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Digital India is a campaign launched by the Government of India in order to ensure that the

Government's services are made available to citizens electronically by improved online


infrastructure and by increasing Internet connectivity or making the country digitally empowered in
the field of technology

Startup India is a flagship initiative of the Government of India, intended to catalyse startup culture
and build a strong and inclusive ecosystem for innovation and entrepreneurship in India

Make in India is an initiative by the Government of India to create and encourage companies to
develop, manufacture and assemble products made in India

Entrepreneurship Accelerates Economic Growth By creating new products and services, they
stimulate new employment, which ultimately results in the acceleration of economic development.

Delegation means teaching and inspiring employees, team members, and other parts of your
organization and Assigning responsibilities and dividing work equally among team

Entrepreneurship - The entrepreneur is defined as someone who has the ability and desire to
establish, administer and succeed in a startup venture along with risk entitled to it

It helps in Wealth Sharing   & increase in GDP 

It creates Jobs for society

Interpersonal skills are those we use every day to communicate and interact with others, including
listening, speaking and questioning skills.

VERBAL COMMUNICATION

Verbal communication occurs when we engage in speaking with others. It can be face-to-face, over
the telephone, via Skype or Zoom, etc. Some verbal engagements are informal, such as chatting with
a friend over coffee or in the office kitchen

NON-VERBAL COMMUNICATION

What we do while we speak often says more than the actual words. Non-verbal communication
includes facial expressions, posture, eye contact, hand movements, and touch.

WRITTEN COMMUNICATION

Whether it is an email, a memo, a report, a Facebook post, a Tweet, a contract, etc. all forms of
written communication have the same goal to disseminate information in a clear and concise
manner
LISTENING

The act of listening does not often make its way onto the list of types of communication. Active
listening, however, is perhaps one of the most important types of communication because if we
cannot listen to the person sitting across from us, we cannot effectively engage with them

VISUAL COMMUNICATION

We are a visual society. Think about it, televisions are running 24/7, Facebook is visual with memes,
videos, images, etc., Instagram is an image-only platform, and advertisers use imagery to sell
products and ideas. Think about from a personal perspective – the images we post on social media
are meant to convey meaning – to communicate a message

 Feedback plays a very important role in communication as it tells both sender 
and receiver, how the message was interpreted

The feel‐good hormone released by our body, which helps us cope with stress is  Dopamine      

The 4W's of Problem Scoping are Who, What, Where and Why. These Ws helps in identifying and
understanding the problem in a better and efficient manner.

1. Who - "Who" part helps us in comprehending and categorizing who all are affected directly


and indirectly with the problem and who are called the Stake holders.

2. What - "What" part helps us in understanding and identifying the nature of the


problem and how do we get to know what helps to get us know the evidence.
3. Where - "Where" does the problem arises (context), situation and the location.

4. Why - "Why" is the given problem worth solving and tells about benefits to the


stakeholders.

Hidden layer does processing in the neural network of AI

2030 Agenda for  Sustainable Development are also known as development goals

Dimensionality Reduction is not a type of Unsupervised learning

CONFUSION MATRIX

true positives (TP): These are cases in which we predicted yes (they have the disease), and they do
have the disease.

true negatives (TN): We predicted no, and they don't have the disease.

false positives (FP): We predicted yes, but they don't actually have the disease. (Also known as a
"Type I error.")

false negatives (FN): We predicted no, but they actually do have the disease. (Also known as a
"Type II error.")

Accuracy: Overall, how often is the classifier correct?

(TP+TN)/total = (100+50)/165 = 0.91


Precision: When it predicts yes, how often is it correct?

TP/predicted yes = 100/110 = 0.91

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