Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), the world's largest contract chipmaker, will recruit more than 6,000 new staff in 2023, the company said in a statement on Saturday. The hiring drive comes despite a global downturn in the chip industry.
According to TSMC, the company will seek young engineers with associates, bachelor's, masters's or doctorate degrees in electrical engineering or software-related fields, in cities all across Taiwan.
The average overall salary of a new engineer with a master's degree is T$2 million (roughly Rs. 53,55,930), the company added.
A decline in demand for electronics and high inventory levels following a shortage of some chips have led to a downturn for the semiconductor industry.
Since late 2022, a number of chip companies around the world have reined in investments.
Intel recently announced that it would cut payments to mid-level staff and executives from 5 percent to 25 percent. Chief Executive Pat Gelsinger also took a pay cut of 25 percent. Meanwhile, the company's hourly workforce's pay will not be cut, said a person familiar with the matter who was not authorised to speak publicly.
Gelsinger also conceded that Intel has "stumbled" and lost market share to rivals such as Advanced Micro Devices, which on reported quarterly sales that were above Wall Street's expectations. The company has also lowered its 401(k) matching program from 5 percent to 2.5 percent and suspended merit raises and quarterly performance bonuses, the person said.
TSMC's dominance in making some of the most advanced chips for high-end customers such as Apple has shielded it from downturn.
The company slightly reduced its annual capital expenditure for 2023 and predicts a first-quarter revenue drop, but has said it expects demand to pick up by the second half of this year.
From smartphones with rollable displays or liquid cooling, to compact AR glasses and handsets that can be repaired easily by their owners, we discuss the best devices we've seen at MWC 2023 on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Freewheeling historical fiction meets twisted family drama in Taj: Divided by Blood, a Zee5 series produced by Mumbai-based Contiloe Pictures. The canvas of the India-UK co-production is vast and the sweep of the narrative covers several decades of Emperor Akbar's nearly 50-year reign. But The series is not quite the epic that it aspires to be.
The 10-episode show is about war, bloodshed, palace intrigue, conspiracies hatched in the shadows, internecine feuds and forbidden love that turns father against son. The plot has no dearth of genuine dramatic potential - to be fair, a significant proportion of it is realised - but the overall impact of the series is undermined by a preponderance of passages that deliver far less than they promise.
Taj: Divided by Love never sinks into tedium, but it could have done with a little more heft. It portrays Emperor Akbar as a man and a ruler navigating the pulls and pressures of his onerous royal duties, shouldering his paternal responsibilities and dealing with his consorts.
The screenplay by William Borthwick and Simon Fantauzzo gives the emperor's three sons full play but does not do full justice to the women in his life. The begums are played by Zarina Wahab, Sandhya Mridul and Padma Damodaran.
All three make the most of the limited opportunities that they have to make their presence felt. Wahab is especially underutilised. The focus is any case not on them as much as it is on Aditi Rao Hydari in the role of the ill-fated Anarkali - a tragic, melancholic, caged woman. Hydari is up to the challenge. She is luminous although she, too, could have done with a little more play.
Given the fate that the female characters suffer in this series, it would seem that this is no kingdom for women. One of them is held captive against her will, a host of others are forced into marriages of convenience and are doomed to pine for love in silence, and the emperor's begums are hard-pressed to have their voices heard. In the male-dominated universe that Taj: Divided by Blood is located in, a degree of monotony and predictability is inevitable.
Fleshed out with poise and empathy by Naseeruddin Shah, Emperor Akbar is a man who responds to contradictory impulses - he often sways from acts of wisdom and benevolence to streaks of despotism. He is a figure prone to actions and decisions that make matters worse than they already are.
The emperor is a guardian of justice, a defender of secularism, a much-married man and a father to three young men who share nothing in common temperamentally. The sons test his patience - and acumen - the most. Advisers like Birbal (Subodh Bhave), Man Singh (Digambar Prasad) and Abul Fazl (Pankaj Saraswat) stepping in to show him the way forward with varying degrees of success.
The emperor has a secret tucked away in a prison that nobody else has access to. When the cat is out of the bag, it sets him on a collision course with his eldest son, Prince Salim (Aashim Gulati), a young man addicted to wine and women. His concubines keep him way too occupied for him to worry about what the future holds for the kingdom. Salim isn't the only son that the emperor struggles to tame.
The series, too, grapples with inconsistent pace and protracted stretches that appear to beat about the bush a bit too much. Taj: Divided by Blood is of course more fiction than history, a fact acknowledged by a 'story' credit to Anand Neelakantan and Christopher Butera. The show works best when the action is confined to the interiors of the palace and the family dynamics.
Akbar's harem is occupied by three begums - Salima (Zarina Wahab), Ruqaiya (Padma Damodaran) and Jodha (Sandhya Mridul), who is understandably keen to see her son, Akbar's first-born Salim, as the next Mughal badshah. The impediments in the way generate the conflicts that Salim and the rest of the palace faces.
Taj: Divided by Blood centres on the tussle among the brothers and their cohorts over who will succeed the emperor, who, on his part, antagonises conservative elements in his kingdom and outside it by introducing the Din-i-Ilahi, a religion that recognises every faith and is aimed at annihilating sectarian hatred and promoting humanity and harmony.
Episode 2 of Taj: Divided by Blood is devoted almost entirely to a skirmish in Kabul between the Mughal Army and a band of rebels led by Emperor Akbar's half-brother Mirza Hakim (Rahul Bose). The battle scenes, mounted on an epic scale and designed to present war at its most gruesome, come off as rather mechanical and unexciting.
The decision upsets the already fragile balance in the kingdom. The situation is aggravated by the fact that none of Akbar's sons is ready to be emperor yet. The self-absorbed Salim is busy with his concubines. The middle son, Murad (Taha Shah Badusshah), is overly hot-headed and impulsive. The youngest, Daniyal (Shubham Kumar Mehra), is a devout soul who is too soft and sensitive to be in with a genuine chance to step into his father's shoes.
Salim is smitten at first sight by Anarkali. The liaison spells trouble. Murad, always on a short fuse, is prone to acts of defiance that keep the emperor on his toes. And Daniyal, who advised by the head of the ulema, stumbles upon a truth about himself and a mother he has never seen that pushes him down a slippery slope.
Several of the principal technicians of the series are English - director Ron Scalpello, director of photography Simon Temple and music composer Ian Arber.
Taj: Divided by Blood is crafted with diligence. Parts of the show are informed with enough drama and intrigue to perk things up. It, however, frequently feels a touch strained and repetitive. It is neither Mughal-e-Azam nor Game of Thrones.
That is not to say that the show does not have its moments. It is reasonably gripping especially when it explores the simmering fraternal tensions after the emperor decides that the successor to the Mughal throne will not be his first-born, but the son with the greatest merit.
While the onus of holding the show together inevitably falls on Naseeruddin Shah, the three actors in the roles of the sons - Aashim Gulati, Taha Shah Badussha and Shubham Kumar Mehra - bring enough ti the table not to be overshadowed by a thespian at his best.
Its ambitions are grand and the execution is competent but Taj: Divided by Blood low on genuine lustre.
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Snapchat is kicking dozens of children in Britain off its platform each month compared with tens of thousands blocked by rival TikTok, according to internal data the companies shared with Britain's media regulator Ofcom and which Reuters has seen.
Social media platforms such as Meta's Instagram, ByteDance's TikTok, and Snap's Snapchat require users to be at least 13 years old. These restrictions are intended to protect the privacy and safety of young children.
Ahead of Britain's planned Online Safety Bill, aimed at protecting social media users from harmful content such as child pornography, Ofcom asked TikTok and Snapchat how many suspected under-13s they had kicked off their platforms in a year.
According to the data seen by Reuters, TikTok told Ofcom that between April 2021 and April 2022, it had blocked an average of around 180,000 suspected underage accounts in Britain every month, or around 2 million in that 12-month period.
In the same period, Snapchat disclosed that it had removed approximately 60 accounts per month, or just over 700 in total.
A Snap spokesperson told Reuters the figures misrepresented the scale of work the company did to keep under-13s off its platform. The spokesperson declined to provide additional context or to detail specific blocking measures the company has taken.
"We take these obligations seriously and every month in the UK we block and delete tens of thousands of attempts from underage users to create a Snapchat account," the Snap spokesperson said.
Recent Ofcom research suggests both apps are similarly popular with underage users. Children are also more likely to set up their own private account on Snapchat, rather than use a parent's, when compared to TikTok.
"It makes no sense that Snapchat is blocking a fraction of the number of children that TikTok is," said a source within Snapchat, speaking on condition of anonymity.
Snapchat does block users from signing up with a date of birth that puts them under the age of 13. Reuters could not determine what protocols are in place to remove underage users once they have accessed the platform and the spokesperson did not spell these out.
Ofcom told Reuters that assessing the steps video-sharing platforms were taking to protect children online remained a primary area of focus, and that the regulator, which operates independently of the government, would report its findings later this year.
At present, social media companies are responsible for setting the age limits on their platforms. However, under the long-awaited Online Safety Bill, they will be required by law to uphold these limits, and demonstrate how they are doing it, for example through age-verification technology.
Companies that fail to uphold their terms of service face being fined up to 10 percent of their annual turnover.
In 2022, Ofcom's research found 60 percent of children aged between eight and 11 had at least one social media account, often created by supplying a false date of birth. The regulator also found Snapchat was the most popular app for underage social media users.
Risks to young children
Social media poses serious risks to young children, child safety advocates say.
According to figures recently published by the NSPCC (National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Young Children), Snapchat accounted for 43 percent of cases in which social media was used to distribute indecent images of children.
Richard Collard, associate head of child safety online at the NSPCC, said it was "incredibly alarming" how few underage users Snapchat appeared to be removing.
Snapchat "must take much stronger action to ensure that young children are not using the platform, and older children are being kept safe from harm," he said.
Britain, like the European Union and other countries, has been seeking ways to protect social media users, in particular children, from harmful content without damaging free speech.
Enforcing age restrictions is expected to be a key part of its Online Safety Bill, along with ensuring companies remove content that is illegal or prohibited by their terms of service.
A TikTok spokesperson said its figures spoke to the strength of the company's efforts to remove suspected underage users.
"TikTok is strictly a 13+ platform and we have processes in place to enforce our minimum age requirements, both at the point of sign up and through the continuous proactive removal of suspected underage accounts from our platform," they said.
The iQoo Neo 7 packs a lot of power at an affordable price. But did the company cut the right corners to keep the price low? We discuss this and more on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Meta Platforms cut the prices of its virtual reality headsets in hopes of stirring demand for its VR hardware, as its bold bets on the metaverse have struggled to make a big splash.
Its flagship Meta Quest Pro will retail for $999 (nearly Rs. 81,700), down from its launch price of $1,499 (nearly Rs. 1,22,500 crore), and Quest 2 256 GB version for $429 (nearly Rs. 35,000) from $499 (nearly Rs. 41,000), Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg said in a broadcast in a blog post on Friday.
The company called out lower Quest 2 sales as the reason behind a 17 percent drop in fourth-quarter revenue at its Reality Labs unit, which includes VR-related offerings.
The division lost $13.7 billion (nearly Rs. 1,12,000) last year and over $10 billion (nearly Rs. 81,700) in 2021.
The price cut on Meta Quest 2 256 GB version will be effective from March 5 in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Iceland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, South Korea, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, the UK, and the US, which the Meta Quest Pro will begin price drop starting March 5 in the US and Canada and March 15 in all other countries where Meta Quest Pro is supported.
Meta is facing heat from investors for pouring money into metaverse that has not reaped benefits as expected.
Late last year, the company launched Quest Pro, positioning it as its most-advanced VR headset with capabilities to push the use-cases further.
Quest Pro, with its outward-facing cameras that capture 3D livestream of the physical environment and allow novelties like the ability to hang virtual paintings on a real-world wall, was aimed at designers, architects and other creative professionals.
Meta has of late sobered its stand on the metaverse and is focusing on saving costs. The company called 2023 as the "Year of Efficiency" and projected billions in cuts to its spends this year.
While VR headsets have added more advanced capabilities of late, their adoption outside of the gaming community has been slow.
Last month, Tencent, the world's largest video game publisher, shelved plans to venture into VR hardware, while it has been in talks to distribute Meta Quest line of products in China.
After facing headwinds in India last year, Xiaomi is all set to take on the competition in 2023. What are the company's plans for its wide product portfolio and its Make in India commitment in the country? We discuss this and more on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Croma has announced the latest edition of its Festival of Dreams sale on the ocassion of Holi. With the offer, customers can avail of massive discounts of up to 70 percent on a wide range of electronic devices, home appliances, and gadgets, from March 2 to March 12. From latest edition of MacBook Air to TV and AC, get your hands on a variety of products at a discounted price. We've handpicked some of the best deals and offers you can grab on Croma's Holi-special sale this week.
Apple's MacBook Air can handle the most demanding tasks with its advanced M2 chip processor, 8GB RAM, and 256GB SSD storage capacity. With its 13.6-inch display and Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos, you can enjoy an immersive visual and audio experience like never before. One can get their hands on the MacBook Air 2022 at an unbeatable discounted price at the Croma's Festival of Dreams Holi Edition sale. With instant discounts of Rs.10,000 on purchases through HDFC Bank Credit Card and no-cost EMI options, there's no better time to invest in the MacBook Air 2022.
Gamers can up your gaming experience with the purchase of ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14, which is powered by an AMD Ryzen 9 5900HS processor and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 Ti graphics. This laptop offers seamless gaming performance with stunning visuals and smooth gameplay. It comes with a 14-inch FHD IPS display and 16GB DDR4 RAM, coupled with 512GB SSD storage. The Croma's Festival of Dreams Holi Edition sale is offering the ASUS ROG Zephyrus G14 at an unbeatable discounted price. With exclusive offers such as a 10 percent instant discount on purchase made using ICICI Bank credit and debit cards and a cashback of up to Rs.1,500 on ICICI Bank credit card EMI, there's no better time to invest in the ultimate gaming machine.
Ecovacs Deebot N8 Robotic Vacuum Cleaner, designed to make your life easier with its 2300Pa suction power that effortlessly cleans all surfaces, is currently available at a discounted price. Its 3-layer dust filtration system effectively removes 99 percent of small particles. Its compatibility with Auto-Empty Station and smart home devices such as Google Assistant or Alexa, you can control it hands-free. The Croma's Festival of Dreams Holi Edition sale is making the availability of the Ecovacs Deebot N8 Robotic Vacuum Cleaner at a fantastic price. It comes bundled with exclusive offers such as a 10 percent instant discount on ICICI Bank credit and debit cards purchases and a cashback of up to Rs.1,000 on ICICI Bank credit card EMI.
The Sony X75K LED Ultra HD 4K TV comes with a high resolution, a 50Hz refresh rate, and 4K X-Reality PRO technology that provides a truly immersive viewing experience. The TV runs on Android OS and comes with pre-installed apps like Netflix, Prime Video, YouTube, and Hotstar. It also gets a 20W speaker with Dolby Atmos sound, providing a cinema-like audio experience. The Croma's Festival of Dreams Holi Edition sale is offering the TV with exclusive offers such as a 5 percent instant discount on various bank credit cards purchases.
LG's 6 in 1 Convertible 1.5 Ton 5 Star AI Dual Inverter Split AC is the perfect solution for all your cooling needs. With a 5-star rating and a copper condenser, this AC is highly efficient and energy-saving. It comes with HD Filter and EZ Clean Filter, providing clean and healthy air circulation. It is ideal for use in rooms up to 180 square feet. The AC comes with a 1-year comprehensive warranty and a 10-year compressor warranty. Croma offers a great deal on the AC unit with up to 10 percent instant discount on purchases using ICICI Bank Debit cards, 10 percent cashback on ICICI Bank Credit card EMI, and 10 percent off on ICICI Bank credit cards.
The SONY WH-1000XM5 Bluetooth Headset is a premium quality over-ear headset. With an adaptive noise cancellation feature and a multi-noise sensor technology, it blocks out even the most persistent external sounds. It also has a long battery life of up to 40 hours and fast charging. The headset also features a powerful HD noise-cancelling processor QN1 and is compatible with voice assistants like Alexa, Google, and Siri. You can now purchase it at an attractive sale price of Rs. 26,990 (MRP Rs. 34,990) and avail additional discounts of 10 percent up to Rs. 1,000 on ICICI Bank credit card with a cart value above Rs. 10,000, 10 percent instant discount up to Rs. 1,000 on ICICI Bank Debit card, and 10 percent cashback up to Rs. 1,500 on ICICI Bank Credit card EMI.
Marshall Emberton II is a compact portable speaker. With Bluetooth v5.1, you can connect your device and enjoy music wirelessly. It has a power output of 20W and a battery life of up to 30 hours. The speaker also features a 360-degree sound design, providing an immersive audio experience. It is IP67-rated for dust and waterresistance. The speaker is available at a discounted price of Rs. 17,499, down from the MRP of Rs. 19,999 during the sale. One can combine it with a 10 percent instant discount up to Rs. 1,000 on an ICICI Bank credit card. Additionally, you can enjoy a 10 percent cashback of up to Rs. 1,500 on ICICI Bank credit card EMI purchases and a 10 percent instant discount of up to Rs. 1,000 on ICICI Bank debit card purchases.
If happy memories were to acquire a tangible, physical shape, they would probably resemble bright, little multicoloured gems stored away in the subconscious to be savoured in tranquillity. Conversely, unpleasant memories would be akin to sharp shards of glass that prick, wound and leave deep scars. Rahul V. Chittella's debut feature, Gulmohar, is peopled by characters whose remembrances, triggered by a flashpoint, are more in the nature of the latter.
An engaging, genteel family drama that flips open crypts of the mind and the heart and probes the discomfiting secrets and fears that lie buried down there, Gulmohar, streaming on Disney+Hotstar, celebrates the healing potential of kinship even as it confronts the trauma of disruption brought on by quirks of destiny or as repercussions of individual decisions.
The film centres on an affluent Delhi family that struggles to stick together as their choppy past casts a shadow on their uneasy present. A brood dealing with insecurities and misgivings that erupt amid a life-altering event may sound like old hat, but Chittella and Arpita Mukherjee's screenplay, marked by disarming simplicity and impressive depth, puts an agreeably refreshing spin on it.
That apart, Gulmohar is buoyed by a slew of superlative performances - not surprising at all given that the cast is led by Sharmila Tagore, Manoj Bajpayee, Simran and Amol Palekar. The seasoned quartet lends weight to the intimate, insightful narrative. They convey a wide spectrum of emotions with unwavering, clinical precision.
The director also draws the best out of the younger actors, notably Kaveri Seth, Utsavi Jha and Santhy Balachandran, who brilliantly etches out a self-effacing housemaid who has a moving story of her own that is inextricably intertwined with that of the family she serves. Also in the film is Suraj Sharma, who delivers a flawless turn.
The impact of the ensemble cast is appreciably enhanced by Jatin Goswami, Chandan Roy (as two migrants to the city who work in the Batra household) and Anurag Arora as a key member of the extended family. Chittella, Mira Nair's producing partner on The Reluctant Fundamentalist and A Suitable Boy, clearly has a way with actors.
Gulmohar narrates a decades-spanning tale that is astutely compressed into four days in the life of the Batras as they prepare to move out of what has been their abode for 34 years. One final party is on in the house when the film opens.
Life is, however, anything but a party for the departing denizens of Gulmohar Villa. The equations of the family matriarch, Kusum Batra (Sharmila Tagore), with her son Arun (Manoj Bajpayee) and daughter-in-law Indu (Simran) are palpably frosty. Matters appear to be no better between Arun and his son Aditya (Suraj Sharma).
The property has been sold to a real-estate company to be developed into a residential complex, a plight that befalls many such homes across Delhi these days. Before the packers and movers can get to work, Kusum organises a bash to commemorate the family's last night at the address.
Director of photography Eeshit Narain shoots the film's opening sequences in a manner that approximates the turmoil of departure and the uncertainties of the future. The frenetic cutting by editor Tanupriya Sharma heightens the restive moments as the camera darts from one face to another, from one part of the small gathering to another.
Talat Aziz, playing a friend of the family, croons a soothing number that serves as a counterpoint to the discordant notes that hang heavy in the air. The party winds up with Kusum making two matter-of-fact announcements that take her son aback. But the lady stands her ground.
As the film progresses, the cinematography settles into a steadier rhythm as the back stories of the characters begin to emerge and either mesh with each other or spark confrontations. As the household belongings are packed and loaded on a truck, long-dormant truths and lies begin to bubble forth. Thwarted aspirations and suppressed feelings come out in the open and the warts begin to show.
Holding the family together is a challenge for all three generations of the Batras. Arun and Indu have firmed up plans to shift into their own apartment. Their son and his wife Divya (Kaveri Seth), too, are ready to fly the coop. The young couple has decided to branch out to escape living under the shadow of the parents.
Each of the relationships - mother-son, father-son, husband-wife - is tested as Kusum, Arun and Aditya seek to go their separate ways now that the glue that held them together for three decades and more is no longer going to be a part of their lives. Arun's daughter Amrita (Utsavi Jha), a budding songwriter, also finds herself at the crossroads as the ground beneath her feet literally shifts.
Kusum's sullen brother-in-law Sudhakar Batra (Amol Palekar), who is only mentioned but not seen in person at the party at the start of the film, holds grudges and fuels discord. He loses no opportunity to fire barbs at Kusum, who he holds responsible for what is going wrong.
Gulmohar, acknowledging that there are other lives around the Batras that matter and deserve attention, carves out a significant subplot to two men and a woman - Jeetu (Jatin Goswami), Paramhans (Chandan Roy) and Reshma (Shanty Balachandran) - who work for the family and whose fate hinges on the what is left in the wake of the disappearance of a home.
Gulmohar, expressly dedicated to the homes that people build and the families that they forge, could be described as a sweet little film about what happens to individuals when a concrete space that collectively defines them ceases to be.
Admittedly, there are some plot elements here that rely overly upon happenstance, but that does not take anything away from the combination of warmth and clear-eyed discernments that underpin Chittella's unpretentious but hugely effective storytelling style.
There is a great deal of beauty in the muted melodrama. There is just as much technical finesse in the film. It is perceptive and poignant in equal measure. With Sharmila Tagore, returning to the screen after a hiatus of more than a decade, and Manoj Bajpayee in immaculate form, Gulmohar is a treat all the way.
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Deepika Padukone, on Thursday, announced the exciting news that she is among the celebrities presenting at the 95th Oscars. The actress shared a post on her Instagram with the names of all the presenters. The list also includes Riz Ahmed, Emily Blunt, Glenn Close, Troy Kotsur, Dwayne Johnson, Jennifer Connelly, Samuel L. Jackson, Melissa McCarthy, Zoe Saldana Donnie Yen, Jonathan Majors and Questlove. Sharing the post, the actress simply wrote, "#oscars#oscars95." The 95th Academy Awards will be held on March 12 (March 13 in India) at Los Angeles' Dolly Theatre.
Soon after she shared the post, Neha Dhupia was among the first ones to drop a comment: "an't wait to watch you Deepu @deepikapadukone."
Deepika Padukone's fans also flooded the comment section. A user wrote, "Pathaan's girl at the Oscar," while another wrote, "This tym is ours Deepika mam."
Meanwhile, this year the Oscars is going to be extra special for India as one song and two documentaries have been nominated in different categories. Naatu Naatu from SS Rajamouli's RRR has also been nominated at this year's Oscars in the Best Original Song category. The song's music has been composed by MM Keeravaani, while its lyrics are written by Chandrabose. All That Breathes will compete for Best Documentary Feature Film, while The Elephant Whisperers is among the nominees for Best Documentary Short Film.
Not just this, the RRR song Naatu Naatu will be performed live on stage at the 95th Academy Awards. Singers Rahul Sipligunj and Kaala Bhairava, in their Oscar debut, will be performing the track on stage, the Academy announced on Tuesday night.
Coming back to Deepika Padukone, the actress is basking in the success of her recently released movie Pathaan. Next, she will be seen in Fighter with Hrithik Roshan.
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