Harvard-Backed Experfy, Founded by Harpreet Singh Secures Seed Round to Scale Data Scientist Marketplace!

Harpreet Singh is the co-CEO of Experfy, a big data consulting marketplace in the Harvard Innovation Lab. He works at the intersection of big data and analytics, developing advanced algorithms and high-performance big data systems. Harpreet earned Master’s and PhD degrees from Harvard University, where he was also a faculty member from 2012 to 2014. […]

Harpreet Singh is the co-CEO of Experfy, a big data consulting marketplace in the Harvard Innovation Lab. He works at the intersection of big data and analytics, developing advanced algorithms and high-performance big data systems. Harpreet earned Master’s and PhD degrees from Harvard University, where he was also a faculty member from 2012 to 2014. With an exceptional emphasis on structured governance, he managed the program management initiatives for sixty technology startups from Citigroup’s e-Citi Venture Portfolio Office.

In a later role as Director of Technology, also at Citigroup, he architected the infrastructure of global multi-tiered, web-based electronic exchanges. Harpreet subsequently established the Project Management Office (PMO) for FX Alliance, a global foreign exchange platform, where he was responsible for enabling project and risk management functions for New York, London and Tokyo locations.

Adding a new flavor to the business of transforming heaps of data into actionable insights, a Harvard-based startup is offering custom algorithms on demand. Founded last year, Experfy Inc. has built a marketplace for data scientists who, like designers using 99Designs Inc. or business consultants using HourlyNerd Inc., respond to requests from individuals and businesses for help with specific projects.

Experfy co-founders and co-CEOs Sarabjot Kaur and Harpreet Singh said they are initially targeting small and midsize businesses that have yet to harness value from data they have stored but not analyzed. Ms. Kaur said she has seen a number of companies in manufacturing, agriculture and other sectors that are doing between $50 million and $100 million in revenue, but have no dashboard and are still manually inputting many items.

“They think big data is not for them. They think it’s brain surgery,” she said. “It’s not.”

~ Source: blogs.wsj.com

Bhai Mohinder Singh among the Top 3 Inspirations in UK to be honored with a Commemorative Coin!

A commemorative coin has been released in honour of Bhai Sahib Bhai Mohinder Singh Ji’s achievements at Soho House Museum in Birmingham. A Handsworth currency project was launched to find 3 inspirational visionary personalities of Handsworth who have contributed to society and made a difference to the local community. One of the chosen personalities was […]

A commemorative coin has been released in honour of Bhai Sahib Bhai Mohinder Singh Ji’s achievements at Soho House Museum in Birmingham. A Handsworth currency project was launched to find 3 inspirational visionary personalities of Handsworth who have contributed to society and made a difference to the local community.

One of the chosen personalities was Sikh leader Bhai Sahib Bhai Mohinder Singh Ji Chairperson of Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha under whose leadership the Nishkam Centre, Nishkam Schools and the Nishkam Health Centre came into fruition.

Thousands of coins featuring Bhai Sahib Ji were distributed to local schools and the local community to celebrate their achievements.

~ Source – DailySikhUpdate

Confused what to do after passing out of school?

#MarkYourDates for the Largest Annual Educational Fairs – Career Guidance Fair Date: 18-20th June Venue- Bhai Lakhi Shah Vanjara Hall, Gurdwara Rakab Ganj The CGF – 2015 brings together major Universities and educational institutions to share educational information and provide career counseling to students. The event has been carved to provide timely direction to steer […]

#MarkYourDates for the Largest Annual Educational Fairs – Career Guidance Fair

Date: 18-20th June
Venue- Bhai Lakhi Shah Vanjara Hall, Gurdwara Rakab Ganj

The CGF – 2015 brings together major Universities and educational institutions to share educational information and provide career counseling to students. The event has been carved to provide timely direction to steer the youth towards fruitful careers. The CGF-2015 is the need of the hour and will attract hundreds of career-conscious students and their mentors over three days.

DSGMC has been doing the philanthropic work of providing quality education to the students of Delhi.

One to One counseling & Psychometric test for the students will be an important highlight of the event!

SHARE and let know others!

~ Tapasleen Kaur
~ New Delhi, 5th June ’15

Did You Know The Religious Significance of Gurdwara Khadur Sahib!

Gurdwara Khadur Sahib is a historical town, sanctified by the visit of eight Sikh Gurus. The second Sikh Guru Sri Guru Angad Dev Ji preached Gurbani, developed the Gurmukhi script, established Mal Akhara, got the Janam Sakhi written from Bhai Perra Mokha ji, broke arrogance of Hamayun and influenced him with spiritual ideas, prepared Gurumukhi […]

Gurdwara Khadur Sahib is a historical town, sanctified by the visit of eight Sikh Gurus. The second Sikh Guru Sri Guru Angad Dev Ji preached Gurbani, developed the Gurmukhi script, established Mal Akhara, got the Janam Sakhi written from Bhai Perra Mokha ji, broke arrogance of Hamayun and influenced him with spiritual ideas, prepared Gurumukhi Primers and served mankind for nearly 13 years during his Guruship period. His devoted wife Mata Khiwi, contributed to the practice of “Langar” (free community kitchen) over at Khadur Sahib.

Did You Know The Religious Significance of  Gurdwara Khadur Sahib!

Description of sacred town can also be found in Bani of Sri Guru Granth Sahib and Bhai Gurdas Ji.

The historical town has many heritage buildings but these could not get formal recognition of having heritage status. Old ‘Baran-dari’ (the building having 12 doors) and ‘Khoohi’ (well) situated in the complex of Gurdwara Tapiana Sahib fall in that category.

Did You Know The Religious Significance of  Gurdwara Khadur Sahib!

On the bank of the Gurdwara’s sacred Sarovar (pond), the old ‘Baran-dari’ was constructed. The arcs, design of ceilings and small ‘Lakhauri’ bricks suggested that such buildings were constructed in the beginning of 16th century, the same time period as Guru Angad Dev ji.

This assessment suggests that Guru Angad Dev ji used to address his followers and preach them in this building.

Did You Know The Religious Significance of  Gurdwara Khadur Sahib!

In addition, there is an old ‘Khoohi’ (well) in basement of modern Mata Khivi Langar Hall situated in complex of Gurdwara Tapiana Sahib. This ‘Khoohi’ was also constructed with the same bricks and material as that of ‘Baran-dari’.

Did You Know The Religious Significance of  Gurdwara Khadur Sahib!

It suggests that the ‘Khoohi’ was also built in the same period thereby belonging to Guru Angad Dev ji. It is a well known historical fact that Mata Khivi Ji used to prepare food for Sangat. This fact can also be found in Guru Granth Sahib. As the latest research suggests, the water of this ‘Khoohi’ was used by Mata Khivi ji for ‘Langar’.

~ Source- Sikh24

Janam Diwas Bhagat Puran Singh Ji

Bhagat Puran Singh ji was undoubtedly one of the greatest Sikh Hero of this century who worked totally selflessly all his life to provide the last hope to the mentally and terminally ill patients. Whenever he use to see a deserted dead body (human or animal) immediately he would prepare (by his own hand) a […]

Bhagat Puran Singh ji was undoubtedly one of the greatest Sikh Hero of this century who worked totally selflessly all his life to provide the last hope to the mentally and terminally ill patients. Whenever he use to see a deserted dead body (human or animal) immediately he would prepare (by his own hand) a grave and him human/animal a deserving respect of death. He was to Sikhism, what Mother Teresa is to Catholicism.

Against the backdrop of violence and poverty in 1947 he established a premier institute which takes care of sick, disabled and forlorn persons. Whatever money and financial resources he could gathered he used it to establish this institute. It is also believed that he was almost nominated to receive Nobel Peace Prize in 1990 but by not giving him prize it was the loss of sick and disabled persons as well as Nobel Prize committee. His life story is a saga of grit, determination, faith in the almighty and unending love for the suffering humanity. A very brief sketch of Bhagat Ji’s life is given below.

Bhagat Puran Singh, born at Rajewal, Distt. Ludhiana on June 4 1904., at the house of Chaudhari Chibu Mal and Mehtab Kaur. In an interview to Patwant Singh Bhagat Puran Singh discloses how he became a Sikh ,in his early life he use to travel a lot from village to village and would stay at a Hindu Temple. One day while he was staying at a Temple Brahmins told him to clean the temple and then when he was done they sat in front of him and ate the food without offering him., Incidentally next time he had to stay at a Gurdwara and Bhai ji of Gurdwara not only gave him good food but also a cot and a glass of milk afterwards., without asking for any sewa for Gurdwara. After this Bhagat Puran Singh didn’t even thought twice and became a Khalsa.

He set out in life for the service of the suffering humanity- the greatest religion. He founded Pingalwara in 1947 with a few discarded patients. He was also a writer as well as publisher and an environmentalist. Pingalwara is a very big home of human service.

Bhagat Ji’s contribution in spreading awareness about the global dangers of environment pollution, increasing soil erosion etc are also commendable. His dedication was awarded heaps of honors by many quarters. Prestigious among these was the Padamshri award in 1979, which he surrendered in the wake of the army attack on the Golden Temple in 1984.

He left for his heavenly abode on August 5, 1992. We request you to kindly display the attached appeal at the maximum number of places so that the Sadh Sangat is made aware of the efforts being put up by this Society.

Here are some of the quotes of Bhagat Puran Singh ji

Dignity in death is a birthright of each living thing.

All Punjabi should at least sow a tree of “Bohar”, “Pippal” and “Neem”. These trees are essential to our eco system.

At this time Pingalwara is run by Dr Inder Jit Kaur, she is also President of All India Pingalwara Charitable Society(Regd).

~ Source: sikh-history.com

Air Marshall Birender Singh takes charge as the Indian Air Force’s New Vice Chief!

The Pilot who flew many night strike missions during Kargil War is IAF Vice Chief. Air Marshal Birender Singh Dhanoa, the daring fighter pilot who flew with the then Indian Air Force (IAF) Chief during Kargil mission, took charge as the Vice-Chief of the Air Staff (VCAS). With 37 years of experience in his kitty, […]

The Pilot who flew many night strike missions during Kargil War is IAF Vice Chief. Air Marshal Birender Singh Dhanoa, the daring fighter pilot who flew with the then Indian Air Force (IAF) Chief during Kargil mission, took charge as the Vice-Chief of the Air Staff (VCAS).

With 37 years of experience in his kitty, Air Marshal Dhanoa is also in line to become the next IAF chief by the end of next year. Commissioned into the IAF in June 1978 as a fighter pilot, Air Marshal Dhanoa is an alumnus of Rashtriya Indian Military College, the National Defence Academy and the Defence Services Staff College, Wellington.

It was during the Kargil operations, he hit the headlines after commanding a fighter.

~ Source – oneindia.com

Eco-Awareness Rally by Students of Akal Academy, Dhotian!

The students took a rally around the campus, contributing their bit towards a green environment. The students held banners, placards and raised slogans on environmental protection and conservation, highlighting various environmental issues. They held the responsibility of educating the public on serious issues concerning health & environment. Children are the green ambassadors of tomorrow, they […]

The students took a rally around the campus, contributing their bit towards a green environment. The students held banners, placards and raised slogans on environmental protection and conservation, highlighting various environmental issues. They held the responsibility of educating the public on serious issues concerning health & environment.

Children are the green ambassadors of tomorrow, they should take the lead forward towards an eco-friendly nature. The teachers urged participants to hold on to their spirits of saving the environment and never let it get away.

The purpose of the rally was to not only make a lasting impression in the minds of the children but also bring about an awakening among the public to conserve nature and safeguard the environment.

Like & Share to hail the efforts!

~ Tapasleen Kaur
~ New Delhi, 3rd June ’15

Amarjit Singh garners Fame by producing The Best Mexican Cheese in Canada!

The night before we’re set to meet, Amarjit Singh leaves a message on my phone. He sounds tired and stressed out. It turns out the 62-year-old cheese maker—who has built a reputation over the past 26 years for his exceptional Indian and Latin American cheeses—was forced to make a last-minute delivery to a grocery store […]

The night before we’re set to meet, Amarjit Singh leaves a message on my phone. He sounds tired and stressed out. It turns out the 62-year-old cheese maker—who has built a reputation over the past 26 years for his exceptional Indian and Latin American cheeses—was forced to make a last-minute delivery to a grocery store in the nation’s capital. When I see him the next morning at his factory in Ingersoll, in southwestern Ontario (a 1,200-kilometer round-trip from Ottawa), I learn he’s only been back in town for a few hours.

Singh is a busy man. For Local Dairy, the company he has owned and operated with his wife and son for nearly three decades, he is the research and development team, as well as responsible for sourcing ingredients and helping with label design for his dairy products. A self-taught cheesemaker, he still works the line at the factory throughout the week and even hand-delivers the goods to restaurants, grocery stores, and specialty shops on weekends. “We do everything old school. But passion keeps me going,” he says.

The hard work is paying off. Just over a month ago, Local Dairy’s Oaxaca cheese—a semi-firm string cheese that traditionally hails from southern Mexico—took home the award for best mozzarella at the Canadian Cheese Grand Prix, the Oscars of Canadian cheese. Singh is the first to acknowledge that most people wouldn’t expect award-winning Latin American cheese from a Canadian Sikh of Indian descent. And though this might sound like a parody of multiculturalism, it’s more simply explained as a byproduct of Canada’s history of immigration—for years, Italians, Greeks, Polish, Indians and many others have made a life here, bringing along and fusing gastronomic traditions. It’s no different for Local Dairy.

Singh came to Canada when he was 16 years old, and lived by himself until the rest of his family immigrated. When he was old enough, Singh opened a tire store in Scarborough. Though the business was an early success, he was always aware of the fact that Indian cheese—specifically, paneer—was virtually impossible to come by in Canada. When he was forced to close the tire business due to familial squabbling, Singh and his wife, Gurinder, ventured into the cheese business.
“My mother used to make paneer, so I first learned from her,” Singh says. “My dad laughed at me. He thought just because we liked the cheese didn’t mean everyone would, but I had a belief that there could be a market for it here.”

In 1989, Singh entered into a partnership at a Mennonite creamery in Kitchener. Originally, he was only helping with the production of yogurt, crème fraîche, and a cooked cheese known as koch käse, but a chance encounter with a Salvadoran cheesemaker named Luis Alvarado—who’d been brought to Kitchener through the Mennonite church to make crema—changed everything. “I started asking Luis about Latin cheeses and he would encourage me to try making paneer,” Singh says. When his Mennonite partner went broke, Singh bought out the remaining portion of the business and started making cheese with his wife and Alvarado. In 1999, he relocated the business to Ingersoll, a town of 12,000 people that resides in one of the province’s top milk-producing counties, and set up shop in a historic factory that, over the last 134 years, has been home to a pork-packing plant and the once-renowned Ingersoll Cheese Company.

In the past two decades, Singh has traveled to cheese factories in Mexico, Italy, England, France, India, Turkey, and Cyprus to learn different styles and techniques. Currently, he and his staff of seven make over a dozen dairy products, including Oaxaca, queso fresco, duro blando, chihuahua, koch käse, crème fraîche, cultured butter, ghee, yogurt, dulce de leche, and, of course, paneer. (“We were innovators in the world for packaged paneer,” he boasts. “Nothing in India has a shelf life of more than two weeks. Ours is six months.”) Throughout the week, freshly made cheese is distributed to stores and restaurants across Ontario, either with one of Local Dairy’s five delivery trucks, or by Singh himself.

Arturo Anhalt is an expat from Mexico City who owns a trio of restaurants in Toronto called Milagro Cantina Mexicana. He’s been using Local Dairy products since the restaurants opened a decade ago. “I first found their crema in a Latin grocery store in Kensington Market, and it was so good,” Anhalt says. “We struck up a relationship and now every time Singh makes a delivery we end up having a 30-minute chat.” Milagro’s executive chef, Barjinder Bains, is an Indian hailing from the Punjab region. He and Singh often have protracted, animated conversations about Local Dairy’s products. “It’s not every day you see two Indian guys discussing the state and quality of Mexican cheese, but, hey, I guess that’s Toronto,” Anhalt says.

Toronto’s Cheese Boutique—a shop chef Daniel Boulud once called the best cheese store in [North] America—stocks a half dozen Local Dairy cheeses. “We have a big demand for these types of products, from our retail customers and wholesale restaurant accounts, especially with the boom of Mexican cuisine in Toronto right now,” says maître fromager Afrim Pristine. “The products are unique, not many people in this country are making them.” Singh also supplies many other Toronto eateries, including El Catrin, Nota Bene, Playa Cabana, and Fonda Lola.

Twenty-six years after getting into the cheese business, Singh remains outspoken and hungry to learn. Local Dairy’s recent win at the Canadian Cheese Grand Prix may have put a spotlight on the small creamery, but Singh feels unchanged. “We’ve long been a hidden secret,” he says. “This was the first year we submitted cheese to the competition and, actually, the only reason I did was because the Dairy Farmers of Canada kept pushing me to do it.”

At the end of our interview, Singh gives me a tour of the factory. Having been away from Ingersoll that week, he checks the equipment to make sure it’s all been cleaned properly. Although he may be nearing the typical retirement age, Singh has no intention of slowing down. “I’d like to have another ten or 20 years of doing this,” he says. “The work’s never bothered me, and I realize if I don’t work, I’ll never be healthy.”

~ Source: munchies.vice.com

The courts ruled in the favor of Sikh Boxer after being barred in the ring with his Unshorn beard!

Athletes and activists came together for a panel discussion at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to talk about how sport can be a springboard to tackling human rights issues. Boxer Pardeep Singh Nagra spoke about how he fought for his right to religious expression. In 1999, he was a light flyweight boxing champion. He […]

Athletes and activists came together for a panel discussion at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights to talk about how sport can be a springboard to tackling human rights issues. Boxer Pardeep Singh Nagra spoke about how he fought for his right to religious expression.

In 1999, he was a light flyweight boxing champion. He also had a beard — a mandatory article of his Sikh faith.
He was barred from competing in the Canadian Championships because he refused to shave his beard. While the courts ruled in his favor and called on the Canadian Amateur Boxing Association to end what they deemed religious discrimination, Singh’s career ultimately came to an end.

Singh said by sharing his experience in an open forum, he hopes to help prevent possible cases of discrimination in sport in the future.

“I’ve always seen it as a responsibility, to continue to … always make sure that we can put rights and equality on the forefront no matter what the venue is,” said Mr Singh. “If we can continue to reduce these incidents … going forward, then it’s our responsibility.”

“It’s very important to prevent these things from happening again, that you remember these things and make people aware of what happened in the past and to keep fighting for the rights for everybody,” said Ramos-Farina.

~ Source: SikhIssue.com

Akal Academy, Chogawan explore the world of Science & Technology at Science City!

To inculcate the scientific temperament & amplitude, among the impressionable young minds, a trip to Science City Kapurthala was organized by Akal Academy Chogawan was organized. This academy was constructed in the memory of S. Chambail Singh. The subject areas covered include physical, applied, natural and social sciences, engineering, technology, Jurassic parks, the environment, ecosystems, […]

To inculcate the scientific temperament & amplitude, among the impressionable young minds, a trip to Science City Kapurthala was organized by Akal Academy Chogawan was organized. This academy was constructed in the memory of S. Chambail Singh.

The subject areas covered include physical, applied, natural and social sciences, engineering, technology, Jurassic parks, the environment, ecosystems, as well as frontier areas like space, nuclear science, information technology, robotics and Bio-technology.

It was a great experience for the students. Such enriching experiences are meant to trigger off the imagination and creativity among the students along with encouraging the inquisitive minds to inculcate the spirit of exploration.

~ Tapasleen Kaur
~ New Delhi, 2nd June ’15