hindu #Conclave #Kerala #Governor #recalls #words #Aligarh #Muslim #University #founder

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )