Hi Friends,

Even as I launch this today ( my 80th Birthday ), I realize that there is yet so much to say and do. There is just no time to look back, no time to wonder,"Will anyone read these pages?"

With regards,
Hemen Parekh
27 June 2013

Now as I approach my 90th birthday ( 27 June 2023 ) , I invite you to visit my Digital Avatar ( www.hemenparekh.ai ) – and continue chatting with me , even when I am no more here physically

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Monday, 16 March 2026

Induction Rush

Induction Rush

Induction Rush

Why a stove can tell us about geopolitics

Over the past week I watched a familiar domestic panic unfold — queues at appliance stores, quick-commerce apps showing "out of stock" for induction hobs, and friends calling to ask whether they should buy one today. What began as worries about LPG deliveries and prices has become an instant experiment in how households adapt when the fuel they rely on feels suddenly fragile.

This is not just retail drama. Reports from multiple outlets show induction cooktops selling out across metro neighbourhoods and compatible cookware is vanishing from shelves too (India Today, News18, NDTV).

Four practical threads I keep returning to

1) Cookware matters — and many households underestimate that cost

Induction requires magnetic bottoms. If your aluminium kadhai or non-magnetic stainless pots are the only cookware you own, the shift to induction means another purchase. Retailers and field reports confirm cookware sales jumped alongside hobs — the total switching cost is therefore induction hob + compatible utensils (India Today).

Practical tip I tell friends: start with one hob and one multipurpose induction-compatible vessel, learn how timings translate from flame to induction, then expand. Buying dozens of single-use gadgets in a panic is expensive and often unnecessary.

2) The grid can absorb a lot — but not everywhere, not instantly

Induction cooking is significantly more energy-efficient at the point of use than LPG, but it shifts demand from cylinders to the electricity system. Urban grids are much stronger today than five years ago, and India’s installed capacity has climbed past 500 GW — yet distribution networks (discoms) and wiring in older buildings can be constraints (Energy Connects summary; IISD analysis, https://www.iisd.org/system/files/2026-02/india-clean-cooking.pdf).

Two points to note:

  • Local wiring upgrades matter more than national capacity. A single apartment may need a dedicated connection or an electrical upgrade to run multiple high-power induction burners reliably.
  • If millions of households switch quickly, peak load patterns change — policy and distribution companies need to anticipate and manage that (smart metering, demand shifting, targeted incentives for off‑peak charging of thermal/e-cooking devices).

3) Policy can smooth transitions — or deepen inequities

The government has tools: from prioritising PNG allocations and invoking essential-supplies rules for LPG, to targeted subsidies and mass procurement for induction devices (we have seen emergency measures and reassurances from authorities). But a durable move toward e-cooking requires:

  • Subsidy design that recognises upfront cost barriers (device + cookware + wiring)
  • Focused support for commercial kitchens and small eateries, which face expensive retrofits
  • Integration with rooftop solar and battery programmes for resilient off-grid options in weaker-grid areas

I’ve written before about battery-powered electric cookers and hybrid solar-electric appliances as practical complements to grid-led solutions — and how swappable batteries and retail networks could lower adoption friction (my earlier note on electric-solar hybrid ovens and battery ideas).

4) Behavioural response will shape the long-term outcome

What we are seeing right now is partly precaution: households buying induction as insurance against LPG uncertainty. Panic and precaution often co-exist — we’ve seen customers purchase multiple units, and quickcommerce channels exhaust inventories within days (CNBC-TV18, Open).

Two likely behavioural patterns:

  • Some households will keep induction as a permanent second stove (hybrid kitchens), easing future transitions.
  • Others will revert to LPG if supplies stabilise, leaving a boom‑and‑bust demand cycle that strains manufacturers and retailers.

Policy nudges and affordable finance for appliances and wiring upgrades will shift behaviour from temporary hedging to long-term adoption.

Short, practical checklist for households and small eateries

  • Evaluate: Is your building wiring adequate? If older, consult an electrician before buying multiple high-power burners.
  • Buy smart: start with one good induction hob + one multipurpose compatible wok/pati; test timings.
  • For restaurants: measure conversion cost (power upgrade + burners) vs temporary use of electric pressure cookers and rice cookers; plan phased retrofits.
  • Watch tariffs: understand how increased consumption moves you between slabs; sometimes time-of-use or off-peak cooking (where available) can cut costs.

Policy ideas I’d like to see implemented quickly

  • Rapid SKU (stock-keeping) support: subsidised bulk procurement channels (like earlier EESL pilots) to stabilise prices and ensure quality.
  • Targeted grants or low-interest loans for wiring upgrades in older apartment blocks and commercial kitchens.
  • Incentives for manufacturers to scale induction‑compatible cookware domestically, avoiding short supply and price gouging.

I have argued in previous posts that pairing electric cooking with modular battery solutions and rooftop solar could accelerate clean-cooking adoption — and current events only make that case more urgent (see my earlier analyses).

Final reflection

A scramble for stoves is a small, messy mirror of big geopolitical and energy transitions. Households act fast when they feel vulnerable; markets and policy must act just as fast — not to panic-buy, but to plan. If we make sensible choices now (on cookware, wiring, distribution support and smart subsidies) we can turn this nervous buying into a constructive acceleration toward cleaner, more resilient cooking.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
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Grace for AI Labelling

Grace for AI Labelling

A short pause with long consequences

I read the news that the government will give social media platforms extra time to build "audit-ready" AI labelling systems before strictly enforcing the updated IT rules in India source. My first reaction was: this is pragmatic — and fragile.

Why I welcome the pause

  • Building reliable detectors and an auditable pipeline for synthetic content is not a plug-and-play problem. It requires instrumenting provenance, metadata standards, detection models, human review flows, and legal-forensic logs — all at scale.
  • A short, punitive timeline risks broken implementations: labels that are invisible, detectors that throw false positives or negatives, and systems that are impossible to audit after the fact. We should prefer measured, testable rollouts to brittle emergency fixes.

The hard truth about current readiness

Independent studies and audits over the last year show that platforms struggle to label AI-generated content consistently; launching a label is not the same as reliably applying it across billions of posts analysis and findings. The ecosystem (provenance standards like C2PA, platform display conventions, detector robustness) still has gaps. A little extra time can let platforms do two important things:

  • run real-world pilots and third-party audits, and
  • instrument transparent metrics so regulators can verify compliance without relying on faith alone.

What the extra time must not become

I worry that “time” could turn into procrastination. If regulators relax enforcement without clear milestones, companies may deprioritize the heavy engineering work and the independent verification required for public trust.

So, the pause should be conditional and structured:

  • public interim milestones and reporting,
  • mandatory third-party or independent audits of labelling rates and takedown timelines, and
  • transparency on methods (what signals are used for labelling; aggregate accuracy metrics) while protecting legitimate model IP and safety concerns.

Practical principles I follow — and have written about before

I have long argued that AI systems must be governed by simple, enforceable rules. In my piece on what I call Parekh’s Law of Chatbots, I asked for basic safeguards, human-feedback loops, and transparency when AI speaks or acts in public-facing contexts Parekh’s Law of Chatbots. Those principles map directly to labelling and provenance:

  • declare when content is synthetic, and make that declaration auditable,
  • build easy human review and appeal paths for edge cases, and
  • measure and publish performance so everyone can see if systems work.

A short roadmap I’d watch for from platforms (and regulators)

  • Phase 1 (30–60 days): public disclosure of technical approach, pilot scope, and expected metrics.
  • Phase 2 (60–120 days): live pilots with third-party spot-audits and public dashboards of labeling accuracy and takedown latency.
  • Phase 3 (after pilot validation): phased enforcement with agreed SLA windows and external verification.

This is doable — but only if there is a time-bound plan with independent measurement.

Final thought: trust is the real product

Labels alone aren’t the goal. The goal is restoring and preserving the metadata and provenance that let citizens and institutions tell what’s genuine. If we rush labelling as a checkbox, we will trade short-term compliance for long-term erosion of trust. If we use this grace period to build auditable, transparent, and verifiable systems, we will have done more than avoid a deadline — we will have strengthened the digital public square.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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Assam's Single‑Day Transfer

Assam's Single‑Day Transfer

Why I watched Assam's ₹9,000 transfer with curiosity

On March 10 I followed the headlines: roughly 40 lakh families in Assam received a consolidated ₹9,000 under the Orunodoi programme — a single‑day direct benefit transfer (DBT) said to total about ₹3,600 crore. The scheme, launched in 2020 to support vulnerable women with a monthly stipend, was paid as four months’ assistance plus a Bohag Bihu bonus, all sent straight into beneficiary bank accounts via DBT (Moneycontrol, NDTV).

I don't write about events like this as a detached observer. Cash transfers are where policy, technology and human dignity intersect — and I have written about similar ideas and digital delivery long before they became routine. See my earlier reflections on women's welfare and digital transfers Women of India: This is just not enough and on CBDC-enabled transfers CBDC : could get bigger than UPI.


What this transfer tells me — three quick takes

  • Targeting and scale: Orunodoi is targeted to eligible women households rather than being universal. Large, targeted DBT at scale shows governments can move money quickly when systems and lists are in place.

  • Dignity through DBT: Sending money directly to women's bank accounts preserves choice and dignity. When transfers avoid intermediaries, recipients decide what they need most.

  • Timing and optics: Any big transfer near elections will attract political analysis. Regardless of intent, the immediate impact on household cash flow and festive spending (here, a Bihu bonus) is tangible.


Operational lessons for governments and technologists

I believe every successful DBT exercise should be judged on four operational pillars:

  • Accuracy of beneficiary lists — avoid both exclusion and leakage.
  • Reliability of digital rails (Aadhaar/UPI/Bank networks) — friction erases benefits.
  • Transparent communication — beneficiaries must know when and how funds arrive.
  • Post‑transfer accountability — audits and grievance redress build long‑term trust.

Assam’s event — organised with village‑level meetings and a central launch — highlights that logistics and local outreach still matter even in digital programmes (The Sentinel).


A word on technology and the future of welfare

I have long argued that digital transfers and even experiments with digital currency can improve welfare delivery. When Odisha piloted CBDC‑based transfers, I noted the potential to combine transparency with easy digital spending (CBDC : could get bigger than UPI). The Orunodoi consolidation shows two things:

  • Digital systems let states prepay or consolidate entitlements when needed;
  • But technology alone is not a solution — policy design and social safeguards matter.

If we are serious about long‑term uplift, we need ongoing predictability (regular monthly support where needed), complementary services (health, education, skills) and robust grievance mechanisms.


On leadership and public messaging

The central programme was accompanied by public statements emphasising the compassionate intent behind the move. For example, Himanta Biswa Sarma (himanta.sarma@assam.gov.in) framed the transfer as support for women‑led households and rejected election‑linkage claims in press interactions. Whether you agree or not with the politics, the messaging mattered: clarity about who qualifies, why the payment was consolidated, and how to access support reduces confusion and strengthens trust (Deccan Chronicle).

Policy must be measured by the lives it alters, not the headlines it generates.


My short ask for policy makers and civic technologists

  • Keep beneficiary data current and public enough for scrutiny (with privacy safeguards).
  • Pair cash transfers with accessible complaints channels and local outreach.
  • Track impact beyond the transfer day — did food security, school attendance or health spending change?

These are practical steps that make a big single‑day transfer meaningful beyond its headline.


Final thought

Large DBT events like Assam’s ₹9,000 Orunodoi payment are important experiments in modern welfare delivery. I welcome the intent to support vulnerable women — and I want systems that make such support regular, accountable and empowering. We must treat the technology as an enabler, not a substitute, for policies that build long‑term agency.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

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Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"What are the main advantages and risks of large single‑day DBT disbursements like Assam's ₹9,000 Orunodoi transfer?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
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  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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SC Rebukes Ludhiana Trader for AI-Drafted Plea: "Go Sell Sweaters" - Business League

SC Rebukes Ludhiana Trader for AI-Drafted Plea:

SC Rebukes Ludhiana Trader for AI-Drafted Plea: "Go Sell Sweaters" - Business League

Lede

I write as someone who watches how technology reshapes institutions — sometimes for the better, sometimes with awkward consequences. The recent episode in the Supreme Court, where a Ludhiana trader’s AI-drafted petition was dismissed with a withering rebuke, is a timely reminder: tools that amplify voice also amplify responsibility. The punchline in court — captured in blunt, memorable language — underlines how the judiciary is responding to a new breed of DIY legal filings.

Background facts (according to reports)

  • According to reports, a Ludhiana-based hosiery trader filed a Public Interest Litigation that contained sophisticated legal language. When asked in court to explain parts of the petition, the trader could not satisfy the bench.
  • According to reports, the petitioner acknowledged using multiple AI tools to prepare the draft and said he had help from a typist on court premises; he reportedly handed over garments as a token of thanks rather than paying standard fees.
  • According to reports, the bench dismissed the petition and admonished the petitioner, delivering a striking line advising him to return to his trade rather than attempt further such filings.

Key quotes

"Go sell sweaters"

(That one-line admonition — short, colloquial, unambiguous — became the moment that crystallised the court’s frustration.)

Other reported turns of phrase in court reflected suspicion that the document’s sophistication did not match the petitioner’s background; judges pressed him to explain legal terms that he could not define in his own words, which sharpened the bench’s concern about proxy or AI-authored litigation.

Why the court was upset

At the core of the court’s reaction were three interlocking concerns:

  • Accountability: Courts expect petitioners who sign and file documents to understand, and be able to stand behind, their assertions. When a petitioner cannot explain language or citations, it looks like a script is being read on someone else’s behalf.
  • Frivolity and burden: AI can generate plausible but legally empty arguments and even invented precedents. When those reach the highest court, they consume scarce judicial time and require extra verification.
  • Potential for misuse: The bench signalled worry about “proxy litigation” — situations where intermediaries, bots, or paid writers push filings without a transparent chain of responsibility, potentially exposing unwitting individuals to penalties.

Taken together, these concerns explain the court’s blunt rebuke: the problem is not technology per se, but unexamined reliance on it in a high-stakes civic process.

Legal context

  • Filing a petition is a legal act that carries responsibility. Courts assess standing, veracity and whether claims are pleaded with an understanding of law and facts.
  • Across jurisdictions, judges are increasingly confronting AI-generated filings and are beginning to develop practices — formal or informal — to test authorship, source reliability and the accuracy of cited authorities.
  • The incident sits within broader judicial caution about fabricated citations and AI “hallucinations” that many courts have started flagging in recent months (according to reports).

Broader implications

This episode is a cautionary tale with lessons for multiple audiences:

  • For individuals: AI can help draft, but it cannot substitute for comprehension. Filing legal documents without understanding them invites risk.
  • For lawyers and paralegals: Reliance on generative tools requires rigorous verification of all citations and propositions before filing.
  • For the legal system: We may see guidelines or rules about AI-assisted pleadings, declarations of authorship, or procedural checks for petitioners-in-person.

Practical takeaways — a checklist

  • If you plan to file a petition, ask: Do I understand every term and citation in this document? If not, pause.
  • Verify every legal citation generated by AI against authoritative sources — do not treat model output as law.
  • If you cannot afford counsel, seek formal legal aid or a court-supported services committee rather than outsourcing drafting to unvetted tools or intermediaries.
  • Keep records of authorship: who drafted, who edited, and what tools were used. Transparency reduces later suspicion.
  • Treat AI as a drafting assistant, not as lead counsel: review, edit and internalise the final text before filing.

Conclusion

The court’s brusque exhortation to "Go sell sweaters" is memorable because it cuts to a practical truth: institutions demand accountability. AI is neutral; misuse and misunderstanding create friction. My takeaway is simple — if technology is going to expand access, it must be paired with education, verification, and humility. For citizens and courts alike, the lesson is to adapt systems to channel AI’s benefits while guarding against its theatrical risks.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


Any questions / doubts / clarifications regarding this blog? Just ask (by typing or talking) my Virtual Avatar on the website embedded below. Then "Share" that to your friend on WhatsApp.

Get correct answer to any question asked by Shri Amitabh Bachchan on Kaun Banega Crorepati, faster than any contestant


Hello Candidates :

  • For UPSC – IAS – IPS – IFS etc., exams, you must prepare to answer, essay type questions which test your General Knowledge / Sensitivity of current events
  • If you have read this blog carefully , you should be able to answer the following question:
"Why might courts be especially concerned about legal filings prepared primarily with AI tools, and what procedural safeguards could help address those concerns?"
  • Need help ? No problem . Following are two AI AGENTS where we have PRE-LOADED this question in their respective Question Boxes . All that you have to do is just click SUBMIT
    1. www.HemenParekh.ai { a SLM , powered by my own Digital Content of more than 50,000 + documents, written by me over past 60 years of my professional career }
    2. www.IndiaAGI.ai { a consortium of 3 LLMs which debate and deliver a CONSENSUS answer – and each gives its own answer as well ! }
  • It is up to you to decide which answer is more comprehensive / nuanced ( For sheer amazement, click both SUBMIT buttons quickly, one after another ) Then share any answer with yourself / your friends ( using WhatsApp / Email ). Nothing stops you from submitting ( just copy / paste from your resource ), all those questions from last year’s UPSC exam paper as well !
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QR in Maharashtra Textbooks

QR in Maharashtra Textbooks

I read a short report in The Times of India about a recent SCERT research-paper contest in Maharashtra that surfaced some quietly powerful ideas: embedding QR codes in state textbooks, student-led geo-surveys for geography practicals, teacher-strengthening modules and simple local strategies to boost enrolment (QR codes in textbooks, geo-surveys… ideas at SCERT contest).

Why this matters to me

  • I keep returning to the same intuition: technology is most effective in classrooms when it amplifies human relationships rather than replaces them. The suggestion to embed short, teacher-led videos behind textbook QR codes is an elegant example — students revise to the voice and examples of their own teacher, not to a distant anonymous lecture.
  • The geo-survey idea brings textbook geography off the page and into neighbourhoods. Asking students to collect simple socio-economic data from households, map it and reflect on it turns rote map skills into lived civic inquiry.

What I liked about the SCERT ideas

  • Pragmatic simplicity: QR codes are cheap to print and link to dozens of lightweight resources. They don’t require a full school computer lab — just a phone and small video files that can be cached for low-bandwidth use.
  • Local relevance: teacher-created videos and community geo-surveys mean content is contextual, language-appropriate and anchored in children’s environment.
  • Teacher empowerment: modules that strengthen teachers’ conceptual understanding before they teach (especially when they handle subjects outside their specialisation) are low-cost, high-impact interventions.

Practical hurdles we cannot ignore

  • Access and equity: not every child or parent has a smartphone or reliable internet. QR code benefits must be paired with offline distributions (preloaded USBs, school kiosks, or community viewing slots) and policies that avoid widening the digital divide.
  • Quality and curation: QR links must be curated and reviewed. A QR leading to an unvetted video or an unstable link is worse than no link at all. A lightweight editorial workflow and periodic audits are essential.
  • Assessment integrity and privacy: geo-surveys are brilliant pedagogically but raise questions about data protection and consent. Students should collect anonymised, neighbourhood-level data with clear ethical guidelines and teacher supervision.
  • Teacher time and incentives: creating short, locally relevant videos is time-consuming. Systems should compensate teachers: recognition, small honoraria, or workload adjustments.

How to scale ideas without breaking them

  • Start with pilot clusters: test teacher-made QR content and geo-survey practicals in a handful of districts, measure uptake and learning outcomes, then iterate.
  • Make videos short and modular: 2–3 minute clips focused on a single concept are easier to produce, review and reuse.
  • Build offline-first delivery: allow videos to be downloadable in low-resolution, or provide school-level caching points so students without data can still access resources.
  • Create simple editorial standards: a checklist for accuracy, language, accessibility (subtitles) and link longevity.
  • Train and recognise teachers: a short micro-credential for teachers who create or validate content will professionalise the practice and build ownership.

Continuity with what I’ve written before

I have long written about the power of QR codes and location-based mapping to make public information tangible — from QR-augmented street signs to GPS and three-word addressing for real-world problems (my earlier reflections on QR mapping and what3words). Seeing SCERT surface similar, classroom-focused ideas reassures me: the same simple tools that make cities and history discoverable can also make school learning more intimate and local.

A small personal ask

If policy-makers want impact, pair innovation contests with implementation grants. SCERTs and DIETs are excellent incubators. Give the winning classroom ideas modest funding, a short production bootcamp for teachers, and a rubric to evaluate learning gains after six months.

Closing thought

The magic is not in QR codes or geo-surveys themselves; it is in the choices educators make when they use them. When technology extends teacher voice and students’ connection to their community, textbooks stop being static and become portals to local inquiry. That is a change worth supporting.


Regards,
Hemen Parekh


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