Braj Mohan Chaturvedi

Total Business Management

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  • This Blog is dedicated to all the Management Professionals who want to challenge the set pattern, who are practical in their approach and dont think in thin air; who believe that strategy is all about making things simple; who strongly advocate the “Rule of Simple” and who believe that impossible is nothing. - Just like Katyayana. Katyayana was a disciple of Gautama Buddha. He is also known as Kaccana or Kaccayana, Mahakatyayana, Mahakaccana and in Japanese as Kasennen. Katyayana is one of the “Ten Disciples of the Buddha”. Mahakashyapa, Ananda, Shariputra, Subhuti, Purna, Mahamaudgalyayana, Katyayana, Aniruddha, Upali and Rahula. He was foremost in explaining Dharma. He was born in a brahmin family at Ujjayini (Ujjain) and received a classical Brahminical education studying the Vedas. Katyayana was a Sanskrit grammarian, mathematician and Vedic priest who lived in ancient India, around the time of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom. He is known for two works:- The Varttika, an elaboration on Panini’s grammar. Along with the Maha-bhasya of Patanjali, this text became a core part of the vyakarana (grammar) canon. This was one of the six Vedangas, and constituted compulsory education for Brahman students in the following twelve centuries.- He also composed one of the later Sulba Sutras, a series of nine texts on the geometry of altar constructions, dealing with rectangles, right-sided triangles, rhombuses, etc. Katyayana certainly have been a man of very considerable learning but probably not interested in mathematics for its own sake, merely interested in using it for religious purposes.He wrote the Sulbasutra to provide rules for religious rites and to improve and expand on the rules which had been given by his predecessors. Katyayana would have been a priest instructing the people in the ways of conducting the religious rites he describes. Authorship: Nettipakarana, a work of grammar, and Petakopadesa, a treatise on exegetical methodology, sulvasutras dealt with geometry.

Archive for the ‘Television’ Category

The Raj Television Network Plans a Print Foray

Posted by Braj Chaturvedi on September 11, 2008

The south Indian state Tamil Nadu has around 30 regional language newspapers, including heavyweights such as Dinakaran, Dinamalar and the Daily Thanthi. Dinakaran, owned by the Sun TV group, is the market leader, with a total daily circulation of around one million copies during January-June, according to the Audit Bureau of Circulations. In such a cluttered market the Raj Television Network is planning a print foray – Sun TV groups are you listening.

The Raj Television Network was started in 1994 to provide wholesome entertainment for the entire family. The group has programmes targeted at young and old, male and female alike. The Network with unique set of programs has positioned itself as The People’s Channel. The Raj Television Network, like other Indian media companies is looking forward to expand their portfolio and emerge as the complete media house. The Raj Television Network once has a print presence would help in terms of selling advertisements across television and newspapers.

Raj Television Network Ltd plans to enter the print media and is open to acquiring a Tamil newspaper. The company is evaluating options on its print entry as certain players operating in the regional space have approached it to sell their business. Moreover, the company plans to raise INR 50 to 100 crore from private equity firms to build a studio, office complex for its film production business.

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