
zomato: Zomato offers free delivery for orders above Rs 99 to Gold users for Independence Day celebrations
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Food delivery platform Zomato on Thursday announced a limited-time festive offer to its Gold subscribers to avail free delivery on orders above Rs 99, which was earlier Rs 199.As part of the Independence Day celebrations, Zomato's Gold customers can avail this offer between August 14 and 17. Further, Zomato's Gold membership is also available for Re 1.'By lowering the free delivery threshold for our Zomato Gold members, we aim to make online ordering more rewarding—encouraging customers to enjoy everyday meals while discovering more restaurants,' said Aditya Mangla, chief executive of food delivery business Eternal 'This change not only offers greater value to our Gold members but also supports our restaurant partners during this important time of year,' he added.This comes a day after ride-hailing platform Rapido launched its food delivery service Ownly in Bangalore. Ownly is now available for consumers in Koramangala, HSR, and BTM Layout.Ownly also has a similar budget-friendly segment called 'meals for one,' which features items under Rs 170, including quick bites, snacks, beverages, and similar items.Last month, Swiggy had also launched the '99 store,' offering quick-prep dishes ranging between Rs 49 and Rs 149 and free delivery on orders under the 'eco saver' delivery mode.As the race in food delivery heats up, platforms are coming up with attractive offers and discounts to onboard and retain users.

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Time of India
5 minutes ago
- Time of India
Engines of Independence: Why the heart of India's fighter jets must beat at home
Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads From Launchpads to Dogfights Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads The Kaveri Engine: A Dream That Shaped a Generation Why Fighter Engines Are the Everest of Propulsion Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads A Measured Climb, Not a Blind Leap From Metal to Mastery The Hybrid Path: Independence Without Delay A Factory for the Future When the Sky Roars in Our Own Voice Each Independence Day, the flypast over Delhi's Red Fort is a theatre of sovereignty. Formation after formation cuts through the sky, a demonstration that India can design, build, and fly its own combat aircraft. But the crowd cannot hear one truth: most of those engines, the very heart of these machines, are Behramkamdin, Business Head, Aerospace at Godrej & Boyce, has a vantage point few others possess. His company's journey from producing locks in 1897 to building rocket engines for ISRO mirrors India's long march towards high-precision engineering. Speaking to us ahead of Independence Day, Behramkamdin puts the challenge into perspective:'If you have a beautiful car without an engine, it's just a showpiece. The same applies to aerospace. We've done well in avionics, actuation systems, and other aircraft subsystems, but without our own engine, we're only halfway there.'The point is clear: without mastery over propulsion, India's aerospace sovereignty is aerospace journey began with rocket launches. In 1985, it started with precision tooling for ISRO. From there came the Vikas engine, the cryogenic stages that carried Chandrayaan and Mangalyaan, and a partnership so deep that Behramkamdin says: 'Any rocket launched from Sriharikota with an ISRO logo will have at least one component, if not an entire module or engine, made at our Vikhroli plant.'Under Dr A.P.J. Abdul Kalam's mentorship, Godrej entered defence propulsion for missiles before taking on aviation. Today, almost half its aerospace business serves the skies, including all eight modules for DRDO's 50 kN Kaveri derivative quest for a home-grown fighter jet engine began in the 1980s with the Gas Turbine Research Establishment's (GTRE) Kaveri programme. Conceived alongside the Light Combat Aircraft (LCA) Tejas, the Kaveri was intended to free India from reliance on foreign was an audacious leap and one fraught with challenges. Unlike airframes, engines demand mastery of exotic alloys, high-temperature materials, and microscopic tolerances. Very few nations, the US, Russia, France, and the UK among them, had Kaveri engine's initial prototypes delivered around 70–78 kN of thrust with afterburner, short of the 90 kN target needed for the Tejas. Technical hurdles, from turbine blade metallurgy to afterburner stability, combined with funding interruptions and shifting priorities, led to its eventual decoupling from the LCA to write it off as a failure would be to miss the point. The Kaveri built an ecosystem: design teams, test facilities, metallurgy expertise, and private-sector engagement. Godrej, for instance, manufactured eight major Kaveri modules and delivered two complete engines to GTRE. These capabilities remain the bedrock of India's next propulsion push.'The Kaveri gave us the know-how. Now we need the national will to take it forward, first to 90 kN, then to 120 kN for AMCA,' says Behramkamdin. The Kaveri was not the last word. It was the first sentence in a story India has not finished are bursts of glory, one ignition, one ascent, one job done. Fighter jet engines are the opposite: decades of relentless service, igniting thousands of times, enduring dust, salt, monsoon moisture, Himalayan chill, and desert heat. They demand rare alloys, faultless tolerances, and endurance trials that last longer than some aircraft has already indigenised most missile materials. Rare earth extraction in Odisha is progressing. Composites remain a bottleneck. But as Behramkamdin points out, 'No major engine maker operates in total isolation. But we can reduce dependency to the bare minimum.'Today, the Defence Research and Development Organisation (DRDO) and Indian industry are close to another leap. The fifth-generation Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA) will need an engine capable of producing around 110–120 kN of thrust, a technological cautions against trying to leap there in one bound.'Jumping straight from 50 kN to 120 kN is like trying to leap from 2G to 5G in one step. Possible, but far riskier. An intermediate 90 kN engine, building on the Kaveri programme, could serve the Tejas Mk-2 and give us invaluable learning before aiming for AMCA's full requirement.'It is a pragmatic approach: develop a 90 kN class engine first, prove reliability, and expand upwards. This 'spiral development' model, where capability evolves in stages, mirrors how successful aerospace powers like the US and France achieved propulsion is not caution for its own sake. It is the engineering truth that sustained progress is built in stages. Skip one, and the whole structure may evolution from 'build to print', making parts to someone else's drawings, to 'build to spec', designing, engineering, and testing from scratch, is the true sign of sovereignty. Godrej is now in that second this year, an MoU with the Aeronautical Development Agency was signed. As part of this MoU, Godrej will be developing flight control actuators for AMCA. Moreover, investment in metal 3D printing would reduce waste by 80%. High-temperature brazing improves turbine blade performance.'It's not just machines and materials,' Behramkamdin insists. 'It's people. We've trained them, and we know how to make.'Behramkamdin sees opportunity in India's space programme. 'With our experience in rocket propulsion, where we've mastered metallurgy, materials, and manufacturing precision, I see no reason why we can't succeed in aero engines. The overlap in skills is huge.'Behramkamdin's plan is pragmatic: design AMCA to fly with an imported engine while developing an indigenous one in parallel. When it is ready, swap it in. This way, the aircraft is not hostage to the pace of engine R&D, yet the nation still gains the knowledge, facilities, and industrial base it argue that waiting for an indigenous engine risks delaying fighter projects like AMCA. Behramkamdin's solution is a hybrid model.'Acquire an off-the-shelf engine to meet immediate needs, while developing our own in the background. That way, we avoid delays while still building long-term capability.'It is a doctrine that blends urgency with patience, speed with depth, much like the way ISRO built its cryogenic engines over decades, refusing to abandon the goal after early is an approach that prioritises readiness without sacrificing sovereignty, a balance India must strike as geopolitical tensions demand rapid capability the Kaveri taught India anything, it is that engine development demands not just technical skill but political stamina. Stop-start funding and shifting strategic goals can kill momentum faster than any design flaw.'We need continuity in policy and funding,' says Behramkamdin. 'We must stop shifting focus midway through programmes. If we align government, industry, academia, and startups under a national mission, we can succeed.'Godrej is already putting down its own marker: a Rs 500 crore greenfield aerospace facility in Khalapur, Maharashtra, due in 2028, with full aero-engine manufacturing capabilities aimed at both domestic and global can land on the Moon and send a probe to Mars, but its frontline fighters still borrow their heartbeat. For Behramkamdin, closing that gap is more than an engineering milestone.'It is a matter of will,' he says. The day an AMCA lifts off under an Indian-built engine will not just mark a new phase in defence capability. It will be the sound of a nation's voice, roaring across the sky, unmistakably and irreversibly its its heart, this is about more than defence hardware. A fighter jet engine is a symbol of sovereign capability. It says to the world that India can power its own defence, write its own technological destiny, and never be hostage to supply chain India can marry the Kaveri's legacy with AMCA's ambitions, guided by the hard-earned lessons of ISRO and the grit of its private sector, then by the 2040s the roar of a fully indigenous engine could be more than just a technical achievement. It could be a declaration of independence as profound as the one celebrated every August.'We've built world-class precision manufacturing capabilities,' Behramkamdin reflects. 'Now we need to channel them into making an indigenous aero engine a reality. That will be a true step towards Atmanirbhar Bharat.'


Time of India
5 minutes ago
- Time of India
Independence Day bank holiday: Are banks open or closed for Independence Day on August 15, 2025?
Bank holiday on August 15, 2025 Academy Empower your mind, elevate your skills Bank holiday on August 16, 2025 Long weekend in August 2025 Are banks open on August 16, 2025? State wise bank holiday list for August 2025 Aug-25 8 9 13 15 16 19 25 27 28 Agartala • • Ahmedabad • • • • Aizawl • • Belapur • • Bengaluru • • Bhopal • • • Bhubaneswar • • • • Chandigarh • • Chennai • • • Dehradun • • • Gangtok • • • Guwahati • • Hyderabad • • • Imphal • • Itanagar • Jaipur • • • Jammu • • Kanpur • • • Kochi • Kohima • Kolkata • Lucknow • • • Mumbai • • Nagpur • • New Delhi • Panaji • • • Patna • • Raipur • • Ranchi • • Shillong • • Shimla • • Srinagar • • Thiruvananthapuram • Vijayawada • • • Holiday Description Day Tendong Lho Rum Faat 8 Raksha Bandhan/Jhulana Purnima 9 Patriot's Day 13 Independence Day/Parsi New Year (Shahenshahi)/Janmashtami 15 Janmashtami (Shravan Vad-8)/Krishna Jayanthi 16 Birthday of Maharaja Bir Bikram Kishore Manikya Bahadur 19 Tirubhav Tithi of Srimanta Sankardeva 25 Ganesh Chaturthi/Samvatsari (Chaturthi Paksha)/Varasiddhi Vinayaka Vrata/Ganesh Puja/Vinayakar Chathurthi 27 Ganesh Chaturthi (2nd Day)/Nuakhai 28 Bank customers in India should plan beforehand as there are many public holidays lined up this week that may affect their banking transactions. With many holidays planned from August 15, 2025 to August 17, 2025, several bank holidays are scheduled across different states, in addition to the standard weekend off on commercial banks are looking forward to a long weekend this week with Independence Day on Friday, followed by Janmashtami on Saturday, and then are closed across India on August 15, 2025 to celebrate Independence are closed on Aug 16, 2025 in Gujarat, Mizoram, Madhya Pradesh, Chandigarh, Tamil Nadu, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Telangana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Srinagar and Andhra Pradesh to celebrate Janmashtami/ Krishna read: SBI hikes IMPS charges from August 15, 2025: See what PNB, Canara Bank are charging Banks are closed for the long weekend in Gujarat, Mizoram, Madhya Pradesh, Chandigarh, Tamil Nadu, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Telangana , Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Jammu, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Srinagar and Andhra Pradesh to celebrate Janmashtami/ Krishna August 15, 2025 to August 17, 2025 being a long weekend in most states, August 16, 2025 is a working Saturday so banks will be open in Tripura, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Odisha, Assam, Manipur, Arunachal Pradesh, Kerala, Nagaland, West Bengal, New Delhi, Goa, Himachal RBI website


Hans India
5 minutes ago
- Hans India
Floral tricolour highlights ‘Made in India' message
Rajamahendravaram: The Palla Venkanna Nursery in Kadiyam celebrated Independence Day with a unique and creative floral arrangement. As it is their annual tradition, the nursery management created a special display with plants to convey a message on the occasion of the 79th Independence Day. This year's stunning arrangement, conceptualised by nursery owners Palla Satyanarayana Murthy, Venkatesh, and Vinay, delivered a powerful message about boosting the value of the Indian rupee. Using thousands of border variety plants, they spelled out 'Made in India' and 'Independence'. The centrepiece of the display was a beautifully crafted Indian Tricolour. It also featured a creative representation of an Indian citizen holding the flag in one hand and seemingly repairing the Indian rupee with the other. Satyanarayana Murthy said that this visual was intended to encourage citizens to prioritise the purchase of indigenous goods to strengthen the country's economy and currency, a crucial step in the face of global economic decisions. The nursery's display is being praised for its creativity and patriotic spirit. A unique and creative floral arrangement to mark Independence Day