India-born Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella’s bestseller “Hit Refresh” will soon be available in Hindi, Telugu and Tamil.
The Hindi edition, published by HarperCollins India, will be available at bookstores by the end of this month.
The Tamil and Telugu editions, published by Westland Books, will be available from November 7. A Kindle version of the Tamil edition will also be available for download on November 7, the company said in a statement.
Priced at Rs 599, the English edition was launched on September 26.
In “Hit Refresh” – while taking the readers through his personal journey from Hyderabad to the company’s ongoing transformation at Redmond, Washington State, in the US – Nadella is confident that the knowledge he inherited in India is helping him write new codes of life for Microsoft’s global audience: Be it Cloud, Microsoft 365, Windows 10 and the emerging disruptive technologies.
For Nadella, the future belongs to AI-based computing and Microsoft is building the world’s most powerful AI supercomputer and making the infrastructure available to everyone.
“Hit Refresh” is about individual change, about the transformation happening inside Microsoft and the technology that will soon impact all of our lives: AI, Mixed Reality and quantum computing.
The book is “about how people, organisations and societies can and must transform and ‘hit refresh’ in their persistent quest for new energy, new ideas and continued relevance and renewal”.
For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who’sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.
Advertisement
01:46
03:02
03:37
04:22
05:56
Advertisement
Sunny 65 65 38 Today 65 38 Tuesday 72 42 Wednesday 76 47 Latest Weathercast Interactive Radar Now 65 Tue 72 Wed 76 by BRANDON MCGOUIRK | WGXA News CRAFORD COUNTY, Ga. (WGXA) — Residents in the area of Moncrief Road and Highway 128 have been without water since the weekend due to what Crawford County Water Superintendent Bill Patton calls an "ongoing issue" that they have been fighting. "20 years ago, they put the water line in at the base of the creek. With erosion, the pipe's not three, four feet above the bottom of the creek, so we get five inches of rain, it just washes away, we put it back," said Patton. "We've got a plan in place, now, to just completely replace it with newer technology." He explained that the new pipe will be five or six feet below the creek bed permanently. In the meantime, mobile water tanks, also known as water buffalos, are available for residents to have access to non-potable water to use for cleaning, ...
Comments
Post a Comment