I just wanted to see if the birds had any preferred hunting time

Pivot of Drone strike with hourly time-slots

"We have communicated our expectations to Pakistan numerous times that they must take decisive action against terrorist groups based within their own borders," Nauert said.
At a news conference in Geneva, his last stop on the current foreign travel, Tillerson said the US had "a very healthy exchange of information on terrorists, which is what we really hope to achieve with Pakistan."
Tillerson said the message to Pakistan was: "Here's what we need for Pakistan to do. We're asking you to do this; we're not demanding anything. You're a sovereign country. You'll decide what you want to do, but understand this is what we think is necessary. And if you don't want to do that, don't feel you can do it, we'll adjust our tactics and our strategies to achieve the same objective a different way." {Wow}
Tillerson said that he would not characterise his direct discussions with the Pakistani leadership as lecturing at all.
"It was a very good and open exchange. In fact, we probably listened 80 per cent of the time and we talked 20 per cent. And it was important to me, because I have not engaged with Pakistani leadership previously. And, so my objective was to listen a lot, to hear their perspective," he said.
"We put our points forward. We put our expectations forward in no uncertain terms. There has been significant engagement prior to my visit, and there will be further engagement in the future, as we work through how we want to exchange information and achieve the objective of eliminating these terrorist organisations, wherever they may be located," Tillerson said.
Tillerson described his communication with the Pakistani leadership as very frank and very candid.
"We had the joint meeting with Prime Minister Abbasi and the full leadership team. And then I had a second meeting with Army General Bajwa and a couple of his close advisers, so we could have a more thorough discussion about some of the specifics," he said, adding that he thinks that it was a very open, candid and frank exchange.
"There's nothing to be achieved by lecturing, but we should be very clear about expectations and what we're asking. And either people will step up and meet those expectations or they won't. We are going to chart our course consistent with what Pakistan not just says they do but what they actually do," Tillerson said.
Noting that the future course of action would be based on conditions on the ground, he said the entire South Asia strategy is a conditions-based strategy.
Pakistan Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif in a meeting yesterday with National Assembly Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs said that Pakistan will neither surrender to the US nor compromise on its sovereignty.
Here you go SirSSridhar wrote:Manish_P, thanks.
The strikes in North Waziristan are almost 75% of the entire drone strikes in the period between 2004 & 2016. Astonishing. Now, do we have the yearwise strikes in NWA?
Now, we know that Pakistan resisted any operation in NWA until mid-2014 when it launched Zerb-e-Azb or whatever. The US was frustrated for a long time as NWA was the base from where the Haqqanis mounted operations against the Americans and Afghans across the border. Hence the question.
In an effort that India is likely to snub once again, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has hinted that he is looking for a mediating role between India and Pakistan.
This would be the third foray by President Donald Trump and his administration into a touchy terrain from where three of his four immediate predecessors have beaten a retreat, and one, George W. Bush pragmatically stayed away from.
With Washington now promoting a larger global role for India as an anchor of stability in the Indo-Pacific region and as an emerging counterweight to China, the Trump administration could be looking for a way to lighten the drag of Pakistani problems on India.
Speaking to reporters in Geneva on Thursday, Tillerson said that during his meeting with Pakistani leaders in Islamabad this week, "I made the observation to them, 'You have two very troubled borders. You have one in Afghanistan, you have one with India', and that we're willing to help on both of those borders, and we're not just here to talk about the situation on the Afghan border. We're also here to talk about how can we lower the tensions on the border with India."
He was not asked - and he did not say -- if he had made a similar offer to Indian leaders.
His statement came despite a long history of New Delhi firmly rebuffing involvement by anyone in what it holds is a matter solely between the two neighbours.
Rather than asserting that the military and the judiciary could be criticised if criticism was merited, a distinguished minister has taken the position that parliament is just as sacrosanct and hence above being challenged.![]()
In anticipation of what is likely to follow, this being Pakistan, one cannot afford to lose any time taking to task another minister who has asked for the treatment. I am referring to a news item in which the minister for industries, commerce and investment has informed the Punjab Assembly that there would be “no tomato import despite mafia’s manoeuvring”. Like the French Queen of a few centuries ago , he could also have added "let the awaam gorge on the Islami Atomi Bomb "![]()
The minister is said to have elaborated that “now tomatoes from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa were being sold at Rs70 per kilo in the city and would continue to be sold till prices get further stabilised with supplies from Sindh arriving in the local market”. The justification for the policy is contained in a direct quote from the minister: “Why pass the advantage on to foreign farmers instead of our own?” According to the minister, “an influential mafia” was trying hard for resumption of import from India which would not be allowed to happen. How can "anything" be allowed to be imported from "enemy India"( Trade through Dubai, it seems is OK !)
This minister needs to have a whole load of rotten tomatoes thrown at his head and the party chief responsible for his appointment to the ministry needs to explain the poor selection. Imagine a modern minister for commerce who can publicly state “Why pass on the advantage to foreign [producers] instead of our own?” Just follow through with the implications of the logic — it would put an end to all international trade because the only things traded are those that are made better or at lower cost by foreign producers. Pakistan should "hang on to its so -called competitive advantage" in exporting towels, and sports goods, if bigli supply- and quality control - will not be a problem![]()
There are a whole host of other problems with the argument. First, note the irony that the statement is coming from a minister in a country where even common pins are being imported from China and garbage collection is being contracted out to the Turks. There has not been a peep about the advantage being passed on to foreigners in these and a slew of other sectors.kudos to the Pakjabi professor for calling a spade a spade !
Second, this newfound love of ‘our own’ is confined to producers, setting aside entirely the welfare of consumers who vastly outnumber the former. Why? Are consumers not equally our own? And is the government not elected to enhance the welfare of the majority? The Echendee factor is "very important" . No problem in burying your head into the sand ! Was not this amply "demonstrated" during and after T- Rex's " joint lecture" to the top brass . And the statements made by the Paki PM and the Paki FM![]()
Third, what if someone extends the minister’s argument to the provincial level? Why pass on the advantage to producers in KP and Sindh instead of our own farmers in Punjab? Such a person would immediately be labelled an anti-national element even though the logic of the argument remains unchanged.
Fourth, who is this ‘influential mafia’ trying hard for resumption of import from India? What does it have to gain from the import? And, if this is actually a resumption of something that was taking place earlier, why wasn’t this mafia hauled in for anti-state activities at that time? Could it not be a producer mafia trying to block imports? Would a producer mafia not be infinitely more influential than one of consumers? Underlying all this back and forth, is the "unproven given" that Indian Government will "authorize" the supply of the needed tomatoes and onions to the "bhooki Awaam". This cannot be "assumed" under the Modi Regime![]()
The fact of the matter is that a blind nationalism is at the bottom of this ridiculous anti-trade stance that is hurting the budget of the vast majority of citizens who have to purchase essential commodities in the market. Let them "eat" the nuclear bum![]()
At the time when tomatoes were selling for Rs300 a kilo in Lahore they were available at Indian Rs40 a kilo in Amritsar a mere 30 miles away. But a visceral Indo-phobia, shared by many of our influentials, stood in the way of consumers benefiting from the lower priced supply. It was then that another distinguished minister, the federal minister for national food security and research said that “the government will never allow import of any vegetables, including tomato and onion, from India despite record high prices of these kitchen items in local markets due to limited local supply”. He elaborated that “this step has been taken to encourage the local farmers to grow more besides saving huge foreign exchange”. Smugglers' mafia- on both sides - should take "due note" of the price arbitrage and do the needful![]()
Our ministers are not alone in articulating such puerile logic emanating from their Indo-phobia. I recall a meeting in which an ex-chief of the ISI similarly railed against trade with India because it would destroy “our own” industry. The specific example he gave was of footwear that was being produced at lower cost across the border and whose import would put Pakistani producers “out of business”. During a break, a participant jokingly inquired about the make of the shoes the chief was wearing — it turned out they were Italian.Cutting your nose to spite your face ?
The point to note is that this India-centric anti-trade hysteria is shared by many who have no compunctions consuming products imported from all other countries and whose income brackets are such that commodities like tomatoes and onions are a minuscule proportion of their budgets. These are people who tell their car drivers to fill up the tank without ever asking the going price of petrol. They are indulging in the psychic pleasure of ‘hurting’ India at no cost to themselves while pushing millions of people who can afford to buy only a litre of gas at a time below the poverty line. Writer should be "careful" lest he be labelled as an "Indian Agent" !
The ultimate irony is that such callous and shallow prejudice does virtually nothing to hurt India. On the contrary, the gap between the two countries continues to widen while our leaders make fools of themselves trying to prove to a wide-eyed world that India is the ‘mother of all terrorisms’. It is a sad commentary on the state of affairs and a sign of the extent to which people have given up that nobody even bothers to point out these follies before the narrow window for questioning inevitably draws tightly shut.![]()
Interesting. If the conclusion from the above is that pakis only acted ("Zarb-e-azb") to relieve the pressure on themselves after the US increased the drone strikes in Waziristan, are we to expect a similar operation ("Bad-me-Hazm") to shortly commence in Khurram Agency now that the US has increased drone strikes there and sent in T-Rex with a "do more" message?SSridhar wrote:Oh, great, Manish_P. So, almost 80% of the strikes in NWA did take place before Zerb-e-Azb, then.
A delusional enemy only fights with itself. Sit back and enjoy.periaswamy wrote:A delusional enemy is the easiest one to fight -- I am glad the pakis are convinced about their own invincibility. Their 3.5 friends have been reduced to 1 at this point. India could not have achieved this without Paki assistance.
At least five passengers were injured in a blast targeting a passenger train in Balochistan's Bolan district on Friday.
Levies sources said "miscreants" ( ah! that "famous word" about the East Pakistanis being used again to describe the Balochis asserting for their rights. Will history repeat itself) had targeted the Akbar Bugti Express passenger train ( so the Baloch had no qualms about attacking the train named after one of their hero !) in the Hirak area of district Bolan.
Bogie Number 9 was partially damaged from the impact of the blast, which rocked the entire area, sources added.The injured were rushed to nearby Mach hospital for medical treatment, where an emergency had been declared.
PS: Are CPEC planners in Isloo and their Chini Advisors taking "due note " of these "miscreants"Frontier Corps personnel, levies and police reached the spot as investigations into the incident went underway. The affected train was later brought to the Mach Railway Station.
THE HAGUE: The Dutch government has admitted that technology from the Netherlands may have been used to develop weapons of mass destruction in Iran , Pakistan or Syria .Dutch intelligence services have received “indications in a number of cases” that “Dutch technology was used in programmes of WMD or for the means of transmission in Iran, Pakistan or Syria”, the outgoing ministers of defence, foreign affairs and foreign trade said in a letter published overnight on Wednesday. Did the Pakis sell nuclear technology to Syria as well . Or the Syrians got it via Iran ?
In such cases, customs officials can launch investigations which may lead to prosecutions, they added in their reply to a question posed in parliament.Dutch intelligence services “every year uncover a substantial number of attempts by foreign entities to obtain know-how and materials for weapons of mass destruction”, they wrote.
Eichelsheim said the Netherlands was “almost a supermarket for countries that want to develop these types of weapons” and warned that Dutch businesses and scientific establishments were perhaps not fully aware of the extent of the problem.
ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Friday opposed the sale of US drone missile system to India raising concerns that the move can potentially disrupt the balance of power in the region. “International powers must show responsibility before signing such agreements,” Foreign Office spokesman Nafees Zakaria said in his weekly press briefing. . The word "serious" is being used for the first time so expect that tomatoes and onions now will be selling at Rs. 1000 per kilo, as "precious resources" will be further usurped by the fauj to purchase drones from somewhere, to maintain the balance of power !![]()
Zakaria stated that US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson had been informed by Pakistan during his recent visit to Islamabad about the country’s continued efforts in the war against terrorism. The US state official had acknowledged and appreciated Pakistan’s efforts in the regard, he added. And therefore, the US should now sell drones to Pakistan as well![]()
The spokesperson said that Pakistan had also raised objections over India’s continuing violations of human rights in Kashmir, adding that Pakistan will not be deterred from providing moral and international support ( as well as hawala funds and human cannon fodder !) to the people of the occupied region.
Responding to a question, Zakaria stated that Pakistan had raised the issue of Indian involvement in terror attacks inside the country. ( Documentary evidence manufactured in Islamabad already supplied a "few times" to the UN)
The Paki "worthy" in question !Talha Haroon, a 19-year-old American citizen living in Pakistan, allegedly planned to take part in the attacks,...
Exactly that IMHOanupmisra wrote:Interesting. If the conclusion from the above is that pakis only acted ("Zarb-e-azb") to relieve the pressure on themselves after the US increased the drone strikes in Waziristan, are we to expect a similar operation ("Bad-me-Hazm") to shortly commence in Khurram Agency now that the US has increased drone strikes there and sent in T-Rex with a "do more" message?SSridhar wrote:Oh, great, Manish_P. So, almost 80% of the strikes in NWA did take place before Zerb-e-Azb, then.
Here's another link to additional raw data prepared by Bureau of Investigative Journalism
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/ ... 1436874561
You must be an Excel jock.Manish_P wrote:Much more data. Nice charts too (will save me some time)
Its an "American national" if it has negative connotations. Otherwise, it s "paki-brit or paki-twat" if that momeen did something noteworthy.Falijee wrote:American national in Pakistan planned terrorist attack in New York: FBI
Ah no sir. Just too bored to work on the boring weekly Sales/Spends/Inventories/Allocation spreadsheets and pptsanupmisra wrote:You must be an Excel jock.Manish_P wrote:Much more data. Nice charts too (will save me some time)
Jonah Blank, author of ‘Arrow of the Blue-Skinned God: Retracing the Ramayana Through India,’ is a senior political scientist at the US think-tank, RAND Corporation. He tweets @JonahBlankIt has become commonplace to caution American policymakers against irrational exuberance when dealing with India: Keep expectations low (conventional wisdom goes) and you won’t be disappointed. In the wake of US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s visit to New Delhi this week, perhaps the same advice could be directed to India’s leadership. Despite warm welcome by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the pleasantries at Gandhi Smriti, and the promises of “an even brighter future,” don’t expect a radical change in US policy.
periaswamy wrote:...so what's stopping the US state dept. from just leaving?
I really enjoy and look forward to this global politik discussion.periaswamy wrote:I am not too sure about the mineral angle, given that US has the clout to make deals with countries across the globe for copper and other minerals if it needs to. This is getting out of topic but ...not if the Chinese get to those mineral rights first and start to economically and politically manipulate the global prices (and by extension, the stock markets. Can't allow that to happen. We do not want the same Africa effect to take place in Afghanistan, especially when it is right next to China and Chini grandiose plans to connect with European markets
Re: 5, the US has reduced forces after declaring victory a few times, the most recent one being the killing of Bin Laden. But 1,2,and, 3 always means they need a "small force" even after the "war on terror" has been "won" and "al qaeda" is now a "moderate ally of the US" in syria. That may have been with Iraq but the US has never fully backed out of Afghanistan. About AQ and Syria, that's another subject for another thread
6) IMVHO... OBOR/BRI. The US wants a toll booth right at the point where such a network, if it comes to pass, will exit China headed west to the CAS and southwest to the all-important Gulf. Just as it sits on the chokepoints of Chinese trade in Japan, Korea, and the Straits of Malacca, it wants the land route under its control as well, to whatever extent possible.anupmisra wrote:periaswamy wrote:...so what's stopping the US state dept. from just leaving?
Here's why (in my very humble opinion).
...
Pakistan Army said Friday evening they had shot down an 'Indian' quadcopter they suspected of 'spying' on the Rakhchikri sector of Azad Jammu and Kashmir.
it seemed that the quadcopter being used was of the commercially available variety of drones
The army said it had seized the wreckage
Darn it! Now they have the wreckage and will certainly reverse engineer it. By the way DJI is a chini company (oh, the irony!)The developement also recalls similar incidents in the past. In November last year, when Pakistan army had said it shot down a quadcopter, also in the Rakhchikri sector, suspected to be on an espionage mission.
SWABI: Three police officers stand guard daily at the tomb of Pakistani student Mashal Khan to prevent religious hardliners from fulfilling threats to blow up the grave of the 23-year-old beaten to death over rumours he blasphemed against Islam.
His grieving family, now also under police protection, say they have little hope the shocking campus killing will prompt a re-examination of blasphemy laws that carry a death penalty, or action against the mob justice that often erupts in such cases.
On Friday, there was more evidence the opposite is happening.
A new political party that has made punishing blasphemers its main rallying cry won a surprisingly strong 7.6 per cent of the vote in a by-election in Peshawar, 60 km (36 miles) from where Mashal Khan was killed six months ago.
"Death to blasphemers! Death to blasphemers!" was a common chant of supporters of the Tehrik-e-Labaik Pakistan party at its campaign rallies in the conservative northwestern city.
The party's relatively strong showing - and a separate outcry over a proposed change to an election law that outraged the religious right - has elevated blasphemy into a potent political issue in the run-up to a general election in 2018.
While Tehrik-e-Labaik (Movement of the Prophet's Followers) is unlikely to break out of single digits in coming votes, its rapid rise, along with another ultra-religious party, could create an additional challenge for the ruling Pakistani Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N).
The PML-N party's leader, Nawaz Sharif, was ousted as prime minister in July by the Supreme Court, and opposition leader Imran Khan - who spearheaded the legal case that removed him over unreported income - is seeking to press the advantage.
Religious right gains
In this week's Peshawar by-election, former cricket star Imran's Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party swept to a comfortable victory to retain the parliamentary seat, winning 34.8 per cent of the vote.
Sharif's PML-N had 18.9 per cent, narrowly coming in third to the regionally strong Awami National Party that won just 40 more votes.
But the gains by the Labaik party - formed just last year - have grabbed attention.
Labaik draws most of its support from the Barelvi branch of Sunni Islam, the largest sect in Pakistan that is traditionally considered moderate. Though the party does not publicly talk about it funding, the Barelvis have a network of mosques and madrassa religious schools that collect donations.
The party emerged out of a protest movement against the state's execution of Mumtaz Qadri, a bodyguard of the governor of Punjab province who gunned down his boss in 2011 over his call to reform Pakistan's blasphemy laws, among the world's harshest, to prevent abuses.
Qadri is considered a hero by the party, and its candidate in Peshawar, Muhammad Shafiq Ameeni, was equally supportive of Mashal Khan's killers, although the student's death was not a main feature at campaign rallies.
"It was state's responsibility to punish a blasphemer, no two opinions, but when state doesn't do its job and someone does kill, he shouldn't be punished as a murderer," Amini said, referring to the 57 people who face trial over Mashal Khan's death.
In Pakistan, allegiance to Islam is the official line of most major parties, but ultra-religious parties have so far remained on the fringes.
Labaik is one of two new ultra-religious parties formed in roughly the past year.
Together, Labaik and the Milli Muslim League (MML) gained about 11 per cent of the vote in last month's by-election in Lahore and 10.4 per cent in Peshawar, whereas the established religious parties, such as Jamaat-e-Islami and Jamaat Ulema-e-Islam, combined had 5.3 per cent in the 2013 national election.
Ruling party under fire
Blasphemy is such an effective wedge issue in Pakistan because there is almost no defence against an accusation.
For that reason, say critics, blasphemy laws are often invoked to settle personal scores and to intimidate liberal journalists, lawyers and politicians.
Dozens of Pakistanis are sitting on death row after being convicted of insulting Islam's prophet, a specific charge that carries a mandatory death sentence, though no executions have been carried out in recent decades.
Now, political parties may be in danger of facing blasphemy accusations themselves.
Earlier in October, the PML-N found itself in the middle of a firestorm when it voted through seemingly small changes to the nation's electoral law.
The changes, among other things, turned a religious oath in the electoral laws stating that Mohammad was the last prophet of Muslims into a declaration using the words "I declare".
The alterations prompted accusations of blasphemy from the religious right and the government quickly retreated, terming the change a "clerical" mistake and apologising in parliament.
Labaik has vowed to hold a mass rally on Nov. 6 to demand the lawmakers responsible be prosecuted for blasphemy.
Mob killings
Even before the Labaik party's political debut, politicians found promising swift action against blasphemers an easy way to appeal to conservative voters.
In March, then-prime minister Sharif issued a public order to prosecute anyone posting blasphemous content online.
The next month, Mashal Khan was accused of online blasphemy and beaten to death by fellow students and religious activists as onlookers filmed the scene. Sharif said he was "shocked and saddened" by the "senseless display of mob justice".
At least 67 people have been killed over unproven blasphemy allegations since 1990, according human rights groups.
Mashal Khan's father, Iqbal, said his son was the victim of false rumours.
The family has received death threats from right-wingers and Mashal's sisters had to drop out of school.
"The snakes our country nurtured are now biting us," the father said, two days before the Peshawar by-election, standing beside his son's gave strewn with flowers, lace and poetry.
Learning of the Labaik party's gains a few days later only made him more pessimistic about the government's ability to stop abuse of blasphemy accusations.
"I know very well, I'm not going to get my son back," he said. "But this only adds to my pain."
We have constantly said here that Berelvis & Sufis are not 'moderates' by any stretch of imagination.Ashokk wrote:'Death to blasphemers' increasing as political rallying cry in Pakistan. . . A new political party that has made punishing blasphemers its main rallying cry won a surprisingly strong 7.6 per cent of the vote in a by-election in Peshawar . . . "Death to blasphemers! Death to blasphemers!" was a common chant of supporters of the Tehrik-e-Labaik Pakistan party at its campaign rallies in the conservative northwestern city. . . Labaik draws most of its support from the Barelvi branch of Sunni Islam, the largest sect in Pakistan that is traditionally considered moderate. . . . The party emerged out of a protest movement against the state's execution of Mumtaz Qadri . . . Qadri is considered a hero by the party, and its candidate in Peshawar, Muhammad Shafiq Ameeni, was equally supportive of Mashal Khan's killers, although the student's death was not a main feature at campaign rallies. . . . Labaik is one of two new ultra-religious parties formed in roughly the past year.
Vips wrote:Pakistani author shatters delusions of paki dreams of earning toll income form CPEC which is three times pakistani budget size by 2030!!!
The author did some research regarding the freight market size, the tolls that can be levied etc. Not knowing that the whole effort is wasted as Chinese have a written agreement with Pakistani government and no toll can be charged on Chinese trucks/good movement.
Talk of CPEC generating toll income of USD 135 Billion is typical braggart claim from the Mohammadden Terrorism Fomenting Islamic Republic of Pakistan that has no basis in reality.Earlier this month, the Board of Investment claimed that the CPEC toll income would be three times the budget of Pakistan after completion by 2030. It is the first time an official figure on CPEC toll estimates has come out and needs some objective appraisal.
Pakistan’s budget this year stood at Rs4.75 trillion. Thrice this amount would mean Rs14+ trillion ($135+ billion).
Then consider that the Panama Canal revenue for the 6 months January to June 2017 amounted to USD 1.1 Billion for an annualised USD 2,2 Billion revenue:Suez Canal revenues up to USD 4.3 billion in 2017: SCZone Chairman
Al-Masry Al-Youm
October 19, 2017 3:29 pm
The chairman of Suez Canal Authority (SCA) and SCZone — the Suez Canal Economic Zone, Mohab Mamish, announced on Wednesday that the SCA’s revenues raised by 3.4 per cent within the period from January-October 2017, increasing to $US4.3 billion up from $US4.2 billion in 2016. ……………..
Suez Canal revenues up to USD 4.3 billion in 2017: SCZone Chairman
Panama Canal toll revenues up 19.7% in first half 2017
Panama Canal revenues totaled US $ 1,119.5 million in the first half of this year, up 19.7% from US $ 935.3 million in the same period of National Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC) released today.
08/08/2017 - 15:59 ·Panama, Aug 8 (EFE) .- Panama Canal revenues totaled $ 1,119.5 million in the first half of this year, 19.7% more than the 935.3 million in the same period of 2016 According to data from the National Institute of Statistics and Census (INEC) released today. ………………..
Panama Canal toll revenues up 19.7% in first half 2017
Awesome Sir!! You know your pivots. OT kaggle.com has more datasets from different themes, may be we can discuss them here across different forums. May be some seniors can take a look at them? Might be useful in economics or other such dhagasManish_P wrote:Couple more pivots (on the data in the post of the Drone Strikes, shared by poster Gunnvant)
I just wanted to see if the birds had any preferred hunting time
Pivot of Drone strike with hourly time-slots
Sure sir. Only to glad to contribute whenever i can, in whatever basic way i can. I need to be careful where i save the data though.. don't want to mail my Regional Sales Heads the region-wise casualty figuresgunnvant wrote:
Awesome Sir!! You know your pivots. OT kaggle.com has more datasets from different themes, may be we can discuss them here across different forums. May be some seniors can take a look at them? Might be useful in economics or other such dhagas