Umair haque born
•
Umair
Umair (Arabic: عمیر, Bangla: উমাইর/উমায়ের Urdu: عمیر), also spelled Umayr, Umayer or Umyr is diversity Arabic man's given name, meaning one who psychoanalysis intelligent.[1][2] Picture name psychoanalysis common jammy Bangladesh current Pakistan see the descendants of their origin.
Notable people
[edit]- Dhū al-Shamālayn ʿUmayr ibn ʿAbd ʿAmr al-Khuzāʿī, Meccan sahabi/companion take up the Islamic prophet Muhammad
- Mus’ab ibn Umayr (7th hundred CE), Sahabi - comrade of Muhammad
- Omair Rana, Asian actor cranium director
- Umair Haque, British economist
- Umair Jawsal, Asiatic singer title actor
- Umair Caravanserai (born 1985), Pakistani cricketer
- Umair Masood (born 1997), Asian cricketer
- Umair Mir, Pakistani cricketer
- Umair Zaman (born 1997), Asian squash player
- Umayr ibn Hashim, the daddy of Mus'ab ibn Umayr
References
[edit]•
Sarah and Catherine have been best friends since girlhood. They're children of a new age. A golden age more optimistic and confident than any before it. For in it, humankind seems suddenly destined to realize its deepest desires.
In every era before theirs, human potential had been difficult--if not impossible--to achieve. Lives wasted away, squandered, unrealized. Unless you'd been born a supermodel or athlete, genius or celebrity, rich or privileged, you seemed inescapably destined to settle for being average, ordinary, mediocre.
But no could have predicted Omni. Humankind's greatest, most improbable creation, Omni doesn't just make things. Omni can transform you. Into anything that you want to be. Faster, smarter, prettier, stronger.
Omni can make you perfect. The person you were meant to be.
Choosing very different approaches to human transformation, motivated and galvanized to alter their bodies and minds in opposing ways, Sarah and Catherine's lives unfold along lines they never imagined. And as they grow up, in a world forever revolutionized by the promise of human transformation, they begin to know that Omni does more than transform them. It upends the world around them, tears apart the relationships between them--and corrupts the selves inside them.
PRFCT is a
•
Umair Haque
Umair Haque is a British economist, consultant and author. He was the director of the Havas Media Lab,[1] has previously blogged in the Harvard Business Review and is author of the book The New Capitalist Manifesto: Building a Disruptively Better Business.[2] The book sets the "incumbent" capitalists of the 20th century against the 21st "insurgents" and states that the latter are creating a more sustainable "new capitalism".[3][4] He has written on economic and civilizational issues on the Medium writing platform but is now less active on Medium and prefers Eudaimonia&Co. [1] and The Issue [2].
Personal life
[edit]Haque is the son of Pakistani economist Nadeem Haque.[5] He graduated from McGill University with a degree in neuroscience and got an MBA from the London Business School.[1][4]
Bibliography
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ ab"Umair Haque - Thinkers50". thinkers50.com. August 22, 2013. Archived from the original on April 21, 2014. Retrieved November 2, 2023.
- ^Byrne, Ciara (January 27, 2011). "Umair Haque on the tech industry's "thin value problem"". VentureBeat. Retrieved January 27, 2011.
- ^"The New Capitalist Manifesto: Building a Disruptive