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Ex-CEO of FIITJEE eSchool and ex-Business Head of upGrad

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Ravikanth Kanchibhotla as Head of Test Prep Segment, and Abhishek Chhabra as Head of K-10 Segment.

Ex-CEO of FIITJEE eSchool and ex-Business Head of upGrad joins Infinity Learn by Sri Chaitanya

Infinity Learn by Sri Chaitanya, India’s only Hybrid Learning platform delivering outcome-based learning at scale, has bolstered its leadership team. It welcomes two very experienced professionals: Ravikanth Kanchibhotla as Head of Test Prep Segment, and Abhishek Chhabra as Head of K-10 Segment. These appointments mark a significant milestone for Infinity Learn, reinforcing its commitment to providing high-quality education and amplifying the learning experience for millions of learners nationwide.

Bringing more than two decades of invaluable expertise in the digital ecosystem, Ravikanth takes on the role of Head of Test Prep Segment. His experience encapsulates contributions to the success of six startups, including two unicorns, and serving key roles at multinational corporations. Ravikanth’s proficiency in revenue management, product strategy and operations has been honed through pivotal positions at leading organizations such as Flipkart, InMobi and Google India. His leadership journey in the EdTech domain includes roles such as COO at Oliveboard, in addition to his position of CEO at FIITJEE eSchool.

Expressing his enthusiasm for the new role, Ravikanth Kanchibhotla, Head of Test Prep Segment at Infinity Learn, by Sri Chaitanya, said“I’m thrilled to join Infinity Learn and look forward to leveraging my experience to drive effective strategies in the Learn segment and impact as many learners as possible in the country to prepare them for challenging competitive exams such as NEET and JEE. I am committed to contributing to the Company’s mission of providing quality education and fostering growth opportunities for learners.”

Abhishek, appointed as the Head of K-10 Segment, comes with a wealth of experience from esteemed organizations such as upGrad, Philips, Zomato and Oyo. With a strong academic background from IIT Delhi and ISB Hyderabad, Abhishek aligns his multifaceted approach and passion for meaningful causes with the ethos of Infinity Learn.

Highlighting his eagerness, Abhishek Chhabra, Head of K-10 Segment at Infinity Learn by Sri Chaitanya, asserted“I’ve always aspired to contribute to the cultivation of skill and talent in our nation, fostering a generation of high achievers in their chosen career paths. I am grateful to Infinity Learn for this opportunity. I’m excited to embark on this journey, dedicated to providing our learners with unwavering support and guidance as they shape their brighter futures.”

On this momentous occasion, Ujjwal Singh, Founding CEO of Infinity Learn by Sri Chaitanya, stated, “We are elated to welcome Ravikanth and Abhishek to our esteemed leadership team. Their profound industry expertise will significantly enhance our ability to deliver outcome-based learning experiences. Aligned with our ambitious goal of reaching over 50 million learners on our platform by 2025, the restructuring of our team marks a strategic step in that direction. We eagerly anticipate their invaluable contributions as we work together to advance our mission of ensuring every child has access to quality education with the mantra ‘Bachcha Seekha Hai Ya Nahi’.”

Infinity Learn remains steadfast in its pursuit of becoming India’s leading K-12 EdTech company. With a target net revenue of Rs 500 crore, the company plans to extend its influence to over 50 million learners, encompassing one million paid users, and establish 40 offline centers by 2025. By delivering a personalized learning experience tailored to each student’s unique needs and strengths, Infinity Learn aspires to elevate overall educational outcomes, simultaneously enhancing affordability and broadening access for students from diverse backgrounds.

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Beyond Silence: A Smarter Way to Meditate

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THE SCIENCE OF NEUROFEEDBACK AND HOW BRAIN-SENSING HEADBANDS ARE REDEFINING CALM

Close your eyes and imagine rain — not the kind tied to traffic and wet shoes, but the slow, steady kind that arrives when everything is quiet. Now imagine that rain responding to you, growing louder when your mind drifts and softening when you settle. That’s the experience brain-sensing headbands are designed to create. The headband rests lightly across your forehead, where small EEG sensors read your brain’s electrical activity in real time. Fast beta waves reflect a busy mind, while slower alpha and theta waves are linked to relaxation and meditation. Devices like Muse, Emotiv, and NeuroSky don’t read your thoughts — they simply follow your brain’s rhythm. “When the rain grows heavier, you know your mind has wandered. When it softens, you’ve returned.”

Person wearing a brain-sensing neurofeedback headband while meditating in a calm indoor setting.

This is neurofeedback — giving the brain a mirror so it can learn to regulate itself. Most people think they’re calm during meditation, but their brain activity often says otherwise. These headbands close that gap using sound, often in the form of weather.

READING THE RHYTHM OF THE BRAIN

Weather sounds are chosen carefully. Rain, wind, and waves don’t repeat in predictable patterns, which makes them hard for the analytical mind to track. With nothing to control, the mind gradually let go.

Person wearing a brain-sensing neurofeedback headband while meditating in a calm indoor setting.

There’s also a deeper reason. These are sounds humans have lived with long before cities existed. Neuroscientists suggest water-based sounds carry no threat signal, allowing the body to relax — breathing slows, muscles soften, and tension releases.

That said, sound isn’t universal. For some, rain is comforting; for others, it may carry difficult memories. That’s why apps paired with headbands allow users to personalise their soundscapes.

When neurofeedback is layered onto these sounds, the experience becomes interactive. In systems like Muse, available in India through platforms like Amazon, the audio shifts instantly based on your brain activity. The result feels simple, but for someone struggling to meditate, it can be transformative.

WHY IT WORKS SO FAST

What surprises most people is how quickly it works. Instead of guessing what calm feels like, the brain gets immediate feedback. When the sound softens, it signals success. Over time, the brain learns that pattern and begins to recreate it on its own.

“The brain doesn’t need years to learn calm. It needs clear, honest feedback.”

Sound plays a powerful role here. It doesn’t just reach the ears — it activates memory, emotion, and the body’s stress system at once. Repeated over time, certain sounds can become triggers for calm.

THE SCIENCE IS NUANCED

These devices aren’t perfect. Brainwaves don’t map neatly to emotions, and most headbands only read activity from the forehead. Still, research shows increases in alpha and theta waves during meditation, making the feedback useful, even if incomplete.

A TOOL, NOT A SHORTCUT

It’s easy to see these headbands as a crutch. But for people who struggle with meditation, they offer something simple and powerful: proof that calm is possible. And once you’ve felt it, returning becomes easier — with or without the rain.

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The AI tools serious creators are quietly building empires with — and nobody is talking about

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AI tools for creators in 2026
The New Creative Intelligence · Tools Issue · 2026
There is a version of the future that has already arrived — it just hasn’t been distributed equally. While the internet argues over the same five tools, a quieter revolution is unfolding inside the workflows of the creators who are actually winning: the podcaster who batches a month of episodes in an afternoon, the fashion filmmaker who renders twenty b-roll cuts before breakfast, the solo creator who looks like she has a full post-production team. They are not working harder. They are working with the right instruments.
“The tools that stay in your stack are never the ones that promise everything. They are the ones that solve the one thing you cannot stop losing time to.”
What follows is not a ranking. It is a wardrobe. Each piece chosen for a specific occasion, a specific problem — and each one worthy of a permanent spot in how you create.
01 · ElevenLabs Voice Design
Voice & Audio
“Your voice, available at every hour you are not.”
best AI tools for content creators in 2026
Think of it as the understudy who has studied you so closely she can walk on stage without a rehearsal. ElevenLabs Voice Design does not produce the flat, robotic narration we have been trained to scroll past — it produces something uncanny in the best possible sense. The emotional range is generous enough that audiences, real ones, do not notice the seam.
Clone your own voice for batch content. Build entirely fictional ones for characters, brands, or projects that demand something no human voice currently offers. Podcasters, course creators, and long-form YouTubers use it to decouple production volume from recording sessions entirely. The free tier is a real introduction; the paid tiers are where serious work lives.
02 · Kling AI
Video Generation
“The quiet contender who didn’t need the waitlist.”
    best AI tools for content creators in 2026
While the industry held its breath for tools still locked behind invitation lists, Kling AI was being used. The difference that matters: motion coherence. Characters remain themselves across frames. Objects hold their shape. The physics feel, if not real, then at least convincing — which is exactly what b-roll and product visualisation demand.
Fashion, food, and lifestyle creators have adopted it almost as a category unto themselves. The faceless-channel ecosystem runs on it. The question was never whether AI video would arrive — it was which tool would be stable enough to build a production rhythm around. This is that tool.
03 · Higgsfield
Social Video
“It speaks the language of the scroll.”
best AI tools for content creators in 2026
Most video AI thinks in widescreen. Higgsfield thinks vertically. It was built with Reels, TikToks, and Shorts as the native format — not an afterthought. It understands pacing the way a seasoned editor understands an audience’s attention span: precariously, and with great respect.
Upload a concept; receive a draft that does not look like it was generated by something that has never seen a social feed. The creator community has not fully caught on yet, which means there is still a first-mover advantage to be had. That window, as with all windows in this space, will not stay open long.
04 · Captions App
Mobile Editing
“The invisible production team in your pocket.”
There is a quiet indignity in watching yourself speak on camera — the slight downward drift of the eyes toward the script, the filler words that seemed inaudible in the room. This framing made your kitchen look like a hostage situation. Captions remove all of it.
Eye contact correction moves your pupils to face the camera. Filler words vanish. Auto-reframing and b-roll suggestions round out what is, genuinely, an entire post-production workflow living inside a mobile app. For the solo creator who wants to look like she has a team — this is the cheat code.
05 · Wisper + Notion AI
Ideation Workflow
“From the voice memo that goes nowhere to the piece that publishes itself.”
best AI tools for content creators in 2026
Every creator has a graveyard of voice memos — the ideas caught while driving, the observations recorded between meetings, the three-minute ramble that contained, somewhere inside it, a genuinely good essay. Wisper transcribes them with fidelity across accents and rapid speech. Notion AI structures the result into scripts, outlines, newsletters, whatever shape the idea needs.
The gap between raw thought and publishable content is not a talent gap. It is a friction gap. This combination collapses it from hours of staring at a blank document to under fifteen minutes of light editing. That is not productivity optimisation. It is the return of creative momentum.
06 · Pika Labs
Video Effects
“Not a replacement. An enhancement. The distinction matters enormously.”
best AI tools for content creators in 2026
The fantasy of AI video is the blank-page generator. The reality of a working creator’s life is the footage that already exists — and needs something added, changed, elevated. Pika Labs understood this before the competition did. It specialises in modification: add effects to existing footage, change the weather in a scene, swap a background, and animate a still image.
It slots into an editing workflow rather than demanding you abandon one. That is the reason working creators choose it over all-or-nothing tools. Integration, not replacement, is the intelligence at play here.
The pattern that runs through every tool on this list is the same: specificity. Not the sweeping promise of doing everything, but the quiet confidence of doing one thing so well that you cannot imagine working without it. Fashion has always understood this. The dress that works for every occasion works for none of them. The tools that stay — the ones that survive a year in your workflow and still feel essential — are the ones that solved the right problem, elegantly, and got out of the way. That is not a feature. That is a philosophy.
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Where Cinema Meets Innovation

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From L To R – Mr. Ruben Castano, VP- Design, Brand & CX Motorola, aspiring film directors Shikha Jain & Riya Kulkarni, Filmmaker Imtiaz Ali, aspiring film directors, Peekansh S Gosain & Amar Vaswani and Shivam Ranjan, Head of Marketing – APAC, Motorola

The Motorola Signature Film Festival marked the re-premiere of original short films crafted by emerging directors(Mr. Ruben Castano, VP- Design, Brand & CX Motorola, aspiring film directors Shikha Jain & Riya Kulkarni, Filmmaker Imtiaz Ali, aspiring film directors, Peekansh S Gosain & Amar Vaswani and Shivam Ranjan, Head of Marketing – APAC Motorola ), each shot entirely on the Motorola Signature smartphone. The showcase highlighted the device’s gold-standard cinematic camera capabilities, demonstrating how cutting-edge mobile technology is redefining visual storytelling. Through powerful narratives and striking visuals, the films underscored Motorola’s commitment to empowering the next generation of filmmakers by placing professional-grade filmmaking tools directly in their hands.

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