$ cat ./records/gates-meets-pm-modi-in-new-delhi-to-discuss-ai-health-and-indias--2025.txt
Gates meets PM Modi in New Delhi to discuss AI, health and India's development
[RECORD.TXT] · cat --full
Bill Gates met Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi in New Delhi to discuss technology, health, agriculture, and India's long-term development goals, with Gates praising the country's innovations in global health and digital public infrastructure. The Gates Foundation has worked with the Indian government for two decades on healthcare, agriculture, and digital transformation, including AI tools that support rural health workers. The meeting reflected India's growing centrality to Gates's philanthropy and technology interests.
Source: https://www.newsonair.gov.in/pm-modi-bill-gates-discuss-wide-range-of-issues-during-meeting/
Free forever · No ads · Solo developer
If this was worth a read, help make the next entry possible.
Every entry in this archive was researched, verified, and written by one person — for free. No corporate funding. No ad revenue. Just a developer who believes verified history should be accessible to everyone. Your donation directly funds new entries.
Crypto accepted · No subscription required
← Previous
Gates confirms 'Source Code' is the first of a planned three-volume memoir
Next →
Bill Gates remains America's largest private farmland owner amid renewed debate
[CROSS_REFERENCES] · grep --category='Personal'
Related Accomplishments
1990s
Gates keeps a collection of rare and classic cars
Despite his reputation for frugality in some areas, Bill Gates has long indulged a passion for cars, assembling a collection that has included several Porsches — among them the 911 he has owned for decades and the storied 959 — as well as other classics. His automotive tastes, and the saga of importing the then-illegal 959, are among the more colorful footnotes of his personal life.
1990s
Gates retreats for solitary, twice-yearly 'Think Weeks'
For years Bill Gates retreated twice a year to a secluded cabin for a solitary 'Think Week,' during which he read stacks of papers, books, and employee proposals with no interruptions, emerging with strategic memos that shaped Microsoft's direction. The ritual became famous as a model of deep, focused thinking by a busy executive, and was credited with helping spark major pivots — including Microsoft's embrace of the internet. Gates carried the habit of voracious, deliberate reading into his philanthropy.
[ARCHIVE_FUNDING] · INDEPENDENT · NO ADS
One developer. >300 verified entries. Zero ads. Forever free.
No sponsors, no paywall, no algorithm. If this archive has been useful to you, reader support is what keeps it running.