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Radhemohan Pal

Let's connect to wor... • 1y

Good [morning/afternoon/evening], esteemed investors. Today, I present an eco-friendly solution to a global issue: mosquito-borne diseases. Our product is a natural, effective, and affordable mosquito vaporizer refill made from neem oil, camphor, a

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14 Replies
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My Dawai Wala

India's Health First... • 2m

What We Saw in Kolkata That Made Us Start MDW By Prasenjit Das | Co-founder, MDW Growing up in Kolkata, I’ve seen something too often — people waiting in long lines at pharmacies for basic medicines, elderly parents calling their children late at n

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9 Replies
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Sairaj Kadam

Entrepreneur • 2m

Markets fall when problems arise not because of the problem itself, but because we fear it. Once fear fades, optimism returns. Even just the talk of solutions (like trade deals) makes the market believe again. That’s how sentiment drives economics.

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5
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Pratik

Innately Curious • 1y

SCAM AC repairs are scam in our country. The machine gets much worse after the first gas refill by technician. There is no reliable service provider whom we can trust. Is it just me or anyone else face this isssue?

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Ayaan Ahamed

Founder & CEO @opsl... • 7d

Founders don’t wait for perfect conditions, we create them. Stress, fatigue, even fever can’t stop me, because commitment is non-negotiable. Fr me, 2 things stand above all: work and client satisfaction. That’s the DNA of Opslify. Finally today's ta

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Sourav Mishra

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Codestam Technologies • 3m

You don’t need to burn out to build something great. But most founders do. Not because they want to— Because they’re too deep in the weeds. Worried about bugs. Juggling freelancers. Fixing things customers should never see. At some point, buildin

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Harshith K

Tech Entrepreneur | ... • 12d

💡 Every great startup begins with a spark — but too often, that spark dies out early. Not because the idea was weak, but because the founders couldn’t validate it, build a strong online presence, or afford expensive agencies. That’s where we step i

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Sourav Mishra

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Codestam Technologies • 1m

why most MVPs fail: not because the tech is bad. not because the idea is bad. but because the feedback loop is broken. no real users. no real feedback. no real iteration. build → launch → learn → repeat. that’s the game.

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