Start volunteering at a farm on weekends if possible. If you like it, get your own land and start a small hobby farm. You can even start associated processing business or shop.
This ^. I still work in tech, but I have cattle and chickens and a tractor and endless outdoor projects now. That plus a family puts work solidly in its place: a way to make money so that I can do what I enjoy. I do of course enjoy work here and there, but I enjoy my life outside of work more. My farm isn't a business, so there's no extra pressure there, but it gave me a way to dive into permaculture and try to pave a path toward self-sufficiency, which has given me and my family a lot of joy and stability. And I can do that AND save for retirement thanks to the tech job.
This would be me if I could figure out a way to make it happen. A good friend of mine has a tiny farm but he is in poor health. I go out to his farm fairly often to help him. I absolutely love it (being outdoors and the peacefulness).
UPI is owned by NPCI(National Payments Corporation of India) which in turn is owned 67 share holders. Top 10 share holders are major banks and they hold around 80% shares. Other owners are smaller banks, other non banking financial institutions and Google(GooglePay), Amazon(AmazonPay), Flipkart/Walmart(PhonePe) etc.
From the complementary states of the entangled particles we know entanglement happens. But then how do we know that the collapse and "de-entaglement" happens instantaneously if we can't determine whether superposition collapsed or not?
Yeah, I too want to know this. If we know that the collapse has happened, then it can be used to infer that someone has tried to measure the other entangled particle. Can this be be leveraged or my understanding is wrong?
wave function does not have to collapse for particles to exist. Particles and wavefunctions are just different lenses for which to make sense of excitations in quantum fields
I see this happening all the time, majority of the people working in service based companies are bad at all the steps of development of any kind of software project. But there is an other side to it. Form a long time I am trying to get into consulting, companies don't want to see the background of us(devs). Majority of the times there is no response or they want to see some "white papers".
Would recommend you look at more focused consultancies that do one thing, very well.
Avoid shops that have diner-style "We can do anything, and we're great at all of it!" marketing. And also ones which require a heavy PM footprint: that's a good sign they don't trust their own devs.
The former cares about capability; the latter just cares about minimizing labor costs and getting clients to sign.